1. If I'm using Cold Fusion Markup Language in BD.NET, it may be compiled to 
.NET, but the language syntax is still CFML.  I can choose not to use .NET 
syntax or import any .NET libraries, then no logical argument can refute that 
I'm still using CFML and not any .NET language as my development language.  
People can refer to ColdFusion as both the server or the language.  I'm talking 
about the language.  

 "Your long-term business plan for this site is for it to stay
small, right?"  Well, not a question I would ask, but based on who your client 
is, you would get an idea of size and scale.  Like you said, if you had small 
clients that you would recommend CF for their purposes, which is the point I 
was attempting to make. You wouldn't recommend a solution that didn't fit size, 
scale and budget. 

Rick....

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Phillip Holmes
Sent: Sun 11/5/2006 4:09 PM
To: Dallas/Fort Worth ColdFusion User Group Mailing List
Subject: Re: [DFW CFUG] Why Cold Fusion vs Java? vs PHP? vs .ASP? etc.
 
Rick,

1. If you're parsing .NET libs via .NET syntax in BD, then it *IS*
.NET. No logical argument can refute that.

2. Dev times 3X? No. As someone that knows .NET and CF, the dev times
are equivalent. This is especially true with .NET 2.0 (3.0 is about to
rollout). Sorry, the old dev time arguments haven't held up since .NET
1.0.

3. .NET is much more efficient and has faster data access when using
MS SQL and has baked in session management which allows MS SQL to
handle your session tracking.

I love CF and will continue to use it for small clients. But how many
clients do you author sites for with a preceding development question
being, "Your long-term business plan for this site is for it to stay
small, right?"

-- Phil

----->


> Back to your statement about .NET competing CF in terms of performance issues 
> with scale, I totally agree, but not every site is going to need to scale to 
> an enterprise-level application.  In my mind, .NET is overkill for a 
> small-to-medium sized site especially if speed-to-market is a concern. If I 
> needed a database for a small-to-medium scale application, would I get Oracle 
> or DB2 in case I would ever need it, or would I get something that fits my 
> needs now (maybe MS SQL Server or MySQL)?  Even if you chose .NET, would you 
> architect your application to scale 10x larger just in case even if there's 
> no proof that it would ever scale that large, but would take possibly 3x as 
> long to develop?
>
> I think MySpace is a very good example of the limits of ColdFusion's scale, 
> and it was something that I'm sure a lot of people were wondering about.
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Phillip Holmes
> Sent: Sun 11/5/2006 7:56 AM
> To: Dallas/Fort Worth ColdFusion User Group Mailing List
> Subject: Re: [DFW CFUG] Why Cold Fusion vs Java? vs PHP? vs .ASP? etc.
>
> 1.
> > Sorry, you can't say MySpace is "entirely" .NET and still have "parts of
> > the site" running CF.  Even if we're talking about CFMX as a .NET
> > assembly, it's still CF as a language, not CF as a server that's running
> > at least the presentation layer.
>
> 2.
> > I wouldn't hesitate in believing it if
> > I heard they were migrating from CF to .NET on the language side based
> > on the issues they've had with performance and scale.
> >
>
> 1. .NET framework parses the page, therefore its .NET
> 2. Performance and licensing.
> 3. Computerjobs.com just ditched CF too for exactly the same reasons.
>
> http://members.microsoft.com/CustomerEvidence/Common/FileOpen.aspx?FileName=10625_ComputerJobs_bizversion_300k.wvx
>
> Its time all of us become ambidextrous developers with .NET + CF as
> tools. CF is losing it's biggest sites one by one because of
> outrageous pricing for the enterprise product, poor support by adobe
> and performance issues.
>
> For a onsey twosey server site, its not an issue but once you start
> playing with the big boys, CF doesn't make financial sense.
>
>
> --Phil
>
> _______________________________________________
> Reply to DFWCFUG:
>  [email protected]
> Subscribe/Unsubscribe:
>  http://lists1.safesecureweb.com/mailman/listinfo/list
> List Archives:
>    http://www.mail-archive.com/list%40list.dfwcfug.org/
>  http://www.mail-archive.com/list%40dfwcfug.org/
> DFWCFUG Sponsors:
>  www.HostMySite.com
>  www.teksystems.com/
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Reply to DFWCFUG:
>  [email protected]
> Subscribe/Unsubscribe:
>  http://lists1.safesecureweb.com/mailman/listinfo/list
> List Archives:
>    http://www.mail-archive.com/list%40list.dfwcfug.org/
>  http://www.mail-archive.com/list%40dfwcfug.org/
> DFWCFUG Sponsors:
>  www.HostMySite.com
>  www.teksystems.com/
>


-- 
Warmest Regards,

Phillip B. Holmes

_______________________________________________
Reply to DFWCFUG: 
  [email protected]
Subscribe/Unsubscribe: 
  http://lists1.safesecureweb.com/mailman/listinfo/list
List Archives: 
    http://www.mail-archive.com/list%40list.dfwcfug.org/             
  http://www.mail-archive.com/list%40dfwcfug.org/
DFWCFUG Sponsors: 
  www.HostMySite.com 
  www.teksystems.com/


_______________________________________________
Reply to DFWCFUG:
  [email protected]
Subscribe/Unsubscribe:
  http://lists1.safesecureweb.com/mailman/listinfo/list
List Archives:
    http://www.mail-archive.com/list%40list.dfwcfug.org/
  http://www.mail-archive.com/list%40dfwcfug.org/
DFWCFUG Sponsors:
  www.HostMySite.com
  www.teksystems.com/

Reply via email to