> If we avoid the trap of equating "enterprise class" with > J2EE, then yes, Spyce is enterprise-class. I'm sure I could > design a site to serve a million db-backed pages per day from > a single server (http + > db) in Spyce, because I've already built one in another > interpreted language (TCL) that is somewhat more feeble (and > marginally slower) than Python. Is that enterprise-class enough?
I've never really understood the definition of "Enterprise-class" either. I think it means being extremely scalable, the ability to span across multiple servers in multiple locations (geographically), and the ability for multiple other systems to communicate with each other. Am I wrong on this? What is the exact definition of "Enterprise-class"? I work for an enterprise and we use multiple languages for different purposes - does that count? I'd be interested to hear people's definitions. Jesse .-----------------------------------. | This has been a P.L.U.G. mailing. | | Don't Fear the Penguin. | | IRC: #utah at irc.freenode.net | `-----------------------------------'
