CFUG and focus (was: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-23 Thread Sean Corfield

On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 11:35 AM, Judah McAuley ju...@wiredotter.com wrote:
 Well, yes and no. Adobe did have a decent user group system but then
 they consolidated them and it all changed. We had a Portland CF
 Usergroup but then it got changed by Adobe to a PDX RIA group and most
 all of the content and discussion is around Flash and Flex.

That was *not* done by Adobe - it was done by the UG manager.

A lot of CFUGs are being asked to cover non-CF topics - it happens in
my three local groups too. Attendees want a broader range of topics.
That broader range attracts more developers (non-CF developers) and so
the group does better.

If you want your local CFUG to stay CF-focused, you need to encourage
CFers to actually *attend* :)

Look at this:

http://survey.constantcontact.com/survey/a07e2olvoj6g4ek9zt3/results

Over a third of respondents *never* attend a UG meeting and nearly 20%
only attend one a year! No wonder CFUGs are struggling - developers
are not supporting them!
-- 
Sean A Corfield -- (904) 302-SEAN
Railo Technologies US -- http://getrailo.com/
An Architect's View -- http://corfield.org/

If you're not annoying somebody, you're not really alive.
-- Margaret Atwood

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-22 Thread Tom Chiverton

On Thursday 21 Jan 2010, Dave Watts wrote:
 Melbourne which had PHP topics, but I don't think CF would be an
 appropriate topic at an open-source conference, since, you know, it's
 closed-source.

Nah...there's a open language spec (due any day now) and at least two open 
source implementations of it, as well as Adobe's closed one.
I keep meaning to mention it to our local GeekUp/Free software as a talk idea.

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-22 Thread Tracy Xia

Marketing key to success for everything? Well, I agree marketing helps  
in most situations and for most products--but it doesn't always have  
to be the case.

Take a look at Wikipedia's success; there were no big bucks spent on  
advertising it.

Take a look at that United Breaks Guitars song on YouTube, and then  
take a look at the one United made as a response. The second one was  
not free and had a well known artist.


On Jan 22, 2010, at 2:39, Sean Corfield seancorfi...@gmail.com wrote:


 On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 3:18 PM, Eric Nicholas Sweeney
 n...@bigfatdesigns.com wrote:
 Maybe it's my marketing background, but that story just doesn't  
 hold up. The
 success rate of anything based on that sort of fairytale/whimsical/ 
 lucky
 business plan is extremely low. I am sure you can all point to one  
 or two
 that break through that boundary - but not thousands.

 Well, we're talking about programming languages and most of them
 succeed because of community momentum, not because of ACME Inc.
 marketing them...
 -- 
 Sean A Corfield -- (904) 302-SEAN
 Railo Technologies US -- http://getrailo.com/
 An Architect's View -- http://corfield.org/

 If you're not annoying somebody, you're not really alive.
 -- Margaret Atwood

 

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-22 Thread Dave Watts

 Melbourne which had PHP topics, but I don't think CF would be an
 appropriate topic at an open-source conference, since, you know, it's
 closed-source.

 Nah...there's a open language spec (due any day now) and at least two open
 source implementations of it, as well as Adobe's closed one.
 I keep meaning to mention it to our local GeekUp/Free software as a talk idea.

CF != CFML

While I think that the open-source CFML implementations are great and
all, I think you can understand why Adobe might not present at an
open-source conference, right?

Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
http://www.figleaf.com/
http://training.figleaf.com/

Fig Leaf Software is a Veteran-Owned Small Business (VOSB) on
GSA Schedule, and provides the highest caliber vendor-authorized
instruction at our training centers, online, or onsite.

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-22 Thread Tom Chiverton

On Friday 22 Jan 2010, Dave Watts wrote:
 While I think that the open-source CFML implementations are great and
 all, I think you can understand why Adobe might not present at an
 open-source conference, right?

Adobe does a ton of good open source work, in particular around Flex. They 
have a good story to tell, and based on Sean Corfield's blog about the CFML 
spec., they could do something similar around that if they wanted to.

-- 
Helping to proactively expedite performance-oriented innovative corporate 
granular web-readiness as part of the IT team of the year 2010, '09 and '08



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of members is available for inspection at the registered office together with a 
list of those non members who are referred to as partners.  We use the word 
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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-22 Thread Eric Nicholas Sweeney

As I said Xia - Everyone can point to one or two... Can you point to
thousands? I am not dismissing the viral phenomena - I am just saying it's
the exception.

And as I ALSO said - in not so many words - Who is to say that community
momentum wasn't/isn't part of the marketing? The smaller your
product/service - the more you rely on free marketing techniques.

Marketing - IS the key to success. Yes. (If by success you mean - getting
people to buy, use, or believe what you do/say.) You may be thinking of
traditional marketing delivery methods (TV, Radio, print) - But now with
the internets - we have all this new stuff like blogs, user groups, forums,
emails, etc. (Please Note: Anyone with a signature here is marketing...
Sean, Dave, Mark, etc. They have links so people will go to their sites...
That's Marketing. They are generating awareness of their products/services
through a medium. Not that there is anything wrong with that. I am just
pointing it out.)

The first person/group/company that made (insert something here) - Told
someone about it. Usually - aggressively telling people about it. They told
others - hey look at this. As simple as that is - it's marketing by the
inventor of the product.   Word-of-mouth marketing. Generally slower
than other forms - but better because it has built in trust... 

So yes - Sean - I agree - that Developers have a strong community and it
helps propel our products and tools. It's marketing done by us. For Free.
But the developers of our products had to first Market them to us - or we
wouldn't know about them - and certainly wouldn't have tried them.

So if you think Marketing by Acme Inc. has nothing to do with it - that's
crazy talk. (I know you were just generalizing) But since we're really
talking about Adobe - that's super crazy talk. It's not like they released
CF9 and waited for the community to respond to an updated version on the
website.

They held QA, had press releases, Got Ben Forta excited ;), blogged about
it, held conferences, pounded tradeshows, evaluated market shares, wrote
books, made videos... Had people read all these inane posts... :)  

So what I was originally getting at - was that while Adobe has a huge
marketing plan in place - it certainly doesn't have the full weight of the
company behind it - and it probably isn't being as aggressive as some of us
would like to see it. 

I believe they have the power to own the market. To make CF the hot
language. They certainly were able to put the smack down on the graphics
industry. So, I would like them to add a little more attention here. (Not
that that would make them lower prices, but I digress)

Perfect example:  Purchase the Adobe Master Collection. $2500. Comes with
everything they make - well except ColdFusion and Flex. But Everything
else you need to make rich websites. Come on guys... You couldn't bundle
the developer edition? (FREE) You couldn't include the $250 Flex Builder?
Really? Not even a lite version? (Hell, the WEB Suite Premium doesn't
include Flex either.)

And what is with charging the same price for CF8 AND CF9?  WTF?

Missed opportunities gentlemen... That is all I am saying.

I mean - if we - the developers - are really the driving force behind
promoting their products - shouldn't they spend a little more time giving
me warm fuzzies? Why is it your job to make me feel better about what they
are doing? In short: It's not. And you won't. Unless of course - they've
convinced you to try the product and you really liked it -and then feel the
need to share that info... But it all starts with them convincing you it's
worth your time to try it out. Sneaky little Acme...

Not that I am telling you something you didn't already know - I just felt
like typing a bunch of words. (I was really hoping to use the word
'hypothetically' in that rambling but I guess it wasn't needed.  Oh wait -
there it is.)

- Nick



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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-22 Thread Dave Watts

  While I think that the open-source CFML implementations are great and
  all, I think you can understand why Adobe might not present at an
  open-source conference, right?

 Adobe does a ton of good open source work, in particular around Flex. They
 have a good story to tell, and based on Sean Corfield's blog about the CFML
 spec., they could do something similar around that if they wanted to.

Well sure, they do all sorts of good stuff in the open-source world,
but I don't see that helping them to sell CF. So I wouldn't be
surprised to see the CF sales team give a pass to open-source
conferences. They don't have an infinite budget, after all.

Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
http://www.figleaf.com/
http://training.figleaf.com/

Fig Leaf Software is a Veteran-Owned Small Business (VOSB) on
GSA Schedule, and provides the highest caliber vendor-authorized
instruction at our training centers, online, or onsite.

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-22 Thread Casey Dougall

There is never a lack of coldfusion google alerts and here is a nice
one...

While this is just a fraction of the ColdFusion sites out there, it's still
cool in my opinion...

Today ColdfusionSites.com http://www.coldfusionsites.com/ covers more than
2.000 ColdFusion websites. This means that the number of ColdFusion
references on ColdfusionSites.com http://www.coldfusionsites.com/ has
doubled in the last six month.

Also the number of countries increased from 38 to 47. New entries are e.g.
Antigua, Jamaica, Liechtenstein and Luxemburg. The Top3 contributing
countries are (surprise, surprise!):

1. USA (763, + 158%)
2. Switzerland (478, + 214%)
3. Germany (167, + 69%)

In this reporting the Top3 contributing countries cover nearly 70% of all
listed entries, while the other 44 countries cover 30% together. Beside the
above mentioned, these countries as well increased their number of
ColdFusion websites noticeble: Austria (+ 129%), Italy (+ 125%), New Zealand
(+ 100%), Canada (+ 77%), Australia (+ 66%).

Among the new entries there are wellknown companies like Anheuser-Busch
InBevhttp://www.coldfusionsites.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=rcon.showRefreferenceid=3717,
ATT 
Storehttp://www.coldfusionsites.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=rcon.showRefreferenceid=3680,
eBay (Invester 
Relations)http://www.coldfusionsites.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=rcon.showRefreferenceid=3531,
FedEx (Investor
Relations)http://www.coldfusionsites.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=rcon.showRefreferenceid=3558,
Hitachi 
(Österreich)http://www.coldfusionsites.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=rcon.showRefreferenceid=3416and
Olympushttp://www.coldfusionsites.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=rcon.showRefreferenceid=3763
.

We never expected, that
ColdfusionSites.comhttp://www.coldfusionsites.com/has more than
2.000 incredible ColdFusion websites after 14 months. Please
continue to post your best ColdFusion projects on
ColdfusionSites.comhttp://www.coldfusionsites.com/and be part of the
largest pool for fascinating ColdFusion projects.


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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-22 Thread Sean Corfield

On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 8:16 AM, Eric Nicholas Sweeney
n...@bigfatdesigns.com wrote:
 So if you think Marketing by Acme Inc. has nothing to do with it - that's
 crazy talk. (I know you were just generalizing) But since we're really
 talking about Adobe - that's super crazy talk. It's not like they released
 CF9 and waited for the community to respond to an updated version on the
 website.

Right, and I think Adobe did a huge amount of marketing on CF9. It's
why I get frustrated when folks complain Adobe aren't doing enough.
Adobe do a *huge* amount of marketing. A lot of it, people in this
community don't even see because it's aimed at other levels of the
food chain and/or other communities.

 And what is with charging the same price for CF8 AND CF9?  WTF?

They changed the license to allow free use on development and testing
servers when you buy a production license. They added support for
cloud usage so you can run ColdFusion on Amazon EC2 - even Standard
Edition. They allow deployment on a standby server for free so you
have a production-ready failover server (that came with CF8 or 8.0.1 I
think). They've added a huge amount of value with the licensing
changes in CF9.

They're betting on those changes helping them sell more licenses than
they would without those changes. When I was at Broadchoice, the whole
pay-for-dev/test-licenses thing was a serious bone of contention and
the board were challenging my use of ColdFusion 8 because of the cost.
In the end, we consolidated onto a large, heavily-virtualized server
and used a single CF8 Enterprise license. CF9 would have allowed us to
develop/test the way we wanted and would have eased my discussions
with the board over license costs. As it was, we bought four
Enterprise licenses for production but when we deployed a new project
to Amazon, we went with Railo Community Edition (back in the 3.0,
pre-open source days) because of the CF8 EULA. Adobe worked with us -
thank you Adam and Kristen! - and provided a way for us to use CF8
legally on Amazon and we migrated our CF8 applications to Amazon as
well. Cost is still an issue and I don't see Broadchoice rushing to
upgrade to CF9 but the CF9 EULA would have caused us far fewer
headaches than the CF8 EULA did!

Does anyone actually think those are *bad* changes? Really?
-- 
Sean A Corfield -- (904) 302-SEAN
Railo Technologies US -- http://getrailo.com/
An Architect's View -- http://corfield.org/

If you're not annoying somebody, you're not really alive.
-- Margaret Atwoo

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-22 Thread Ben Shelden

Too bad you couldn't convince them to migrate to ColdFusion 9 which has
built in Sharepoint integration out of the box.


abdy 

I'm considering moving back to Northern Virginia if the right opportunity
presents itself. CF in the Raleigh/Durham area is almost non existent (job
wise) I was laid off two weeks ago because my employer pushed everything to
either Sharepoint or a new accounting system. 

What's unfortunate is that I wasn't given the opportunity to plead my case,
because I believe that they'll wind up spending more on Epicor and
Sharepoint then what they were paying me per year.

I believe that we as developers need to push and promote ColdFusion, and the
open source versions (Railo, Open BD). I'm forever hearing .Net and PHP
developers saying  our stuff is free and ColdFusion isn't.

You can expound on the death of CF or you can get out there and promote.



I think the availability of CF jobs depends a lot on how far you are willing
to move and where you live. I lost my job at the end of October last year
and I have not been seeing listed CF jobs around West Palm Beach, FL. I see
plenty of job openings in the Northern Virginia area and jobs scattered
around the country for those willing to relocate. I'm still looking for CF
employment but I've started teaching myself .NET because there are a lot of
.NET jobs available around where I live. I was speaking with a recruiter and
she was telling me that she found it interesting how the job opportunities
for different languages seemed to center around different geographical
locations. She told me there were a lot of Java jobs in Dade County, FL
(i.e. Miami) but they disappeared going north across the county line and
then the demand started for .NET developers and some PHP (but not anywhere
near the demand for .NET) 

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-22 Thread Ben Shelden

Concerning  our stuff is free and ColdFusion isn't, it is difficult to 
program in .NET without Visual Studio Professional and that cost $800. 
Microsoft will find a way to cost those developers money.

I'm considering moving back to Northern Virginia if the right opportunity
presents itself. CF in the Raleigh/Durham area is almost non existent (job
wise) I was laid off two weeks ago because my employer pushed everything to
either Sharepoint or a new accounting system. 

What's unfortunate is that I wasn't given the opportunity to plead my case,
because I believe that they'll wind up spending more on Epicor and
Sharepoint then what they were paying me per year.

I believe that we as developers need to push and promote ColdFusion, and the
open source versions (Railo, Open BD). I'm forever hearing .Net and PHP
developers saying  our stuff is free and ColdFusion isn't.

You can expound on the death of CF or you can get out there and promote.



I think the availability of CF jobs depends a lot on how far you are willing
to move and where you live. I lost my job at the end of October last year
and I have not been seeing listed CF jobs around West Palm Beach, FL. I see
plenty of job openings in the Northern Virginia area and jobs scattered
around the country for those willing to relocate. I'm still looking for CF
employment but I've started teaching myself .NET because there are a lot of
.NET jobs available around where I live. I was speaking with a recruiter and
she was telling me that she found it interesting how the job opportunities
for different languages seemed to center around different geographical
locations. She told me there were a lot of Java jobs in Dade County, FL
(i.e. Miami) but they disappeared going north across the county line and
then the demand started for .NET developers and some PHP (but not anywhere
near the demand for .NET) 

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-22 Thread Dave Watts

 And as I ALSO said - in not so many words - Who is to say that community
 momentum wasn't/isn't part of the marketing? The smaller your
 product/service - the more you rely on free marketing techniques.

Adobe does a pretty good job with supporting community-driven
marketing. I don't know how many people here run into this, but Adobe
sponsors conferences, user groups, and all kinds of learning events.

 Marketing - IS the key to success. Yes. (If by success you mean - getting
 people to buy, use, or believe what you do/say.) You may be thinking of
 traditional marketing delivery methods (TV, Radio, print) - But now with
 the internets - we have all this new stuff like blogs, user groups, forums,
 emails, etc.

Again, though, marketing by Adobe alone is not sufficient for success.
Adobe sponsors conferences and user groups organized by others because
they drive attendance and mindshare. Lots of Adobe people are on
blogs, Facebook, etc. I think they're as accessible, or more
accessible, than their counterparts in many other products.

 (Please Note: Anyone with a signature here is marketing...
 Sean, Dave, Mark, etc. They have links so people will go to their sites...
 That's Marketing. They are generating awareness of their products/services
 through a medium. Not that there is anything wrong with that. I am just
 pointing it out.)

Yeah, that's kind of the point. I don't post on cf-talk because I'm
altruistic, I do it because it helps sell me within the CF world, and
helps me sell CF within the larger world.

 So what I was originally getting at - was that while Adobe has a huge
 marketing plan in place - it certainly doesn't have the full weight of the
 company behind it - and it probably isn't being as aggressive as some of us
 would like to see it.

Well, that's the whole problem. No matter how much they do, it won't
be enough for some people.

 I believe they have the power to own the market. To make CF the hot
 language. They certainly were able to put the smack down on the graphics
 industry. So, I would like them to add a little more attention here. (Not
 that that would make them lower prices, but I digress)

The problem with that theory is that CF isn't like other products they
sell. There really aren't many compelling alternatives to Photoshop
and Dreamweaver. There are lots of alternatives to CF, and they're not
all owned by companies that Adobe can buy up - remember, Adobe's
dominance in the graphics industry is largely due to them buying the
right companies. Are they going to buy MS to own .NET? Who can they
buy to own PHP? CF may be good, great, first among equals, but Adobe
simply doesn't have the position to change these things.

 Perfect example:  Purchase the Adobe Master Collection. $2500. Comes with
 everything they make - well except ColdFusion and Flex.

... and LiveCycle, and Flash Media Server, and Connect, and Captivate,
and RoboHelp, and ...

I can see the argument that Flex should be included in their GUI tools
packages, but CF just doesn't fit. Many people buying Master
Collection, etc, aren't interested in running servers, and wouldn't
care for the significant price increase that would surely result. But
presumably, you're not advocating a price increase for Master
Collection, you just want free stuff, right?

 And what is with charging the same price for CF8 AND CF9?  WTF?

I'm not sure what you want here. Should they increase the price for CF
9, since it has shiny new features?

 Missed opportunities gentlemen... That is all I am saying.

Adobe would presumably like to make a profit on CF. Adobe has a
limited advertising budget to spend on CF. Given those two facts, what
you consider a missed opportunity may well be just a way for Adobe
to make less money from CF. And, if Adobe does start making less money
(or losing money) on CF, things are going to be a lot worse for you
than they are now.

 I mean - if we - the developers - are really the driving force behind
 promoting their products - shouldn't they spend a little more time giving
 me warm fuzzies? Why is it your job to make me feel better about what they
 are doing? In short: It's not. And you won't. Unless of course - they've
 convinced you to try the product and you really liked it -and then feel the
 need to share that info... But it all starts with them convincing you it's
 worth your time to try it out. Sneaky little Acme...

I tell people how great CF is because, as a CF developer, it serves my
best interests - as a CF developer, I can do things faster and
arguably better than .NET, clients get results faster, and everyone's
happy. Again, I think your expectations from Adobe are somewhat
unreasonable, and apparently so does Adobe. Adobe provides lots of
resources for developers, they sponsor conferences, attend trade
shows, etc, etc. But they get to figure out how to price their
products, and if you're not happy with that, there just isn't a whole
lot you can do about that.

Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf 

Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-22 Thread Judah McAuley

On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 10:56 AM, Dave Watts dwa...@figleaf.com wrote:

 And as I ALSO said - in not so many words - Who is to say that community
 momentum wasn't/isn't part of the marketing? The smaller your
 product/service - the more you rely on free marketing techniques.

 Adobe does a pretty good job with supporting community-driven
 marketing. I don't know how many people here run into this, but Adobe
 sponsors conferences, user groups, and all kinds of learning events.

Well, yes and no. Adobe did have a decent user group system but then
they consolidated them and it all changed. We had a Portland CF
Usergroup but then it got changed by Adobe to a PDX RIA group and most
all of the content and discussion is around Flash and Flex. Having a
Flash and Flex group is fine but CF has really been pushed to the
background. I'm sure that if I made a hard push, I could get more CF
stuff in the meetings, present myself, etc. But for a random CF
developer, there isn't nearly as much user group support as there once
was. Not a good change.

Judah

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-22 Thread Dave Watts

 Well, yes and no. Adobe did have a decent user group system but then
 they consolidated them and it all changed. We had a Portland CF
 Usergroup but then it got changed by Adobe to a PDX RIA group and most
 all of the content and discussion is around Flash and Flex. Having a
 Flash and Flex group is fine but CF has really been pushed to the
 background. I'm sure that if I made a hard push, I could get more CF
 stuff in the meetings, present myself, etc. But for a random CF
 developer, there isn't nearly as much user group support as there once
 was. Not a good change.

Adobe doesn't really manage the user groups directly. That is, they
don't tell a specific user group to cover this or that specific topic.
So, presumably, the user group managers did that on their own. So, you
can either (a) get into your user group management yourself, and bring
them around, or (b) just start your own user group. It doesn't really
take much other than lots of free time.

Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
http://www.figleaf.com/
http://training.figleaf.com/

Fig Leaf Software is a Veteran-Owned Small Business (VOSB) on
GSA Schedule, and provides the highest caliber vendor-authorized
instruction at our training centers, online, or onsite.

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-22 Thread Judah McAuley

I used to be a CFUG manager, so I understand. But it was my impression
that all of the CFUGs were getting converted to RIA groups. Perhaps I
misunderstood and I just need to get off my lazy ass and make a group
again :)

Cheers,
Judah

On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 11:55 AM, Dave Watts dwa...@figleaf.com wrote:

 Well, yes and no. Adobe did have a decent user group system but then
 they consolidated them and it all changed. We had a Portland CF
 Usergroup but then it got changed by Adobe to a PDX RIA group and most
 all of the content and discussion is around Flash and Flex. Having a
 Flash and Flex group is fine but CF has really been pushed to the
 background. I'm sure that if I made a hard push, I could get more CF
 stuff in the meetings, present myself, etc. But for a random CF
 developer, there isn't nearly as much user group support as there once
 was. Not a good change.

 Adobe doesn't really manage the user groups directly. That is, they
 don't tell a specific user group to cover this or that specific topic.
 So, presumably, the user group managers did that on their own. So, you
 can either (a) get into your user group management yourself, and bring
 them around, or (b) just start your own user group. It doesn't really
 take much other than lots of free time.

 Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
 http://www.figleaf.com/
 http://training.figleaf.com/

 Fig Leaf Software is a Veteran-Owned Small Business (VOSB) on
 GSA Schedule, and provides the highest caliber vendor-authorized
 instruction at our training centers, online, or onsite.

 

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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs - Move to CF-Community??

2010-01-22 Thread Gaulin, Mark

Please, can this thread end, or at least move to CF-Community or
something?

Thanks
Mark

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs - Move to CF-Community??

2010-01-22 Thread Michael Dinowitz

Mark,

I've left the thread here so it could be disputed but after 2 days it
is time to take it to the OT list. Anyone who wants to continue on the
bi-monthly CF is dead thread, please go to the CF-OT list.

Thanks

--
Michael




On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 3:39 PM, Gaulin, Mark mgau...@globalspec.com wrote:

 Please, can this thread end, or at least move to CF-Community or
 something?

 Thanks
        Mark

 

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs - Move to CF-Community??

2010-01-22 Thread patrick buch

Please, can this thread end, or at least move to CF-Community or
something?

Thanks
   Mark

Man,

I couldn't agree more Look, this should be for code exchanges, etc. We all 
live by the CF sword and die by the CF sword. If you're that worried about it, 
learn the other languages 

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-22 Thread Dave Watts

 I used to be a CFUG manager, so I understand. But it was my impression
 that all of the CFUGs were getting converted to RIA groups. Perhaps I
 misunderstood and I just need to get off my lazy ass and make a group
 again :)

A lot of them have switched to RIA topics, or just become more general
than CF. But I think that's more a matter of how they're being run,
and who's willing to do presentations. It's hard to run a CF user
group if no one else is willing to do CF topics each month. We did
that, by ourselves, for nearly ten years, and it's a LOT of work.

Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
http://www.figleaf.com/
http://training.figleaf.com/

Fig Leaf Software is a Veteran-Owned Small Business (VOSB) on
GSA Schedule, and provides the highest caliber vendor-authorized
instruction at our training centers, online, or onsite.

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-22 Thread Charlie Griefer

Judah:

It's likely that you misunderstood.  I started a CFUG in the East Bay,
California area less than a year ago.  I've not had Adobe attempt to
influence any sort of influence over the topics we cover, nor did they
attempt to mandate that the group be referred to as anything other than a
CFUG.

All they've done is send schwag :)

On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 12:07 PM, Judah McAuley ju...@wiredotter.comwrote:


 I used to be a CFUG manager, so I understand. But it was my impression
 that all of the CFUGs were getting converted to RIA groups. Perhaps I
 misunderstood and I just need to get off my lazy ass and make a group
 again :)

 Cheers,
 Judah

 On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 11:55 AM, Dave Watts dwa...@figleaf.com wrote:
 
  Well, yes and no. Adobe did have a decent user group system but then
  they consolidated them and it all changed. We had a Portland CF
  Usergroup but then it got changed by Adobe to a PDX RIA group and most
  all of the content and discussion is around Flash and Flex. Having a
  Flash and Flex group is fine but CF has really been pushed to the
  background. I'm sure that if I made a hard push, I could get more CF
  stuff in the meetings, present myself, etc. But for a random CF
  developer, there isn't nearly as much user group support as there once
  was. Not a good change.
 
  Adobe doesn't really manage the user groups directly. That is, they
  don't tell a specific user group to cover this or that specific topic.
  So, presumably, the user group managers did that on their own. So, you
  can either (a) get into your user group management yourself, and bring
  them around, or (b) just start your own user group. It doesn't really
  take much other than lots of free time.
 
  Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
  http://www.figleaf.com/
  http://training.figleaf.com/
 
  Fig Leaf Software is a Veteran-Owned Small Business (VOSB) on
  GSA Schedule, and provides the highest caliber vendor-authorized
  instruction at our training centers, online, or onsite.
 
 

 

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs - Move to CF-Community??

2010-01-22 Thread Leigh

Michael / Mark / Patrick

Thank you!




  

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs - Move to CF-Community??

2010-01-22 Thread Dave Watts

 Please, can this thread end, or at least move to CF-Community or
 something?

I realize this is OT, but if you're using Gmail/Google Apps, you can
mute a thread:
http://mail.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?hl=enanswer=47787

Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
http://www.figleaf.com/
http://training.figleaf.com/

Fig Leaf Software is a Veteran-Owned Small Business (VOSB) on
GSA Schedule, and provides the highest caliber vendor-authorized
instruction at our training centers, online, or onsite.

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs - Move to CF-Community??

2010-01-22 Thread Leigh

 I realize this is OT, but if you're using Gmail/Google
 Apps, you can
 mute a thread:
 http://mail.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?hl=enanswer=47787

Thanks for the tip Dave. I did not know that one :)


  

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-22 Thread Kai Koenig

ColdFusion as a platform is most certainly not on its last legs.

As always, this statement comes with a big it depends. It's a matter
of fact that the attention ColdFusion gets in the Pacific market (that
also includes New Zealand) from the local Adobe office equals to
nil. Adobe Australia is a pure LC ES, Flex and CS 4/5-driven sales
organisation. I'm not saying this is right or wrong either way, it's just
as it is.

What that leads to though is ColdFusion not getting any marketing
recognition and exposure - not even during Adobe's own Refresh events
in AU and NZ supposed to cover some of the MAX news locally - just 
have a glance at the agenda and try to spot ColdFusion:

http://events.adobe.co.uk/cgi-bin/event.cgi?country=paeventid=9155

I guess what people are saying is that the market for ColdFusion 
developers in Pacific is hard and Adobe is not helping at all. 
Here in NZ I'm seeing large government departments moving away from
CF because CIOs got with the flow and jump on .NET, Rails and others.
Sure they would - getting bombarded by buzzwords I can see why 
they go with mainstream products and technologies, if they fail they 
can at least say: I did what everyone else did.

I've heard and seen similar things happening in Australia and yes - 
the observation of fewer people starting any major new developments 
on the basis of CF is something I can certainly agree with. Some of that
would be driven by a weaker economy - as some people have said:
Australia and New Zealand have been in a downturn, but to compare
that to the economical slaughterhouse in Europe/US would be really
misleading. The economies down here are more or less in an ok state.

Someone is this thread said this was again the my country doesn't
get any love from Adobe situation (I think it was Sean). It might be,
yes. Unfortunately for Pacific that is the case since a particular and the
only CF-minded person in the local Adobe offices have left the country
to work for Adobe US. 

There are however a bunch of clients around that heavily rely on CF
and appreciate the value it can offer if applied properly. It's just a bit
more of a challenge to find those, but they certainly do exist. Flexibility
is the key though - one of my main clients is not even in the same 
country as I am and it still works perfectly fine to support them in their
CF undertakings. If one can't find work/clients in Sydney (or any other
city) look for Brisbane, Melbourne etc.

At the end of the day, discussing all this is riding a dead horse, it's
not changing anything. If people feel they can't make any more money
with coding in CF or providing consultancy services around the platform
it might be a good idea to step aside and learn a second/third/.../nth
technology. Actually that's a good idea for anyone imho - look around,
there's tons of cool stuff to play with - don't focus on one particular
product/language.

That is all :)

Kai


 
 Interesting, John.   Actually of those 32 jobs om Australia,   4 are
 in Sydney, the biggest city in the country,
 
 One is for a .NET developer  and exposure to Coldfusion would be an advantage,
 Another is for a FLASH developer with some exposure to Coldfusion.  So
 those two arent really coldfusion jobs.
 
 So that leaves 2 jobs in a city of 4.5million people.  One of those
 isnt really a coldfusion job - its coldfusion related - they're
 looking for a front-end developer in a web agency that uses coldfusion
 for their dynamic pages.  let's say its half a coldfusion job.   That
 means there are 1.5 coldfusion jobs according to Indeed.com.au.
 
 It's a paradox, but I think Andrew's right - the ColdFusion sites are
 steadily changing to other technologies - .Net or php mostly or java
 for the larger ones.   At least that's my perception. Last year i
 had my 3 biggest clients tell me they weren't doing any more
 development in Coldfusion  - they were switching to .NET in two cases,
 and Java in the other case.
 
 I'm not trying to whine and say Adobe should solve all my problems.
 But it is a worrying trend, and I'd like to know what (if anything) is
 being done to reverse it.
 
 Right now,  it seems no one really is putting too much effort into
 creating new ColdFusion sites, at least here in Sydney.  From what I
 see anyway.
 
 Cheers
 Mike Kear
 Windsor, NSW, Australia
 Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer
 AFP Webworks
 http://afpwebworks.com
 ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from AUD$15/month
 
 
 On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 11:53 PM, John M Bliss bliss.j...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Surely most of the people who read Mike's original message do not live in
 Australia and do not have first-hand knowledge of the state of CF there.
 However, Mike's subject was not Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs
 in Australia and several of his points seemed to be non-Australia-specific.
 
 http://www.indeed.com.au/jobs?q=coldfusion+or+cold+fusion;
 
 ...returns 32 jobs: 1 CF job for every 691,348 Australians.
 
 http

Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-22 Thread Kai Koenig

Sean, as much as we disagree about the unique-ness situation of Pacific,
you're absolutely right that we have an awesome set of conferences 
covering CF (and other topics). I can't speak for the other people from
the region on this mailing list, but all the ones below you've mentioned
are on my absolutely-have-to-be-there list. 

Kai

 
 On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 3:36 PM, Andrew Scott andr...@andyscott.id.au wrote:
 We don't have the luxury of the conferences like you guys over their,
 although one individual has taken it upon himself to try to change this.
 
 webDU?
 
 Web on the Piste?
 
 cf.Objective(ANZ)?
 
 MXDU/webDU is pretty much a fixture on the calendar and now
 cf.Objective(ANZ) has joined the line-up - and is even more focused on
 CF.
 -- 
 Sean A Corfield -- (904) 302-SEAN
 Railo Technologies US -- http://getrailo.com/
 An Architect's View -- http://corfield.org/











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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-22 Thread Bryn Parrott

 Scott Stewart sstwebwo...@bellsouth.net wrote: 

 I have *never* seen an effective deployment of Sharepoint.

 You know, I have heard this many times, but it seems 
implausible. Why would CxOs continue to buy a product that 
takes so much work by so many expensive consultants to get 
it running? 

Because it cements said CxO into a job.
Its called 'make-work'.
And they will never be blamed for implementing Microsoft.
(sung to the tune of you'll never be blamed for buying IBM).



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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-22 Thread Daniel Baughman

Please move this discussion off list thx

Sent from my mobile device

On Jan 22, 2010, at 8:10 PM, Bryn Parrott  
bryn_parr...@internode.on.net wrote:


  Scott Stewart sstwebwo...@bellsouth.net wrote:

 I have *never* seen an effective deployment of Sharepoint.

 You know, I have heard this many times, but it seems
 implausible. Why would CxOs continue to buy a product that
 takes so much work by so many expensive consultants to get
 it running?

 Because it cements said CxO into a job.
 Its called 'make-work'.
 And they will never be blamed for implementing Microsoft.
 (sung to the tune of you'll never be blamed for buying IBM).



 

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-22 Thread Bryn Parrott

Well, we're talking about programming languages and most of them
succeed because of community momentum, not because of ACME Inc.
marketing them...
-- 
Sean A Corfield -- (904) 302-SEAN

A point we agree upon.  And the reason why I think postings like (Mike Kears) 
are dangerous because they are just more nails in the coffin of CF developer 
morale.

Sure, demand for CF work in Sydney has declined in the last year or so, but 
then demand has picked up in Brisbane, Melbourne, and Auckland.
Does Sydney really need someone to get up and say the obvious ?

Result of original post: CF developers up and leave town looking for work in 
greener fields - or change to .Net or PHP or Flash if they can ...
Follow on result: Clients look for CF developers and discover there is a 
shortage - can't get anyone to do the work...
Next: Employer takes the decision to move onto a technology for which they can 
more easily get competent developer resources. pick one

Cheers




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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-22 Thread Bryn Parrott

 you mean the days when CGI people were swearing that
coldfusion
weren't going anywhere, Flash was just a gleam in Future Splash's pants,
And I.E. was Leno and Netscape was Conan? Lol

Yep ... Back in the good old days when there was no competing technology ...
..er hem.. 

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Bryn Parrott

Mike:

[A] there is almost no new development going on in ColdFusion   

An exaggeration I think.  Yes, there are less jobs, but mostly this comes down 
to the effects of the recession. In times of uncertainty, companies invest less 
where there is perceived risk. Web Application development is perceived as high 
risk.  I've noticed that the number of jobs advertised lately seems to have 
picked up.
But we still have the same old trick by recruiters that tend to turn one job 
into what looks like 8, due to multi-agency sourcing by employers.

You have to ask youself why they do that, and I suggest that its because 
employers are finding it hard to get the right sort of candidates for the few 
jobs they are offering.


[B] There is next-to no apparent activity in the Usergroups on
coldfusion, at least as far as I've seen.

I've observed the same thing over a period of 10 years or so.  The Cold Fusion 
market is mature, there are fewer newbies out there asking dumb questions.
Cold Fusion is no longer seen as the new fashioned thing, rather the opposite, 
even by its proponents.


[C]  Adobe dont seem to be doing anything to promote ColdFusion here.

Thats always been true (but substitute Macromedia as well) except for the time 
it was owned by J Allaire.  Cold Fusion has always been driven by enthusiasm 
among its development fraternity.

It would help if Adobe were to make an investment in Cold Fusion, it would be 
along the lines of making it more robust and less risky for companies wanting 
to invest.
Some attention to incomplete product features (stuff that looks good but does 
not work or is hard to use) and less attention to new features unless they are 
essential to making it compete.

Cold Fusion certainly has its threats, with .Net, PHP, Python  etc 
alternatives out there.  Originally CF had the game to itself and it was an 
original concept that helped ignite enthusiasm and help to turn the web into 
what it is today.  Now the market is bigger and there is more competition when 
it comes to deciding what technology for a new project to get built in.
The new-fashioned technologies get picked because they are shinier and well, 
not so old-fashioned.  Not because they are any better.  But building something 
in CF will generally get done faster [ If they can hire enough programmers ]
But the opposition too are affected by the same industry wide problems seen by 
CF, that is the recession  declining investment in web applications.

Really though, given that CF is driven by enthusiasm, it does not help morale 
to have these all too frequent widely broadcast 'Chicken Little' type message 
events.
If you feel that way, put together the message and then do a global search on 
your message and replace on it (replacing CF with C-Sharp) and send it into the 
message boards for one of our competitors. (and then duck for cover).  In other 
words, go off quietly and don't bother the CF community about your doubts.  We 
all know about the problem.If on the other hand you come up with a positive 
contribution that helps to lift morale, then tell the world about it.

When you are discussing these matters with your friends, remind them and 
yourself of why CF always was and still remains a great concept with great 
productivity that to this day does things no other web development platform 
does.  It is a proprietary platform but which is flexible enough to permit a 
wide variety of programming techniques.


Boy i hope I'm wrong!

Yep, well IMO you are.


Cheers,
Bryn Parrott
Perth, Australia


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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Bryn Parrott

Mike:

[A] there is almost no new development going on in ColdFusion   

An exaggeration I think.  Yes, there are less jobs, but mostly this comes down 
to the effects of the recession. In times of uncertainty, companies invest less 
where there is perceived risk. Web Application development is perceived as high 
risk.  I've noticed that the number of jobs advertised lately seems to have 
picked up.
But we still have the same old trick by recruiters that tend to turn one job 
into what looks like 8, due to multi-agency sourcing by employers.

You have to ask youself why they do that, and I suggest that its because 
employers are finding it hard to get the right sort of candidates for the few 
jobs they are offering.


[B] There is next-to no apparent activity in the Usergroups on
coldfusion, at least as far as I've seen.

I've observed the same thing over a period of 10 years or so.  The Cold Fusion 
market is mature, there are fewer newbies out there asking dumb questions.
Cold Fusion is no longer seen as the new fashioned thing, rather the opposite, 
even by its proponents.


[C]  Adobe dont seem to be doing anything to promote ColdFusion here.

Thats always been true (but substitute Macromedia as well) except for the time 
it was owned by J Allaire.  Cold Fusion has always been driven by enthusiasm 
among its development fraternity.

It would help if Adobe were to make an investment in Cold Fusion, it would be 
along the lines of making it more robust and less risky for companies wanting 
to invest.
Some attention to incomplete product features (stuff that looks good but does 
not work or is hard to use) and less attention to new features unless they are 
essential to making it compete.

Cold Fusion certainly has its threats, with .Net, PHP, Python  etc 
alternatives out there.  Originally CF had the game to itself and it was an 
original concept that helped ignite enthusiasm and help to turn the web into 
what it is today.  Now the market is bigger and there is more competition when 
it comes to deciding what technology for a new project to get built in.
The new-fashioned technologies get picked because they are shinier and well, 
not so old-fashioned.  Not because they are any better.  But building something 
in CF will generally get done faster [ If they can hire enough programmers ]
But the opposition too are affected by the same industry wide problems seen by 
CF, that is the recession  declining investment in web applications.

Really though, given that CF is driven by enthusiasm, it does not help morale 
to have these all too frequent widely broadcast 'Chicken Little' type message 
events.
If you feel that way, put together the message and then do a global search on 
your message and replace on it (replacing CF with C-Sharp) and send it into the 
message boards for one of our competitors. (and then duck for cover).  In other 
words, go off quietly and don't bother the CF community about your doubts.  We 
all know about the problem.If on the other hand you come up with a positive 
contribution that helps to lift morale, then tell the world about it.

When you are discussing these matters with your friends, remind them and 
yourself of why CF always was and still remains a great concept with great 
productivity that to this day does things no other web development platform 
does.  It is a proprietary platform but which is flexible enough to permit a 
wide variety of programming techniques.


Boy i hope I'm wrong!

Yep, well IMO you are.


Cheers,
Bryn Parrott
Perth, Australia


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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Tom Chiverton

Wow ? Seriously ? ColdFusion is dead ? *Again* :-)

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Helping to continually develop front-end next-generation edge-of-your-seat 
holistic mindshares as part of the IT team of the year, '09 and '08



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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread John M Bliss

Anecdotal but still interesting(?): I'm not actively job-searching but I do
receive email-notifications re: new CF opportunities from:

- GetColdFusionJobs.com
- LinkedIn - CFManiacs:ColdFusion Developers Group
- LinkedIn - ColdFusion - 3000+ Members!
- LinkedIn - ColdFusion
- cf-j...@houseoffusion.com
- Indeed.com
- Monster.com
- etc

Many messages contain more than one opportunity.  Some messages contain
duplicate opportunities.  Here're the message counts:

Jun - 95
Jul - 98
Aug - 101
Sep - 103
Oct - 134
Nov - 144
Dec - 146
Jan - 56 so far

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 1:53 AM, Andy Allan andy.al...@gmail.com wrote:


 There was a lot of activity in Europe in 2009:

 * ColdFusion Insider Workshop Tour, which visited a good dozen
 European countries if not more
 * Ben Forta UG Tour, probably visiting half a dozen countries, if not more
 * Scotch on the Road UK and Scotch on the Road Europe, which visited
 Scotland, England, Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Netherlands and
 Belgium

 For 2010 I know Ben Forta is coming back, because the Netherland CFUG
 has announced a date in March, and Scotch on the Rocks is back to
 running in a single location on May 24/25 in London.

 Andy

 2010/1/21 Sean Corfield seancorfi...@gmail.com:
 
 
  [C]  Adobe dont seem to be doing anything to promote ColdFusion here.
 
  That's been a long-standing complaint since the Macromedia days
  {insert country here} gets no love. Adobe added a European
  specialist (Claude Englebert) and were looking at how best to support
  the APAC market - but these are not simple problems to solve and there
  is no unlimited marketing budget.
 

 --
 andy.al...@gmail.com
 www.fuzzyorange.co.uk
 www.andyallan.com
 www.scotch-on-the-rocks.co.u

 

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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Andrew Scott

Not in Australia, and Mike is right the jobs are not there for ColdFusion
developers in Australia.

Australia is not in a recession, America might be. But we refuse to
acknowledge this, and our economy here is actually very strong in a lot of
areas.

The job market here has continued to reflect that Companies are moving to
other technologies because it is getting harder and harder to get good
ColdFusion developers. This has not changed in the last 10 years.

If anyone wishes to reflect that we are in a recession then please Explain
how the jobs for ColdFusion began declining in 1999, and have continued to
drop for ColdFusion?

Again let me say this, the Australian IT industry is thriving, just not the
ColdFusion side of it. If there are no developers to replace, then the
companies have no choice but to look at moving to another technology where
developers and resources can be replaced, this hasn't changed in the last 10
years either.

It really sickens me that the excuse of a recession is used, are you saying
that we have been in a recession for the last 10 years Sean? I don't thinks
so.



-Original Message-
From: Sean Corfield [mailto:seancorfi...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Thursday, 21 January 2010 6:03 PM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs


The pool of CFers is constantly growing. Rates are still higher for
CFers than most other web technologies. There are more CFML
conferences and events than ever.

But there is a recession going on - and that hurts everyone.


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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread John M Bliss

Surely most of the people who read Mike's original message do not live in
Australia and do not have first-hand knowledge of the state of CF there.
However, Mike's subject was not Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs
in Australia and several of his points seemed to be non-Australia-specific.

http://www.indeed.com.au/jobs?q=coldfusion+or+cold+fusion;

...returns 32 jobs: 1 CF job for every 691,348 Australians.

http://www.indeed.com/jobs?q=coldfusion+OR+cold+fusion;

...returns 2,644 jobs: 1 CF job for every 116,688 Americans.


On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 3:42 AM, Andrew Scott andr...@andyscott.id.auwrote:


 Not in Australia, and Mike is right the jobs are not there for ColdFusion
 developers in Australia.

 Australia is not in a recession, America might be. But we refuse to
 acknowledge this, and our economy here is actually very strong in a lot of
 areas.

 The job market here has continued to reflect that Companies are moving to
 other technologies because it is getting harder and harder to get good
 ColdFusion developers. This has not changed in the last 10 years.

 If anyone wishes to reflect that we are in a recession then please Explain
 how the jobs for ColdFusion began declining in 1999, and have continued to
 drop for ColdFusion?

 Again let me say this, the Australian IT industry is thriving, just not the
 ColdFusion side of it. If there are no developers to replace, then the
 companies have no choice but to look at moving to another technology where
 developers and resources can be replaced, this hasn't changed in the last
 10
 years either.

 It really sickens me that the excuse of a recession is used, are you saying
 that we have been in a recession for the last 10 years Sean? I don't thinks
 so.



 -Original Message-
 From: Sean Corfield [mailto:seancorfi...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Thursday, 21 January 2010 6:03 PM
 To: cf-talk
 Subject: Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs


 The pool of CFers is constantly growing. Rates are still higher for
 CFers than most other web technologies. There are more CFML
 conferences and events than ever.

 But there is a recession going on - and that hurts everyone.


 

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Mike Kear

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 6:02 PM, Sean Corfield seancorfi...@gmail.com wrote:
 Ah, Mike, how long's it been since your last ColdFusion is dead post?

A very long time.   In the past i have joined discussions on this
topic, saying something along the lines that 'even if Adobe announced
the cancellation of the product, there would still be jobs around'.
I have never felt pessimistic about this line of work until now.

 Contrast this with a few years ago when
 freelancers like me had jobs lined up one behind the other.

 Contrast this with a few years ago when we weren't in the biggest
 recession since... when? WWII? The Great Depression?


The US and Europe might be, but Australia isnt.   We havent been hit
to anywhere near the extent that other countries have.   Yes we have a
down-turn, but not like elsewhere.



 [B] There is next-to no apparent activity in the Usergroups on
 coldfusion, at least as far as I've seen.  Everyone's fussing about
 Flex and Flash and Railo and Ruby on Rails and no one's talking about
 ColdFusion.

 OK, now you're the *fourth* person to say the same thing to me
 today... What is up with user groups that I'm hearing this so much
 lately?

My point about the UGs is that my feeling (which i keep saying i hope
is wrong) is that CF is cold now and even developers arent talking
much about it.  Instead talking about Flex, Ajax, Flash,  other stuff.
   I get the impression you dont talk about CF any where near as much
as you used to, Sean.



 [C]  Adobe dont seem to be doing anything to promote ColdFusion here.

 That's been a long-standing complaint since the Macromedia days
 {insert country here} gets no love. Adobe added a European
 specialist (Claude Englebert) and were looking at how best to support
 the APAC market - but these are not simple problems to solve and there
 is no unlimited marketing budget.

Never said there was.   But as things get harder for me,  I look for
signs that might tell me what I ought to do about it.   Should I hang
in with CF or maybe do something else? And one of the worries i
have that I hope someone will prove is foundless, is that the
impression I get is that Adobe arent promoting ColdFusion much in
Australia.I had an Adobe guy tell me a while back we're in the
IDE and Development Tool business  not the server business.  I dont
know why we have ColdFusion at all.That was a bit disquieting at
the time, and I wonder . what if that feeling was widespread in Adobe?
   What if they start seeing CF as an orphan?


 Boy i hope I'm wrong!

 You are :)

Good then!


 The pool of CFers is constantly growing. Rates are still higher for
 CFers than most other web technologies. There are more CFML
 conferences and events than ever.


There is an extra CF conference here in 2009, but i dont see evidence
of the rest.   Rate pressure down more,   fewer jobs than ever before.


-
Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer
AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com
ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from AUD$15/mon

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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-21 Thread Will Swain

I read it as a commentary on the state of cf in general, not specifically in
Australia.

Can we amend the subject line - we really don't need more grist for the 'cf
is dead' mill

-Original Message-
From: John M Bliss [mailto:bliss.j...@gmail.com] 
Sent: 21 January 2010 12:54
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs


Surely most of the people who read Mike's original message do not live in
Australia and do not have first-hand knowledge of the state of CF there.
However, Mike's subject was not Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs
in Australia and several of his points seemed to be non-Australia-specific.

http://www.indeed.com.au/jobs?q=coldfusion+or+cold+fusion;

...returns 32 jobs: 1 CF job for every 691,348 Australians.

http://www.indeed.com/jobs?q=coldfusion+OR+cold+fusion;

...returns 2,644 jobs: 1 CF job for every 116,688 Americans.



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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Jose Diaz

I live in Surrey and work in London, I have seen a decline on the job boards
for Coldfusion - Some of that most certainly due to the recession :( but
alot due to CIO's following the trends. I currently work for a company that
has ditched CF and moved to C#.net all because the new CIO came from taht
background.

A number of other big players in London are also ditching CF and moving to
.net which I find really frustrating, I guarantee this is all decisions made
at the top - The upper management in organisations dont understand the value
of CF and I blame alot of that on the bad press coverage that Adobe
provides.

I am a die hard CF fan but I am finding myself having to go down a C#.net
route to retain the daily rates I am getting. If I look on
jobserve.co.ukand search for CF roles there are like 3 pages covering
the whole of the UK,
if I do the same search for C#.net there are about 20+ pages of roles.

This frustrates hell out of me. CF is AWESOME and i want to continue using
it!!!

Jose

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 9:42 AM, Andrew Scott andr...@andyscott.id.auwrote:


 Not in Australia, and Mike is right the jobs are not there for ColdFusion
 developers in Australia.

 Australia is not in a recession, America might be. But we refuse to
 acknowledge this, and our economy here is actually very strong in a lot of
 areas.

 The job market here has continued to reflect that Companies are moving to
 other technologies because it is getting harder and harder to get good
 ColdFusion developers. This has not changed in the last 10 years.

 If anyone wishes to reflect that we are in a recession then please Explain
 how the jobs for ColdFusion began declining in 1999, and have continued to
 drop for ColdFusion?

 Again let me say this, the Australian IT industry is thriving, just not the
 ColdFusion side of it. If there are no developers to replace, then the
 companies have no choice but to look at moving to another technology where
 developers and resources can be replaced, this hasn't changed in the last
 10
 years either.

 It really sickens me that the excuse of a recession is used, are you saying
 that we have been in a recession for the last 10 years Sean? I don't thinks
 so.



 -Original Message-
 From: Sean Corfield [mailto:seancorfi...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Thursday, 21 January 2010 6:03 PM
 To: cf-talk
 Subject: Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs


 The pool of CFers is constantly growing. Rates are still higher for
 CFers than most other web technologies. There are more CFML
 conferences and events than ever.

 But there is a recession going on - and that hurts everyone.


 

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Mike Kear

Interesting, John.   Actually of those 32 jobs om Australia,   4 are
in Sydney, the biggest city in the country,

One is for a .NET developer  and exposure to Coldfusion would be an advantage,
Another is for a FLASH developer with some exposure to Coldfusion.  So
those two arent really coldfusion jobs.

So that leaves 2 jobs in a city of 4.5million people.  One of those
isnt really a coldfusion job - its coldfusion related - they're
looking for a front-end developer in a web agency that uses coldfusion
for their dynamic pages.  let's say its half a coldfusion job.   That
means there are 1.5 coldfusion jobs according to Indeed.com.au.

It's a paradox, but I think Andrew's right - the ColdFusion sites are
steadily changing to other technologies - .Net or php mostly or java
for the larger ones.   At least that's my perception. Last year i
had my 3 biggest clients tell me they weren't doing any more
development in Coldfusion  - they were switching to .NET in two cases,
and Java in the other case.

I'm not trying to whine and say Adobe should solve all my problems.
But it is a worrying trend, and I'd like to know what (if anything) is
being done to reverse it.

Right now,  it seems no one really is putting too much effort into
creating new ColdFusion sites, at least here in Sydney.  From what I
see anyway.

Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer
AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com
ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from AUD$15/month


On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 11:53 PM, John M Bliss bliss.j...@gmail.com wrote:

 Surely most of the people who read Mike's original message do not live in
 Australia and do not have first-hand knowledge of the state of CF there.
 However, Mike's subject was not Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs
 in Australia and several of his points seemed to be non-Australia-specific.

 http://www.indeed.com.au/jobs?q=coldfusion+or+cold+fusion;

 ...returns 32 jobs: 1 CF job for every 691,348 Australians.

 http://www.indeed.com/jobs?q=coldfusion+OR+cold+fusion;

 ...returns 2,644 jobs: 1 CF job for every 116,688 Americans.




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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Phillip Vector

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 5:17 AM, Mike Kear afpwebwo...@gmail.com wrote:

 Interesting, John.   Actually of those 32 jobs om Australia,   4 are
 in Sydney, the biggest city in the country,

So go to the 28 other jobs and explain to them why telecommuting would
be good for their company and expand your pool.

Either that or move if the job market is that bad out there.

Sorry if I offend, but it seems that you want the perfect job in the
perfect place and it isn't working out. So instead of you doing
something about it, you are claiming that no one wants CF developers
anymor

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-21 Thread Mike Kear

What would be a whole lot better is if someone said 'no you are wrong,
Mike,  look at all the things we're doing to promote Coldfusion to
.net/php/java users:
a:
b:
c:
etc'

 or
No Mike, you're wrong the server customer base has increased over the
last year by xx%
or
No Mike, we presented at a .Net conference in Sydney last July,  and
at a .php conference in Melbourne in August ...  etc 

but there's none of that at all.  Not a sound.

Not even 'hey look at the great new user that bought CF Enterprise!
...'  or look at this great new CF application that XXX Pty Ltd put
in ..

Nothing from Adobe.  I might be wrong - I hope I am,  but Adobe didnt
know much about what to do with a server product when they bought
Macromedia,  and I got the impression that many Adobe people see it as
a bit of an orphan,  a bit of a non-core product,  and not a good
career move in Adobe to be associated with it unless you're Ben Forta.
  I got the feeling that Adobe people think it's something they got
stuck with when they bought Macromedia for what they REALLY wanted -
Flash and Dreamweaver.

Certainly in Australia i have yet to hear of anyone at Adobe who is
annoyed because I am painting them in a bad light that's undeserved.

Let me say here and now that I will VERY rapidly change my tune on
this if anyone can show me that I'm wrong about this.But let me
summarise the 3 main factors:

[A] hardly any jobs for over a year now
[B] hardly any promotion activity on ColdFusion apart from preaching
to the converted at CF Conferences
[C]  Very little or no interest in Coldfusion from the usergroups.

Does that add up to a vibrant, growing, thriving community?

Either prove me wrong someone,  or stop bashing me for being critical
and for gods sake lets poke someone in the ribs who's in a position to
DO SOMETHING about it!

Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer
AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com
ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from AUD$15/month


On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 12:00 AM, Will Swain w...@hothorse.com wrote:

 I read it as a commentary on the state of cf in general, not specifically in
 Australia.

 Can we amend the subject line - we really don't need more grist for the 'cf
 is dead' mill



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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Mike Kear

No, Phillip.  I have been busy all year, but i dug up projects of my
own.  What i am concerned about is the apparent lack of activity on
the part of anyone to get new ColdFusion sites up and going, while
most of us can point to CF sites that have gone to other technologies.

Go ahead.  Bash me. if it amuses you. Bash away. But it doesnt change
the problem.  Its ignoring the problem I'm trying so hard to point
out.   We're all so scared to say that Adobe arent doing much because
we might be labelled one of the ColdFusion is dead crew  that it's
just being neglected.  At least that's how it seems to me, and there
is NO ONE who has made any effort to tell me I'm wrong about that.

Look I know the signs.  I spent more than 20 years in Sales
Management,  Sales to Government (state and Federal departments) and
major accounts sales.  I know what major sales activity looks like.
And I havent seen any.  I could easily be wrong because I dont mix in
those circles any more.I have a son in product management in the
biggest IT distributor in Australia.   He also says there is no
apparent activity happening in ColdFusion that they can see.   He also
could easily be wrong about ColdFusion because he also might be
talking to people who wouldnt know about CF.

I'm not asking for anyone to reveal projects that are delicate and
might fall over.  I'm not asking anyone to reveal confidential
information.  But surely there is SOMETHING someone can point to that
says Adobe are promoting ColdFusion in Australia.  Where is the trade
show presentation?   What about a booth at a .Net conference?   Any
presentations at Adobe gatherings?   What about when Adobe had the
presentations to potential customers last year,was anything said
about ColdFusion then?   I didnt see anything mentioned about CF on
the agenda so I didnt go.  I had a living to earn.   Any ads placed?
Any mailouts done?  Any brochures printed?  Did anyone actually make a
phone call to any potential new CF customer?

Or have they decided to spend their efforts on development tools and
IDEs and just let the server product manage itself?

All I know is what I see with my own eyes.  And for daring to speak
about it,  I'm getting slammed as one of the ColdFusion is dead
people.


Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer
AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com
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On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 12:22 AM, Phillip Vector
vec...@mostdeadlygame.com wrote:

 On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 5:17 AM, Mike Kear afpwebwo...@gmail.com wrote:

 Interesting, John.   Actually of those 32 jobs om Australia,   4 are
 in Sydney, the biggest city in the country,

 So go to the 28 other jobs and explain to them why telecommuting would
 be good for their company and expand your pool.

 Either that or move if the job market is that bad out there.

 Sorry if I offend, but it seems that you want the perfect job in the
 perfect place and it isn't working out. So instead of you doing
 something about it, you are claiming that no one wants CF developers
 anymor

 

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Mike Kear

You are being a jerk Phillip.  I'm talking about one of the world's
largest and most sophisticated cities.   The largest city in a very
advanced economy.  And in this city of nearly 5 million people there
are apparently 4 jobs for people involving ColdFusion, and of those,
only 2 actually want any ColdFusion programming.

If I was Adobe's CEO I'd be reading the riot act about it.

This is how it's been for over a year,  in a country that DID NOT go
into recession.

I'm not complaining because I cant have the perfect job in the perfect
place and I'm not going to accept anything less.  That's insulting.

I'm not sitting idly waiting for money to fall into my hands.   That's
insulting too.

And how dare you presume to decide for me that I should uproot my
family, kids, sell my house, move my businesses,  find help for my
disabled wife,  when you havent got a clue about my personal
situation.  Life's all very easy when you dont have to worry about
little details like that - when it's not YOUR family you are tipping
upside down.

Dont be a jerk.  Actually READ what i'm saying or shut the hell up.

Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer
AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com
ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from AUD$15/month



On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 12:22 AM, Phillip Vector
vec...@mostdeadlygame.com wrote:

 On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 5:17 AM, Mike Kear afpwebwo...@gmail.com wrote:

 Interesting, John.   Actually of those 32 jobs om Australia,   4 are
 in Sydney, the biggest city in the country,

 So go to the 28 other jobs and explain to them why telecommuting would
 be good for their company and expand your pool.

 Either that or move if the job market is that bad out there.

 Sorry if I offend, but it seems that you want the perfect job in the
 perfect place and it isn't working out. So instead of you doing
 something about it, you are claiming that no one wants CF developers
 anymor





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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Phillip Vector

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 5:54 AM, Mike Kear afpwebwo...@gmail.com wrote:

 Go ahead.  Bash me. if it amuses you. Bash away. But it doesnt change
 the problem.  Its ignoring the problem I'm trying so hard to point
 out.   We're all so scared to say that Adobe arent doing much because
 we might be labelled one of the ColdFusion is dead crew  that it's
 just being neglected.  At least that's how it seems to me, and there
 is NO ONE who has made any effort to tell me I'm wrong about that.

First of all, I'm not bashing you. I am merely pointing out how it
looks from my point of view. I'm sorry if you took that as bashing. No
need to get defensive. :)

 I'm not asking for anyone to reveal projects that are delicate and
 might fall over.  I'm not asking anyone to reveal confidential
 information.  But surely there is SOMETHING someone can point to that
 says Adobe are promoting ColdFusion in Australia.

Ah.. So you are complaining about CF in Australia. My bad. I thought
you were talking about ColdFusion in general.

Again I will say, if CF is that bad in Australia, telecommute or move
to someplace that it IS good. I'm pretty sure CF is dying in Tuvalu as
well, but if I lived there, I would look into other options.

 Or have they decided to spend their efforts on development tools and
 IDEs and just let the server product manage itself?

Considering they are about to release CF9 (or have they already? I
just use 8 currently), I doubt they are giving up on it.

 All I know is what I see with my own eyes.  And for daring to speak
 about it,  I'm getting slammed as one of the ColdFusion is dead
 people.

Because you are saying it.

i think the trends tell me ColdFusion is either a dead duck of soon
to be a dead duck

You aren't getting slammed either. We are trying to explain how you
are incorrect and you seem to not want t

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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Robert Harrison

THE RUMORS OF MY DEMISE ARE GREATLY EXAGERATED - Mark Twain


Just a couple of comments on this issue:

1. We are deploying new CF sites every month. Many are major... banks,
universities, colleges, credit unions, hospitals, etc.

2. Jack Henry is one of the major providers of on-line banking services in
the US. We work with them all the time. They are pure CF, and are a major
player in the US banking industry. We also have several major financial
clients (securities and investments - SEC stuff) who are pure CF.

3.  We have no problems selling CF driven sites. The core issue is the power
of the applications, good design and solid architecture... rarely does it
come to language.

4. I've been doing CF for way more than I decade. I hear this doom saying
rant every couple of years. If I'd have listened to it the first time I
heard it I'd have abandoned CF when it was still owned by Allaire, instead
I've enjoyed a great career developing CF and I am not highly concerned for
at least the next several years.

If anyone ever does kill CF it will probably be the self-fulfilling prophecy
created by chatter like this :-)


Robert B. Harrison
Director of Interactive Services
Austin  Williams
125 Kennedy Drive, Suite 100 
Hauppauge NY 11788
P : 631.231.6600 Ext. 119 
F : 631.434.7022
http://www.austin-williams.com 

Great advertising can't be either/or.  It must be .

Plug in to our blog: AW Unplugged
http://www.austin-williams.com/unplugged

 

__ Information from ESET Smart Security, version of virus signature
database 4793 (20100121) __

The message was checked by ESET Smart Security.

http://www.eset.com
 

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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-21 Thread Will Swain

I'll take your word for it on the state of the cf market in Australia. You
live and work there, and have first hand experience. Would like to hear from
other Aus based cfers too on this.

But, you have to see how your initial post and the thread title were
misleading.



-Original Message-
From: Mike Kear [mailto:afpwebwo...@gmail.com] 
Sent: 21 January 2010 14:07
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs


You are being a jerk Phillip.  I'm talking about one of the world's
largest and most sophisticated cities.   The largest city in a very
advanced economy.  And in this city of nearly 5 million people there
are apparently 4 jobs for people involving ColdFusion, and of those,
only 2 actually want any ColdFusion programming.

If I was Adobe's CEO I'd be reading the riot act about it.

This is how it's been for over a year,  in a country that DID NOT go
into recession.

I'm not complaining because I cant have the perfect job in the perfect
place and I'm not going to accept anything less.  That's insulting.

I'm not sitting idly waiting for money to fall into my hands.   That's
insulting too.

And how dare you presume to decide for me that I should uproot my
family, kids, sell my house, move my businesses,  find help for my
disabled wife,  when you havent got a clue about my personal
situation.  Life's all very easy when you dont have to worry about
little details like that - when it's not YOUR family you are tipping
upside down.

Dont be a jerk.  Actually READ what i'm saying or shut the hell up.

Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer
AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com
ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from AUD$15/month



On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 12:22 AM, Phillip Vector
vec...@mostdeadlygame.com wrote:

 On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 5:17 AM, Mike Kear afpwebwo...@gmail.com wrote:

 Interesting, John.   Actually of those 32 jobs om Australia,   4 are
 in Sydney, the biggest city in the country,

 So go to the 28 other jobs and explain to them why telecommuting would
 be good for their company and expand your pool.

 Either that or move if the job market is that bad out there.

 Sorry if I offend, but it seems that you want the perfect job in the
 perfect place and it isn't working out. So instead of you doing
 something about it, you are claiming that no one wants CF developers
 anymor







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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Andy Matthews

Could it be perhaps that you're not looking in the right locations for these
jobs?

I'd guess that a portion of it is that CF developers aren't moving
positions, which means that the positions that ARE out there are currently
filled. While that could also mean that there's no growth in CF, it most
likely means that the economy is bad and no one is hiring period.

On the other hand my company in Nashville TN has hired 2 CF developers in
the last 3 months and is looking to hire 2 more.

Take from that what you will. 


Andy Matthews
Dealerskins

-Original Message-
From: Mike Kear [mailto:afpwebwo...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2010 7:18 AM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs


Interesting, John.   Actually of those 32 jobs om Australia,   4 are
in Sydney, the biggest city in the country,

One is for a .NET developer  and exposure to Coldfusion would be an
advantage, Another is for a FLASH developer with some exposure to
Coldfusion.  So those two arent really coldfusion jobs.

So that leaves 2 jobs in a city of 4.5million people.  One of those isnt
really a coldfusion job - its coldfusion related - they're looking for a
front-end developer in a web agency that uses coldfusion
for their dynamic pages.  let's say its half a coldfusion job.   That
means there are 1.5 coldfusion jobs according to Indeed.com.au.

It's a paradox, but I think Andrew's right - the ColdFusion sites are
steadily changing to other technologies - .Net or php mostly or java
for the larger ones.   At least that's my perception. Last year i
had my 3 biggest clients tell me they weren't doing any more development in
Coldfusion  - they were switching to .NET in two cases, and Java in the
other case.

I'm not trying to whine and say Adobe should solve all my problems.
But it is a worrying trend, and I'd like to know what (if anything) is being
done to reverse it.

Right now,  it seems no one really is putting too much effort into creating
new ColdFusion sites, at least here in Sydney.  From what I see anyway.

Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from
AUD$15/month


On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 11:53 PM, John M Bliss bliss.j...@gmail.com wrote:

 Surely most of the people who read Mike's original message do not live 
 in Australia and do not have first-hand knowledge of the state of CF
there.
 However, Mike's subject was not Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last 
 legs in Australia and several of his points seemed to be
non-Australia-specific.

 http://www.indeed.com.au/jobs?q=coldfusion+or+cold+fusion;

 ...returns 32 jobs: 1 CF job for every 691,348 Australians.

 http://www.indeed.com/jobs?q=coldfusion+OR+cold+fusion;

 ...returns 2,644 jobs: 1 CF job for every 116,688 Americans.






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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Phillip Vector

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 6:06 AM, Mike Kear afpwebwo...@gmail.com wrote:

 You are being a jerk Phillip.

Sorry I come across that way. It isn't my intent. If you wish to
consider me a jerk and that makes you feel better, then feel free.

  I'm talking about one of the world's
 largest and most sophisticated cities.   The largest city in a very
 advanced economy.  And in this city of nearly 5 million people there
 are apparently 4 jobs for people involving ColdFusion, and of those,
 only 2 actually want any ColdFusion programming.

Actually, according to the world atlas..
(http://www.worldatlas.com/citypops.htm)
73. Sydney, Australia - 3,665,000

As for the 2 jobs, are you really locked into only working in Sydney?
Is telecommuting a difficult thing for you to do?

 This is how it's been for over a year,  in a country that DID NOT go
 into recession.

Actually, it did.

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/australia-in-recession-imf/story-e6frg6n6-118720026

True, it didn't hit you guys as hard as the rest of the world..

Australia's forecast -0.2pc growth this year is not as dire as the US
(-1.6pc), Europe (-2pc), the UK (-2.8 pc) and Japan (-2.6pc).

But it still had one and that is probably a factor (note that I didn't
say cause, but a factor) in the less then stellar job market.

 I'm not complaining because I cant have the perfect job in the perfect
 place and I'm not going to accept anything less.  That's insulting.

Well, that is how it appears to me. My mistake.

 I'm not sitting idly waiting for money to fall into my hands.   That's
 insulting too.

Never said you were. Please do not mis-state what I am saying.

 And how dare you presume to decide for me that I should uproot my
 family, kids, sell my house, move my businesses,  find help for my
 disabled wife,  when you havent got a clue about my personal
 situation.  Life's all very easy when you dont have to worry about
 little details like that - when it's not YOUR family you are tipping
 upside down.

If I didn't have a job, I would move me and my family to get one. But
you seem to be forgetting about the telecommuting option I mentioned.
Do you usually focus on the worst solution only?

 Dont be a jerk.  Actually READ what i'm saying or shut the hell up.

I read it. I'm giving my opinion on what I read. I'm done.

 Cheers


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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-21 Thread Andy Matthews

Actually Adobe has been saying since cf.Objective 2009 (I was there in
person) that their user based has grown 300% over the last 5 years. From
250k users around 2004 to over 800k users in 2008/2009.

As for XYZ company just bought CF Enterprise, they're not going to share
that with you unless it's for a white paper. Have you gone to the Adobe site
to see if they've released white papers?

It just seems like that unless you're personally looking for a CF job and
can't find one, why do you care if other people think CF is dead?



Andy matthews
 

-Original Message-
From: Mike Kear [mailto:afpwebwo...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2010 7:34 AM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia


What would be a whole lot better is if someone said 'no you are wrong, Mike,
look at all the things we're doing to promote Coldfusion to .net/php/java
users:
a:
b:
c:
etc'

 or
No Mike, you're wrong the server customer base has increased over the last
year by xx%
or
No Mike, we presented at a .Net conference in Sydney last July,  and at a
.php conference in Melbourne in August ...  etc 

but there's none of that at all.  Not a sound.

Not even 'hey look at the great new user that bought CF Enterprise!
...'  or look at this great new CF application that XXX Pty Ltd put in ..

Nothing from Adobe.  I might be wrong - I hope I am,  but Adobe didnt know
much about what to do with a server product when they bought Macromedia,
and I got the impression that many Adobe people see it as a bit of an
orphan,  a bit of a non-core product,  and not a good career move in Adobe
to be associated with it unless you're Ben Forta.
  I got the feeling that Adobe people think it's something they got stuck
with when they bought Macromedia for what they REALLY wanted - Flash and
Dreamweaver.

Certainly in Australia i have yet to hear of anyone at Adobe who is annoyed
because I am painting them in a bad light that's undeserved.

Let me say here and now that I will VERY rapidly change my tune on
this if anyone can show me that I'm wrong about this.But let me
summarise the 3 main factors:

[A] hardly any jobs for over a year now
[B] hardly any promotion activity on ColdFusion apart from preaching to the
converted at CF Conferences [C]  Very little or no interest in Coldfusion
from the usergroups.

Does that add up to a vibrant, growing, thriving community?

Either prove me wrong someone,  or stop bashing me for being critical and
for gods sake lets poke someone in the ribs who's in a position to DO
SOMETHING about it!

Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from
AUD$15/month


On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 12:00 AM, Will Swain w...@hothorse.com wrote:

 I read it as a commentary on the state of cf in general, not 
 specifically in Australia.

 Can we amend the subject line - we really don't need more grist for 
 the 'cf is dead' mill





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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Casey Dougall

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 12:51 AM, Mike Kear afpwebwo...@gmail.com wrote:


 [A] there is almost no new development going on in ColdFusionIn
 the last 12 months there has been just a handful of coldfusion jobs
 advertised.   And most of those have been advertised by time-wasters
 who didnt end up appointing anyone. I'm sorry Mike, they've put that
 project on hold for now ... yada yada yada   (or so they said  maybe
 they were just too gutless to tell me i didnt get the assignment)   In
 the last 12 months i have had NOT ONE assignment as a result of any
 advertisements for CF developers.   If I hadnt dug up business on my
 own I'd have starved.   Contrast this with a few years ago when
 freelancers like me had jobs lined up one behind the other.   Maybe
 its just me,   maybe everyone else has lots of jobs lined up.  But
 somehow i doubt it.

 --
 Cheers
 Mike Kear
 Windsor, NSW, Australia
 Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer
 AFP Webworks
 http://afpwebworks.com
 ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from AUD$15/month


I'm not trying to knock your original post here about new ColdFusion
development I believe you...

Maybe I just don't understand what you are looking for.

Mom and Pop shops still need websites (the language used doesn't matter),
they may be smaller jobs ranging between $1,000 and $5,000 but people still
need websites!

The 5 to 10 page websites can still pay the bills, change your marketing
strategy :-)


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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Justin Scott

 Anyway, these are the reasons i think the trends tell
 me ColdFusion is either a dead duck of soon to be a dead
 duck at least in Sydney anyway.  I dont know about other

When it comes to usergroups and conferences, and even the kinds of companies
that use ColdFusion, it has a lot to do with the culture around it.  PHP,
Perl, Python, Lisp, C, Ruby, ASP.Net, Groovy, and most other languages are
free to use and deploy for whatever you want.  ColdFusion is not (yes, we
have Railo but it hasn't gained a lot of traction yet).  This one fact alone
causes a lot of new developers to choose other technology over ColdFusion.
ColdFusion was originally made for Windows, a commercial product which
requires licenses.  It wasn't born of the open source culture like many
languages were.  Many developers see ColdFusion as a language that is used
within companies who feel like they need to pay for licensing and support.
Those companies aren't sexy and the more social developers aren't
generally drawn to them.  ColdFusion is associated with a closed-source
culture and set of ideas.  This is obvious when you look at any large-scale
off-the-shelf CF app (shopping carts, forums, CMS systems and the like).
Other languages are open and you can do whatever you want with them and
there are healthy communities with lots of free and open source applications
you can deploy.  With ColdFusion you have to be concerned about which
license you have, how many you have, and where you deploy it.  Just
yesterday Adobe had an e-seminar about using ColdFusion in the Cloud and
they spent the first 20 minutes talking about licensing and what was and
wasn't a cloud and how you should have your legal team get in touch with
Adobe's legal team if you had concerns.  That's not sexy to developers.  It
turns them off and they run over to Ruby where they can just do what they
need to do without worrying about whether they have the right number of CPU
licenses or what their costs are going to look like if they need to scale to
a dozen servers.

If anything is going to kill ColdFusion, THAT, in my opinion is what will do
it in.

I'm not saying it's evil to charge for software or that Adobe is doing
something wrong, far from it, but for a new developer it's like a choice
between an iPhone (and now Android) or a Blackberry.  iPhones are sexy with
lots of free apps.  Blackberry is for corporate snobs who are addicted to
checking their e-mail.  As a developer, you have to decide which culture do
you want to be a part of.  If you want the large usergroups with new
developers fawning over the technology, ColdFusion is probably not right for
you.  If you want stability and a chance to work in larger companies with a
corporate culture, or a government organization with lots of structure and
rules then you'll have better chances.  That is primarily where ColdFusion
lives.

Of course anyone can pull out examples of cool companies that use ColdFusion
(I'd like to think I work for one, but we could use any language and be just
as successful), or of large companies that don't, but the fact remains that
the culture around the ColdFusion platform is inherently different from
platforms born of the open source movement.


-Justin



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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-21 Thread Mike Kear

On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 1:21 AM, Andy Matthews li...@commadelimited.com wrote:

 Actually Adobe has been saying since cf.Objective 2009 (I was there in
 person) that their user based has grown 300% over the last 5 years. From
 250k users around 2004 to over 800k users in 2008/2009.

In Australia??  Really??


 It just seems like that unless you're personally looking for a CF job and
 can't find one, why do you care if other people think CF is dead?



Because that was the reason my biggest client gave for going to DotNet
last year.   They told me that they had decided that ColdFusion was a
dead product,  Adobe was doing nothing with it,  developers were hard
to find.  They said I was a nice guy but they had too many eggs in one
basket and if anything happened to me they were very exposed.
Therefore they were going to DotNet where they could find 50
developers tomorrow if they wanted them and Microsoft wasn't going to
ignore the server market in the forseeable future.

Thats what they said.   I am not saying I agree.  In fact we debated
back and forth quite vigorously but in the end they went DotNet and my
relationship with them ended.


Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer
AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com
ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from AUD$15/month

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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-21 Thread Will Swain

Sorry to hear that.

I lost a large client a couple of years back, because the consultant they
had bought in and were paying £700 a day to told them CF was built on .NET

Companies are always making decisions like this. 

-Original Message-
From: Mike Kear [mailto:afpwebwo...@gmail.com] 
Sent: 21 January 2010 14:46
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia


On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 1:21 AM, Andy Matthews li...@commadelimited.com
wrote:

 Actually Adobe has been saying since cf.Objective 2009 (I was there in
 person) that their user based has grown 300% over the last 5 years. From
 250k users around 2004 to over 800k users in 2008/2009.

In Australia??  Really??


 It just seems like that unless you're personally looking for a CF job and
 can't find one, why do you care if other people think CF is dead?



Because that was the reason my biggest client gave for going to DotNet
last year.   They told me that they had decided that ColdFusion was a
dead product,  Adobe was doing nothing with it,  developers were hard
to find.  They said I was a nice guy but they had too many eggs in one
basket and if anything happened to me they were very exposed.
Therefore they were going to DotNet where they could find 50
developers tomorrow if they wanted them and Microsoft wasn't going to
ignore the server market in the forseeable future.

Thats what they said.   I am not saying I agree.  In fact we debated
back and forth quite vigorously but in the end they went DotNet and my
relationship with them ended.


Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer
AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com
ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from AUD$15/month



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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-21 Thread Andy Matthews

Gotcha.

And I'm guessing that Adobe's numbers are worldwide, and not in one
geographic region. 

-Original Message-
From: Mike Kear [mailto:afpwebwo...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2010 8:46 AM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia


On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 1:21 AM, Andy Matthews li...@commadelimited.com
wrote:

 Actually Adobe has been saying since cf.Objective 2009 (I was there in
 person) that their user based has grown 300% over the last 5 years. 
 From 250k users around 2004 to over 800k users in 2008/2009.

In Australia??  Really??


 It just seems like that unless you're personally looking for a CF job 
 and can't find one, why do you care if other people think CF is dead?



Because that was the reason my biggest client gave for going to DotNet
last year.   They told me that they had decided that ColdFusion was a
dead product,  Adobe was doing nothing with it,  developers were hard to
find.  They said I was a nice guy but they had too many eggs in one basket
and if anything happened to me they were very exposed.
Therefore they were going to DotNet where they could find 50 developers
tomorrow if they wanted them and Microsoft wasn't going to ignore the server
market in the forseeable future.

Thats what they said.   I am not saying I agree.  In fact we debated
back and forth quite vigorously but in the end they went DotNet and my
relationship with them ended.


Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from
AUD$15/month



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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-21 Thread AJ Mercer

it would be interesting to see the figures by region/country


2010/1/21 Andy Matthews li...@commadelimited.com


 Gotcha.

 And I'm guessing that Adobe's numbers are worldwide, and not in one
 geographic region.

 -Original Message-
 From: Mike Kear [mailto:afpwebwo...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2010 8:46 AM
 To: cf-talk
 Subject: Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia


 On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 1:21 AM, Andy Matthews li...@commadelimited.com
 wrote:
 
  Actually Adobe has been saying since cf.Objective 2009 (I was there in
  person) that their user based has grown 300% over the last 5 years.
  From 250k users around 2004 to over 800k users in 2008/2009.
 
 In Australia??  Really??


  It just seems like that unless you're personally looking for a CF job
  and can't find one, why do you care if other people think CF is dead?
 
 

 Because that was the reason my biggest client gave for going to DotNet
 last year.   They told me that they had decided that ColdFusion was a
 dead product,  Adobe was doing nothing with it,  developers were hard to
 find.  They said I was a nice guy but they had too many eggs in one basket
 and if anything happened to me they were very exposed.
 Therefore they were going to DotNet where they could find 50 developers
 tomorrow if they wanted them and Microsoft wasn't going to ignore the
 server
 market in the forseeable future.

 Thats what they said.   I am not saying I agree.  In fact we debated
 back and forth quite vigorously but in the end they went DotNet and my
 relationship with them ended.
 

 Cheers
 Mike Kear
 Windsor, NSW, Australia
 Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer AFP Webworks
 http://afpwebworks.com ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from
 AUD$15/month



 

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Ben Shelden

I think the availability of CF jobs depends a lot on how far you are willing to 
move and where you live. I lost my job at the end of October last year and I 
have not been seeing listed CF jobs around West Palm Beach, FL. I see plenty of 
job openings in the Northern Virginia area and jobs scattered around the 
country for those willing to relocate. I'm still looking for CF employment but 
I've started teaching myself .NET because there are a lot of .NET jobs 
available around where I live. I was speaking with a recruiter and she was 
telling me that she found it interesting how the job opportunities for 
different languages seemed to center around different geographical locations. 
She told me there were a lot of Java jobs in Dade County, FL (i.e. Miami) but 
they disappeared going north across the county line and then the demand started 
for .NET developers and some PHP (but not anywhere near the demand for .NET) 

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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Chung Chow

 Cold Fusion certainly has its threats, with .Net, PHP, Python  etc
 alternatives out there.  Originally CF had the game to itself and it
 was an original concept that helped ignite enthusiasm and help to turn
 the web into what it is today.

Wait Bryn, you mean the days when CGI people were swearing that
coldfusion
weren't going anywhere, Flash was just a gleam in Future Splash's pants,
And I.E. was Leno and Netscape was Conan? Lol

Chung

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Dave Watts

 All I know is what I see with my own eyes.  And for daring to speak
 about it,  I'm getting slammed as one of the ColdFusion is dead
 people.

I can't imagine why, except that your subject line is Why i fear
ColdFusion is on its last legs. Perhaps, since all you know is what
you see with your own eyes, you'd have been better served by having a
less hysterical subject.

I can only hope my own last legs are as sturdy as CF's. CF has been
on its last legs at least since ASP was released in the Windows NT 4
Option Pack. We're a CF reseller, and our sales are doing quite well.

Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
http://www.figleaf.com/
http://training.figleaf.com/

Fig Leaf Software is a Veteran-Owned Small Business (VOSB) on
GSA Schedule, and provides the highest caliber vendor-authorized
instruction at our training centers, online, or onsit

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Sean Corfield

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 7:30 AM, Ben Shelden aboutw...@benshelden.com wrote:
 I was speaking with a recruiter and she was telling me that she found it 
 interesting how the job opportunities for different languages seemed to 
 center around different geographical locations. She told me there were a lot 
 of Java jobs in Dade County, FL (i.e. Miami) but they disappeared going north 
 across the county line and then the demand started for .NET developers and 
 some PHP (but not anywhere near the demand for .NET)

Interesting to hear. I think a lot of CF work has disappeared from the
Bay Area (even tho' we still have three strong CFUGs) - and now
companies are finding it hard to recruit good CFers here - because
many CFers moved to where there were more CF jobs or learned other
languages and are gainfully employed already.

It definitely speaks to the need for developers to be multi-lingual if
they want to avoid roaming around, following their technology to
wherever its jobs are hot (although I've never had any problems
getting telecommute work and the project I'm on right now only has 2
CFers on-site - everyone else, including the designer and the DBA, are
remote).
-- 
Sean A Corfield -- (904) 302-SEAN
Railo Technologies US -- http://getrailo.com/
An Architect's View -- http://corfield.org/

If you're not annoying somebody, you're not really alive.
-- Margaret Atwood

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Dave Watts

 I had an Adobe guy tell me a while back we're in the IDE and Development
 Tool business not the server business. I don't know why we have ColdFusion at 
 all.
 That was a bit disquieting at the time, and I wonder . what if that feeling 
was
 widespread in Adobe? What if they start seeing CF as an orphan?

I think this would come as a great surprise to the LiveCycle team,
which is a pretty big deal in their overall corporate product
strategy. And to the Connect and FMS teams as well.

Adobe is a big company. It sells lots of products. Hundreds of
products. Whatever one Adobe guy tells you, unless that guy is a
CxO, does not reflect any sort of corporate product strategy.

Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
http://www.figleaf.com/
http://training.figleaf.com/

Fig Leaf Software is a Veteran-Owned Small Business (VOSB) on
GSA Schedule, and provides the highest caliber vendor-authorized
instruction at our training centers, online, or onsite

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Dave Watts

 weren't going anywhere, Flash was just a gleam in Future Splash's pants,

 ^^

You really messed up that expression. Just thought I'd point that out.

Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
http://www.figleaf.com/
http://training.figleaf.com/

Fig Leaf Software is a Veteran-Owned Small Business (VOSB) on
GSA Schedule, and provides the highest caliber vendor-authorized
instruction at our training centers, online, or onsite.

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Cameron Childress

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 12:51 AM, Mike Kear afpwebwo...@gmail.com wrote:
 I know that's a 'Chicken Little kind of subject line.  I hope my
 impressions are wrong.   Might be - i have been wrong before.  I
 remember i was wrong once when i thought i was incorrect, but i wasnt.

Since the entire premise of this thread seems to be anecdotal and
localized, I will pile on...

1) My company just started a new CF/Flex project for a large well
known company.  The group we are working with had zero previous CF
applications in place.  So, companies are still adopting CF for new
apps.

2) I see alot of CF development gigs that are Flex with CF.  Meaning
it's a Flex job, and you should also know CF.  Maybe you will find
better gigs if you look for Flex gigs too (maybe not).  But if you
don't know Flex, spend some of your new-found free time learning it.

-Cameron

-- 
Cameron Childress
Sumo Consulting Inc
http://www.sumoc.com
---
cell:  678.637.5072
aim:   cameroncf
email: camer...@gmail.

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-21 Thread Dave Watts

 No Mike, you're wrong the server customer base has increased over the
 last year by xx%

The last time I looked at Adobe's overall sales figures, CF sales were
up. Their overall sales figures are available in their public
statements.

 No Mike, we presented at a .Net conference in Sydney last July,  and
 at a .php conference in Melbourne in August ...  etc 

How many .NET conferences are there? If they're fully run by MS, what
makes you think they'd be let in the door?

Just for kicks, I searched for PHP conferences in Sydney and
Melbourne, and found none. I did find an open-source conference in
Melbourne which had PHP topics, but I don't think CF would be an
appropriate topic at an open-source conference, since, you know, it's
closed-source.

 Nothing from Adobe.  I might be wrong - I hope I am,  but Adobe didnt
 know much about what to do with a server product when they bought
 Macromedia,

That's funny, because the last time I remember seeing a sentence very
similar, except it had Macromedia where you have Adobe, and
Allaire where you have Macromedia.

  I got the feeling that Adobe people think it's something they got
 stuck with when they bought Macromedia for what they REALLY wanted -
 Flash and Dreamweaver.

Again, Adobe people != Adobe.

 Certainly in Australia i have yet to hear of anyone at Adobe who is
 annoyed because I am painting them in a bad light that's undeserved.

I for one am grateful that Adobe people don't spend all day responding
to this sort of thing.

 Either prove me wrong someone,  or stop bashing me for being critical
 and for gods sake lets poke someone in the ribs who's in a position to
 DO SOMETHING about it!

You know who's in a position to DO SOMETHING? It's you, not Adobe.
You're not satisfied with how Adobe markets their product? Market your
services with that product! You're not satisfied with their presence
in user groups and conferences? Get in those user groups and
conferences yourself! It's developers, not salesmen, who are
ultimately responsible for the success or failure of a programming
product.

Nobody had heard of CF when Steve Drucker and I started the very first
CF user group, in Washington DC, in 1993 if I recall correctly. We ran
monthly meetings, demoed neat applications, and our attendance started
with a handful of people, and grew to hundreds. Now, CF is a very
strong presence within the DC metro market, and probably the best
place in the world for CF jobs. We did our best to popularize the
product. Allaire, Macromedia, Adobe - whoever owns the product - can't
do that sort of thing. It takes developers. Or, as Steve Ballmer once
put it, Developers, developers, DEVELOPERS!

Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
http://www.figleaf.com/
http://training.figleaf.com/

Fig Leaf Software is a Veteran-Owned Small Business (VOSB) on
GSA Schedule, and provides the highest caliber vendor-authorized
instruction at our training centers, online, or o

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Sean Corfield

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 12:52 AM, Bryn Parrott
bryn_parr...@internode.on.net wrote:
 I've observed the same thing over a period of 10 years or so.  The Cold 
 Fusion market is mature, there are fewer newbies out there asking dumb 
 questions.

That would seem to mesh with the results for CFUnited State of the CF
Union survey: 80% of respondents have 6+ years of CFML experience
(half of those claim 10+ years).

 It would help if Adobe were to make an investment in Cold Fusion

I'd say with the push into education (free licenses, free public
curriculum) and the huge advances in CF9, Adobe is making a pretty big
investment in ColdFusion. They sponsor CF-focused conferences all over
the place and they're very aggressively marketing to draw in new-to-CF
developers. They might not be investing every penny where you want,
but it's a little unfair to imply they aren't investing...
-- 
Sean A Corfield -- (904) 302-SEAN
Railo Technologies US -- http://getrailo.com/
An Architect's View -- http://corfield.org/

If you're not annoying somebody, you're not really alive.
-- Margaret Atwoo

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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Scott Stewart

I'm considering moving back to Northern Virginia if the right opportunity
presents itself. CF in the Raleigh/Durham area is almost non existent (job
wise) I was laid off two weeks ago because my employer pushed everything to
either Sharepoint or a new accounting system. 

What's unfortunate is that I wasn't given the opportunity to plead my case,
because I believe that they'll wind up spending more on Epicor and
Sharepoint then what they were paying me per year.

I believe that we as developers need to push and promote ColdFusion, and the
open source versions (Railo, Open BD). I'm forever hearing .Net and PHP
developers saying  our stuff is free and ColdFusion isn't.

You can expound on the death of CF or you can get out there and promote.



-Original Message-
From: Ben Shelden [mailto:aboutw...@benshelden.com] 
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2010 10:31 AM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs


I think the availability of CF jobs depends a lot on how far you are willing
to move and where you live. I lost my job at the end of October last year
and I have not been seeing listed CF jobs around West Palm Beach, FL. I see
plenty of job openings in the Northern Virginia area and jobs scattered
around the country for those willing to relocate. I'm still looking for CF
employment but I've started teaching myself .NET because there are a lot of
.NET jobs available around where I live. I was speaking with a recruiter and
she was telling me that she found it interesting how the job opportunities
for different languages seemed to center around different geographical
locations. She told me there were a lot of Java jobs in Dade County, FL
(i.e. Miami) but they disappeared going north across the county line and
then the demand started for .NET developers and some PHP (but not anywhere
near the demand for .NET) 



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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Sean Corfield

Well then maybe the Australian market in completely unique in the
entire world and has different problems that the rest of the world
does not?

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 1:42 AM, Andrew Scott andr...@andyscott.id.au wrote:
 If anyone wishes to reflect that we are in a recession then please Explain
 how the jobs for ColdFusion began declining in 1999, and have continued to
 drop for ColdFusion?

 Again let me say this, the Australian IT industry is thriving, just not the
 ColdFusion side of it. If there are no developers to replace, then the
 companies have no choice but to look at moving to another technology where
 developers and resources can be replaced, this hasn't changed in the last 10
 years either.

 It really sickens me that the excuse of a recession is used, are you saying
 that we have been in a recession for the last 10 years Sean? I don't thinks
 so.

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Bryan Stevenson

You're wrong ;-)

1) The economy tanked and ALL development work slowed.
CF has always taken the harder hit as it is the less used technology

2) Adobe/Macromedia/Allaire and Marketing
Yeahthey have all sucked equally at promoting CF...no news there.
It's always driven me crazy, but I'm used to the lack of effortI
still love CF.

3) You had better look into CF alternatives like OpenBD and
Railiogood things are happening

Cheers



Bryan Stevenson B.Comm.
VP  Director of E-Commerce Development
Electric Edge Systems Group Inc.
phone: 250.480.0642
fax: 250.480.1264
cell: 250.920.8830
e-mail: br...@electricedgesystems.com
web: www.electricedgesystems.com
 
Notice:
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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-21 Thread Wil Genovese

I was going to stay away from this thread at all costsbut I read this:

 Nothing from Adobe.  I might be wrong - I hope I am,  but Adobe didnt
 know much about what to do with a server product when they bought
 Macromedia,
 
 That's funny, because the last time I remember seeing a sentence very
 similar, except it had Macromedia where you have Adobe, and
 Allaire where you have Macromedia.


I wrote about this deep in the first post on my blog.  It wasn't UNTIL Adobe 
took over ColdFusion that I felt really good about ColdFusions future.  This is 
what I wrote.

*snip* from May of 2008
...Then came the Macromedia years. I risk offending a few people here, but I 
really didn't like Macromedia. I felt they didn't know what to do with 
ColdFusion. I kept coding in CFML, but I dropped out of the ColdFusion 
Development Community. I had no desire to help Macromedia out in any way.

When Adobe bought up Macromedia I was worried at first, but within a week I 
realized it was a good thing. Adobe has long been the world leader in print 
media. They had been trying to break into the world of online media and had few 
successes.  They did have PDF, but not much else.  I knew right away that Adobe 
was going to use ColdFusion to become the world leader in online media.  With 
the release of ColdFusion 8 we saw that is exactly what Adobe intends to do.  
This new direction for ColdFusion has left me feeling better and thus I have 
decided to slowly become more involved in the ColdFusion community. 
*/snip*

(full post at http://www.trunkful.com/page.cfm/About if you're really 
interested. )

And I have to say I still feel this way and even more so now that ColdFusion 9 
is here.  I believe ColdFusion is here to stay and grow no mater how much FUD 
certain people try to (and seem to enjoy) spreading.

/soapbox


Wil Genovese

One man with courage makes a majority.
-Andrew Jackson

A fine is a tax for doing wrong. A tax is a fine for doing well. 
 


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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Sean Corfield

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 12:54 AM, Mike Kear afpwebwo...@gmail.com wrote:
 I had an Adobe guy tell me a while back we're in the
 IDE and Development Tool business  not the server business.  I dont
 know why we have ColdFusion at all.    That was a bit disquieting at
 the time, and I wonder . what if that feeling was widespread in Adobe?

Adobe has had a ton of server side technology for years before it
acquired Macromedia so I'd say the guy was just not well-informed
about his own company and their products. Several of its desktop
products rely on server components. ColdFusion joined a number of
existing - and often much more expensive - server technologies at
Adobe.

If anyone wants to point at a company in ColdFusion's history that
didn't understand server side stuff, that would be Macromedia who
tried and failed with several server products. Luckily ColdFusion
survived and has been doing much better since Adobe took over.
-- 
Sean A Corfield -- (904) 302-SEAN
Railo Technologies US -- http://getrailo.com/
An Architect's View -- http://corfield.org/

If you're not annoying somebody, you're not really alive.
-- Margaret At

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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Andy Matthews

Too bad you couldn't convince them to migrate to ColdFusion 9 which has
built in Sharepoint integration out of the box.


abdy 

-Original Message-
From: Scott Stewart [mailto:sstwebwo...@bellsouth.net] 
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2010 12:03 PM
To: cf-talk
Subject: RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs


I'm considering moving back to Northern Virginia if the right opportunity
presents itself. CF in the Raleigh/Durham area is almost non existent (job
wise) I was laid off two weeks ago because my employer pushed everything to
either Sharepoint or a new accounting system. 

What's unfortunate is that I wasn't given the opportunity to plead my case,
because I believe that they'll wind up spending more on Epicor and
Sharepoint then what they were paying me per year.

I believe that we as developers need to push and promote ColdFusion, and the
open source versions (Railo, Open BD). I'm forever hearing .Net and PHP
developers saying  our stuff is free and ColdFusion isn't.

You can expound on the death of CF or you can get out there and promote.



-Original Message-
From: Ben Shelden [mailto:aboutw...@benshelden.com]
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2010 10:31 AM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs


I think the availability of CF jobs depends a lot on how far you are willing
to move and where you live. I lost my job at the end of October last year
and I have not been seeing listed CF jobs around West Palm Beach, FL. I see
plenty of job openings in the Northern Virginia area and jobs scattered
around the country for those willing to relocate. I'm still looking for CF
employment but I've started teaching myself .NET because there are a lot of
.NET jobs available around where I live. I was speaking with a recruiter and
she was telling me that she found it interesting how the job opportunities
for different languages seemed to center around different geographical
locations. She told me there were a lot of Java jobs in Dade County, FL
(i.e. Miami) but they disappeared going north across the county line and
then the demand started for .NET developers and some PHP (but not anywhere
near the demand for .NET) 





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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Chung Chow

Sorry Dave.  Blame it on no caffeine on the account of just waking up to
this discussion. Lol

  weren't going anywhere, Flash was just a gleam in Future Splash's
 pants,
 
  ^^
 
 You really messed up that expression. Just thought I'd point that out.
 
 Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software

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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Scott Stewart

We had CF9 dev servers, I knew about Sharepoint integration, the new
executive staff were sold on Sharepoint from previous gigs.

I had lined up all kinds of solutions to the company's requirements built in
CF. I just hadn't had the chance to deploy them.

I have *never* seen an effective deployment of Sharepoint.

-Original Message-
From: Andy Matthews [mailto:li...@commadelimited.com] 
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2010 1:10 PM
To: cf-talk
Subject: RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs


Too bad you couldn't convince them to migrate to ColdFusion 9 which has
built in Sharepoint integration out of the box.


abdy 

-Original Message-
From: Scott Stewart [mailto:sstwebwo...@bellsouth.net] 
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2010 12:03 PM
To: cf-talk
Subject: RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs


I'm considering moving back to Northern Virginia if the right opportunity
presents itself. CF in the Raleigh/Durham area is almost non existent (job
wise) I was laid off two weeks ago because my employer pushed everything to
either Sharepoint or a new accounting system. 

What's unfortunate is that I wasn't given the opportunity to plead my case,
because I believe that they'll wind up spending more on Epicor and
Sharepoint then what they were paying me per year.

I believe that we as developers need to push and promote ColdFusion, and the
open source versions (Railo, Open BD). I'm forever hearing .Net and PHP
developers saying  our stuff is free and ColdFusion isn't.

You can expound on the death of CF or you can get out there and promote.



-Original Message-
From: Ben Shelden [mailto:aboutw...@benshelden.com]
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2010 10:31 AM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs


I think the availability of CF jobs depends a lot on how far you are willing
to move and where you live. I lost my job at the end of October last year
and I have not been seeing listed CF jobs around West Palm Beach, FL. I see
plenty of job openings in the Northern Virginia area and jobs scattered
around the country for those willing to relocate. I'm still looking for CF
employment but I've started teaching myself .NET because there are a lot of
.NET jobs available around where I live. I was speaking with a recruiter and
she was telling me that she found it interesting how the job opportunities
for different languages seemed to center around different geographical
locations. She told me there were a lot of Java jobs in Dade County, FL
(i.e. Miami) but they disappeared going north across the county line and
then the demand started for .NET developers and some PHP (but not anywhere
near the demand for .NET) 







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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Sean Corfield

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 6:38 AM, Justin Scott
jscott-li...@gravityfree.com wrote:
 When it comes to usergroups and conferences, and even the kinds of companies
 that use ColdFusion, it has a lot to do with the culture around it.  PHP,
 Perl, Python, Lisp, C, Ruby, ASP.Net, Groovy, and most other languages are
 free to use and deploy for whatever you want.

ASP.Net is only perceived to be free. It isn't really free - you have
to pay for Windows server licenses to get it (and if you use SQL
Server you're paying again there). When you talk about free in the
context of those other languages, part of it is the open source
culture and that means Linux instead of Windows and MySQL or
PostgreSQL instead of SQL Server. Just a nit-pick. I agree with your
cultural observation overall.

 ColdFusion is not (yes, we
 have Railo but it hasn't gained a lot of traction yet).

Nearly 25% of respondents in CFUnited's survey are using Railo:

http://survey.constantcontact.com/survey/a07e2olvoj6g4ek9zt3/results

You can argue that survey isn't representative of the overall CFML
market but I think Railo has more traction than you might think.

You're absolutely spot on with your next paragraph tho':

 This one fact alone
 causes a lot of new developers to choose other technology over ColdFusion.
 ColdFusion was originally made for Windows, a commercial product which
 requires licenses.  It wasn't born of the open source culture like many
 languages were.  Many developers see ColdFusion as a language that is used
 within companies who feel like they need to pay for licensing and support.
 Those companies aren't sexy and the more social developers aren't
 generally drawn to them.  ColdFusion is associated with a closed-source
 culture and set of ideas.  This is obvious when you look at any large-scale
 off-the-shelf CF app (shopping carts, forums, CMS systems and the like).
 Other languages are open and you can do whatever you want with them and
 there are healthy communities with lots of free and open source applications
 you can deploy.  With ColdFusion you have to be concerned about which
 license you have, how many you have, and where you deploy it.  Just
 yesterday Adobe had an e-seminar about using ColdFusion in the Cloud and
 they spent the first 20 minutes talking about licensing and what was and
 wasn't a cloud and how you should have your legal team get in touch with
 Adobe's legal team if you had concerns.  That's not sexy to developers.  It
 turns them off and they run over to Ruby where they can just do what they
 need to do without worrying about whether they have the right number of CPU
 licenses or what their costs are going to look like if they need to scale to
 a dozen servers.

For large corporate's ColdFusion is a relatively easy sell - heck,
Enterprise went up $1,500 to make it easier to sell in that market (it
was perceived as too cheap before). After I left Adobe in 2007, I
co-founded a startup and we spent months doing the whole VC tour /
begathon. It was pretty soul-destroying :) Several VCs questioned our
use of ColdFusion because of the licensing costs and I found myself
having to justify how we could scale profitably using a commercial
product instead of one of the other free, open source languages. I was
a bit surprised the VCs cared about the technology but there you go...
-- 
Sean A Corfield -- (904) 302-SEAN
Railo Technologies US -- http://getrailo.com/
An Architect's View -- http://corfield.org/

If you're not annoying somebody, you're not really alive.
-- Marg

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-21 Thread Sean Corfield

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 9:43 AM, Dave Watts dwa...@figleaf.com wrote:
 You know who's in a position to DO SOMETHING? It's you, not Adobe.
 You're not satisfied with how Adobe markets their product? Market your
 services with that product! You're not satisfied with their presence
 in user groups and conferences? Get in those user groups and
 conferences yourself! It's developers, not salesmen, who are
 ultimately responsible for the success or failure of a programming
 product.

This is why I get frustrated with some CFers who bemoan the lack of
corporate marketing: all of the competing technologies have no
corporate marketing - it's all about developer community.

Except .NET of course - but .NET is only one of the successful, hot
techs out there that certain CFers claim are eating CF's business. You
could also argue Sun promotes Java (along with a few other big
corporates). The point is that PHP, Ruby/Rails, etc - all the 'hot'
techs that are free and open source - those are promoted by their
communities.

 Allaire, Macromedia, Adobe - whoever owns the product - can't
 do that sort of thing. It takes developers. Or, as Steve Ballmer once
 put it, Developers, developers, DEVELOPERS!

Amen!
-- 
Sean A Corfield -- (904) 302-SEAN
Railo Technologies US -- http://getrailo.com/
An Architect's View -- http://corfield.org/

If you're not annoying somebody, you're not really alive.
-- Margaret Atwood

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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Roger Austin

 Scott Stewart sstwebwo...@bellsouth.net wrote: 

 I have *never* seen an effective deployment of Sharepoint.

 You know, I have heard this many times, but it seems 
implausible. Why would CxOs continue to buy a product that 
takes so much work by so many expensive consultants to get 
it running? My feeling is that Microsoft has done a very 
good job of marketing to corporate decision makers.
 I do have knowledge of a number of SP projects that have 
been canceled after a while, but I don't know if it was due 
to the technology or whether the project managers or 
designers were incompetent.
--
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/roger-austin/8/a4/60
http://twitter.com/RogerTheGeek
http://www.misshunt.com/ Home of the Clean/Dirty Magnet
http://cfinnc.com/ ColdFusion Conference in North Carolina


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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Eric Roberts

You guys looking for any remote developers Andy?  I am in Chicago...

Eric

-Original Message-
From: Andy Matthews [mailto:li...@commadelimited.com] 
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2010 8:18 AM
To: cf-talk
Subject: RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs


Could it be perhaps that you're not looking in the right locations for these
jobs?

I'd guess that a portion of it is that CF developers aren't moving
positions, which means that the positions that ARE out there are currently
filled. While that could also mean that there's no growth in CF, it most
likely means that the economy is bad and no one is hiring period.

On the other hand my company in Nashville TN has hired 2 CF developers in
the last 3 months and is looking to hire 2 more.

Take from that what you will. 


Andy Matthews
Dealerskins

-Original Message-
From: Mike Kear [mailto:afpwebwo...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2010 7:18 AM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs


Interesting, John.   Actually of those 32 jobs om Australia,   4 are
in Sydney, the biggest city in the country,

One is for a .NET developer  and exposure to Coldfusion would be an
advantage, Another is for a FLASH developer with some exposure to
Coldfusion.  So those two arent really coldfusion jobs.

So that leaves 2 jobs in a city of 4.5million people.  One of those isnt
really a coldfusion job - its coldfusion related - they're looking for a
front-end developer in a web agency that uses coldfusion
for their dynamic pages.  let's say its half a coldfusion job.   That
means there are 1.5 coldfusion jobs according to Indeed.com.au.

It's a paradox, but I think Andrew's right - the ColdFusion sites are
steadily changing to other technologies - .Net or php mostly or java
for the larger ones.   At least that's my perception. Last year i
had my 3 biggest clients tell me they weren't doing any more development in
Coldfusion  - they were switching to .NET in two cases, and Java in the
other case.

I'm not trying to whine and say Adobe should solve all my problems.
But it is a worrying trend, and I'd like to know what (if anything) is being
done to reverse it.

Right now,  it seems no one really is putting too much effort into creating
new ColdFusion sites, at least here in Sydney.  From what I see anyway.

Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from
AUD$15/month


On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 11:53 PM, John M Bliss bliss.j...@gmail.com wrote:

 Surely most of the people who read Mike's original message do not live 
 in Australia and do not have first-hand knowledge of the state of CF
there.
 However, Mike's subject was not Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last 
 legs in Australia and several of his points seemed to be
non-Australia-specific.

 http://www.indeed.com.au/jobs?q=coldfusion+or+cold+fusion;

 ...returns 32 jobs: 1 CF job for every 691,348 Australians.

 http://www.indeed.com/jobs?q=coldfusion+OR+cold+fusion;

 ...returns 2,644 jobs: 1 CF job for every 116,688 Americans.








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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Andy Matthews

We have hired one remote developer, Russ johnson. We'd prefer to have in
house guys as it makes collab so much easier, but it never hurts to put in
your resume.

dev...@dealerskins.com or you can send it to me and I'll forward it on.



andy 

-Original Message-
From: Eric Roberts [mailto:ow...@threeravensconsulting.com] 
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2010 12:46 PM
To: cf-talk
Subject: RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs


You guys looking for any remote developers Andy?  I am in Chicago...

Eric

-Original Message-
From: Andy Matthews [mailto:li...@commadelimited.com]
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2010 8:18 AM
To: cf-talk
Subject: RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs


Could it be perhaps that you're not looking in the right locations for these
jobs?

I'd guess that a portion of it is that CF developers aren't moving
positions, which means that the positions that ARE out there are currently
filled. While that could also mean that there's no growth in CF, it most
likely means that the economy is bad and no one is hiring period.

On the other hand my company in Nashville TN has hired 2 CF developers in
the last 3 months and is looking to hire 2 more.

Take from that what you will. 


Andy Matthews
Dealerskins

-Original Message-
From: Mike Kear [mailto:afpwebwo...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2010 7:18 AM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs


Interesting, John.   Actually of those 32 jobs om Australia,   4 are
in Sydney, the biggest city in the country,

One is for a .NET developer  and exposure to Coldfusion would be an
advantage, Another is for a FLASH developer with some exposure to
Coldfusion.  So those two arent really coldfusion jobs.

So that leaves 2 jobs in a city of 4.5million people.  One of those isnt
really a coldfusion job - its coldfusion related - they're looking for a
front-end developer in a web agency that uses coldfusion
for their dynamic pages.  let's say its half a coldfusion job.   That
means there are 1.5 coldfusion jobs according to Indeed.com.au.

It's a paradox, but I think Andrew's right - the ColdFusion sites are
steadily changing to other technologies - .Net or php mostly or java
for the larger ones.   At least that's my perception. Last year i
had my 3 biggest clients tell me they weren't doing any more development in
Coldfusion  - they were switching to .NET in two cases, and Java in the
other case.

I'm not trying to whine and say Adobe should solve all my problems.
But it is a worrying trend, and I'd like to know what (if anything) is being
done to reverse it.

Right now,  it seems no one really is putting too much effort into creating
new ColdFusion sites, at least here in Sydney.  From what I see anyway.

Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from
AUD$15/month


On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 11:53 PM, John M Bliss bliss.j...@gmail.com wrote:

 Surely most of the people who read Mike's original message do not live 
 in Australia and do not have first-hand knowledge of the state of CF
there.
 However, Mike's subject was not Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last 
 legs in Australia and several of his points seemed to be
non-Australia-specific.

 http://www.indeed.com.au/jobs?q=coldfusion+or+cold+fusion;

 ...returns 32 jobs: 1 CF job for every 691,348 Australians.

 http://www.indeed.com/jobs?q=coldfusion+OR+cold+fusion;

 ...returns 2,644 jobs: 1 CF job for every 116,688 Americans.










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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Matt Quackenbush

Why is it that everyone is afraid to speak the truth?  No worries, I'll do
the dirty work.

Adobe, watching helplessly (so some thought) as Australia scoffs at the
world as it suffers through a major recession, are hell bent upon bringing
full-on recession to Australia.  Their strategy appears to be working, one
CF developer at a time.


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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Mike Kear

On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 4:24 AM, Dave Watts dwa...@figleaf.com wrote:

 I had an Adobe guy tell me a while back we're in the IDE and Development
 Tool business not the server business. I don't know why we have ColdFusion 
 at all.
 That was a bit disquieting at the time, and I wonder . what if that feeling 
 was
 widespread in Adobe? What if they start seeing CF as an orphan?

 I think this would come as a great surprise to the LiveCycle team,
 which is a pretty big deal in their overall corporate product
 strategy. And to the Connect and FMS teams as well.

 Adobe is a big company. It sells lots of products. Hundreds of
 products. Whatever one Adobe guy tells you, unless that guy is a
 CxO, does not reflect any sort of corporate product strategy.


Dave, I have spent enough time in the sales operations of corporations
to know that it doesn't matter a damn what the board of directors says
- if the general sales team in a company has a widespread view that
the product sucks, it doesn't sell.   Or if they dont get the right
support, or if they dont know how to sell it,   it doesnt sell.
This is especially true if the sales people have a whole raft of
products they can sell to make quota.  The CEO can jump up and down
and wave his/her arms all he/she likes and it ain't gonna move.

So thats why i started asking myself what if this person's attitude
was representative of  the general attitude of the Adobe staff?


And dont start talking about bloody LiveCycle.  It was the Adobe
LiveCycle guy at WebDU who told me that he would never allow my
company to have anything to do with selling LiveCycle.  I guess he
took a look at me and decided I wasnt 'the right kind of person' or
something. Perhaps he didnt like the colour of my shirt.   Even after
i had told him that I had known the product for at least 15 years and
had built my career on printed and electronic forms and work flow
since the 1980s.   And i had known this product well since before it
was bought by Moore and then Adobe.  (A substantial part of the
product that eventually became LiveCycle was developed by Hugh
Millikin's company in Sydney)   Even after he knew I had extensive
experience with this kind of market, he still slammed the door in my
face (very rudely too i might add )  so i walked away from the whole
LiveCycle thing.  I'm not going to plead and beg to be 'permitted' to
be a customer.


 Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
 http://www.figleaf.com/
 http://training.figleaf.com/



-- 
Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer
AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com
ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from AUD$15/month

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Mike Kear

On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 5:03 AM, Sean Corfield seancorfi...@gmail.com wrote:

 Well then maybe the Australian market in completely unique in the
 entire world and has different problems that the rest of the world
 does not?

Is that so strange?India has different problems that the rest of
the world does not.  Canada  has different problems that the rest of
the world does not.   England  has different problems that the rest of
the world does not.  France  has different problems that the rest of
the world does not.  China  has different problems that the rest of
the world does not.  Indonesia  has different problems that the rest
of the world does not.  Hell, even the USA  has different problems
that the rest of the world does not.

Why wouldnt Australia?

Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer
AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com
ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from AUD$15/month


--

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Sean Corfield

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 12:07 PM, Mike Kear afpwebwo...@gmail.com wrote:
 And dont start talking about bloody LiveCycle.  It was the Adobe
 LiveCycle guy at WebDU who told me that he would never allow my
 company to have anything to do with selling LiveCycle.

Perhaps it was your attitude? :)

(sorry, Mike, I couldn't resist that one personal pot shot given how
much you're ranting on this thread because people don't agree with
you!)
-- 
Sean A Corfield -- (904) 302-SEAN
Railo Technologies US -- http://getrailo.com/
An Architect's View -- http://corfield.org/

If you're not annoying somebody, you're not really alive.
-- Margaret Atwoo

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-21 Thread Mike Kear

On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 4:43 AM, Dave Watts dwa...@figleaf.com wrote:

 No Mike, you're wrong the server customer base has increased over the
 last year by xx%

 The last time I looked at Adobe's overall sales figures, CF sales were
 up. Their overall sales figures are available in their public
 statements.

In Australia?Are they?   Does anyone outside Adobe know?


 No Mike, we presented at a .Net conference in Sydney last July,  and
 at a .php conference in Melbourne in August ...  etc 

 How many .NET conferences are there? If they're fully run by MS, what
 makes you think they'd be let in the door?


I dont know.  MS were at WebDU.  I went to a presentation of theirs.
Got a complete copy of SQLServer2005 from there.   Why wouldn't CF try
to sell to people who havent already bought the product?  THATS WHAT
SALES PEOPLE DO!




  I got the feeling that Adobe people think it's something they got
 stuck with when they bought Macromedia for what they REALLY wanted -
 Flash and Dreamweaver.

 Again, Adobe people != Adobe.


Actually Dave,   Adobe people  = = Adobe.   You are 100% wrong in
that statement.



 Certainly in Australia i have yet to hear of anyone at Adobe who is
 annoyed because I am painting them in a bad light that's undeserved.

 I for one am grateful that Adobe people don't spend all day responding
 to this sort of thing.

I'd just like to know we aren't building our businesses here in Sydney
in an Adobe wilderness.


 Either prove me wrong someone,  or stop bashing me for being critical
 and for gods sake lets poke someone in the ribs who's in a position to
 DO SOMETHING about it!

 You know who's in a position to DO SOMETHING? It's you, not Adobe.
 You're not satisfied with how Adobe markets their product? Market your
 services with that product! You're not satisfied with their presence
 in user groups and conferences? Get in those user groups and
 conferences yourself! It's developers, not salesmen, who are
 ultimately responsible for the success or failure of a programming
 product.

 Nobody had heard of CF when Steve Drucker and I started the very first
 CF user group, in Washington DC, in 1993 if I recall correctly. We ran
 monthly meetings, demoed neat applications, and our attendance started
 with a handful of people, and grew to hundreds. Now, CF is a very
 strong presence within the DC metro market, and probably the best
 place in the world for CF jobs. We did our best to popularize the
 product. Allaire, Macromedia, Adobe - whoever owns the product - can't
 do that sort of thing. It takes developers. Or, as Steve Ballmer once
 put it, Developers, developers, DEVELOPERS!

Steve Ballmer.  Oh yea.Actually Steve Ballmer doesnt put
DEVELOPERS in front line sales positions.  Those guys are called SALES
people.

I knew it wouldnt be long before someone told me this was all my
fault.   I run a tiny development business.   I havent sat idly by and
waited for the world to push dollars into my hand.  As I said in the
outset, if I hadnt gone out and hustled my own opportunities I'd have
starved. I just wish I wasnt doing it all alone.

If you're a Toyota dealer you dont do it alone.  You get backup
support from the manufacturer.  If you're a Dulux Paint dealer you
dont do it alone.  You get backup support from the manufacturer.   If
you're a Microsoft reseller you dont do it alone.  You get FLOODED
with support from the manufacturer.  If you're a McDonalds franchisee
you dont do it alone.  You get backup support from the manufacturer.

If you're an Adobe dealer/reseller/developer in Australia you get
nothing, not even brochures.   You dont get any support advertising
appearing in trade mags.  You dont get any help developing sales
strategy unless you are prepared to tell a competitor about it all,
because the only thing they'll do to help is refer you to a
competitor.   If you want to sell LiveCycle you get told to piss off.
If you need help to sell server products you get told to stop being
such a crybaby and get off your ass.   All of those things have
happened to me personally while trying to make business for Adobe.


-- 
Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer
AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com
ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from AUD$15/m

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-21 Thread Matt Quackenbush

OK, you have just officially made me laugh so hard that my side hurts.
Since when does Adobe have franchise agreements?  Since when do
people/companies pay Adobe hundreds of thousands of dollars in fees for
which Adobe agrees to market products and/or services for them?

Why do so many damn people in this world want every effen thing for free?
WHY?!?!?!

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 2:38 PM, Mike Kear afpwebwo...@gmail.com wrote:


 If you're a Toyota dealer you dont do it alone.  You get backup
 support from the manufacturer.  If you're a Dulux Paint dealer you
 dont do it alone.  You get backup support from the manufacturer.   If
 you're a Microsoft reseller you dont do it alone.  You get FLOODED
 with support from the manufacturer.  If you're a McDonalds franchisee
 you dont do it alone.  You get backup support from the manufacturer.



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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-21 Thread Matt Quackenbush

You specifically compared Adobe's management of ColdFusion marketing and
sales efforts to those of Toyota on behalf of their dealers.  Toyota dealers
can only become a Toyota dealer by paying massive franchise fees up front
and maintaining those payments year after year, as well as adhering to a
very strict set of guidelines, rules and mandates established by Toyota.

You are not paying franchise fees to Adobe.  You are not adhering to
anything of theirs.  Instead you are once again bitching publicly about
Adobe's lack of effort to secure you a job and/or business.  You bitch about
this even though you pay them **nothing**.  That, sir, proves that you
absolutely _are_ in search of a free ride.

I am certainly not the one being an idiot here.  I might be rude or
inconsiderate for having a damn good laugh at the expense of your whiny
rants, but that definitely does not qualify as being idiotic.


On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 2:52 PM, Mike Kear afpwebwo...@gmail.com wrote:

 Matt you're being an idiot.   I have deliberately AVOIDED mentioning
 dollars because i DIDNT want people thinking i want  a free ride.  I
 dont.   I never said so and you're just being a prick by suggesting i
 did.

 Mike


 On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 7:48 AM, Matt Quackenbush quackfu...@gmail.com
 wrote:
 
  OK, you have just officially made me laugh so hard that my side hurts.
  Since when does Adobe have franchise agreements?  Since when do
  people/companies pay Adobe hundreds of thousands of dollars in fees for
  which Adobe agrees to market products and/or services for them?
 
  Why do so many damn people in this world want every effen thing for free?
  WHY?!?!?!
 
  On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 2:38 PM, Mike Kear afpwebwo...@gmail.com
 wrote:
 
 
  If you're a Toyota dealer you dont do it alone.  You get backup
  support from the manufacturer.  If you're a Dulux Paint dealer you
  dont do it alone.  You get backup support from the manufacturer.   If
  you're a Microsoft reseller you dont do it alone.  You get FLOODED
  with support from the manufacturer.  If you're a McDonalds franchisee
  you dont do it alone.  You get backup support from the manufacturer.
 
 
 
  

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-21 Thread Phillip Vector

Speaking about them not wanting to have you do any selling of
Lifecycle, Yeah.. Most likely the attitude. I wouldn't want him
selling anything for my company either.

 On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 2:52 PM, Mike Kear afpwebwo...@gmail.com wrote:

 Matt you're being an idiot.   I have deliberately AVOIDED mentioning
 dollars because i DIDNT want people thinking i want  a free ride.  I
 dont.   I never said so and you're just being a prick by suggesting i
 

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs in Australia

2010-01-21 Thread Dave Watts

 In Australia?    Are they?   Does anyone outside Adobe know?

I don't know about Australia. But that's entirely irrelevant to
whether CF is on its last legs.

 Actually Dave,   Adobe people  = = Adobe.   You are 100% wrong in
 that statement.

Really? So if I grab any one of the thousands of Adobe employees,
they'll all have the same opinion and vision for the company that the
board of directors does? If I talk to someone on, say, the Photoshop
team, they won't see things a bit differently from someone else on the
Acrobat team? Everyone there will have the same perspective?

 Steve Ballmer.  Oh yea.    Actually Steve Ballmer doesnt put
 DEVELOPERS in front line sales positions.  Those guys are called SALES
 people.

I think you missed the point. Sales people, by themselves, cannot make
a product succeed or fail. It wasn't advertising and marketing that
made CF as successful as it is, it was that developers embraced it.

 I knew it wouldnt be long before someone told me this was all my
 fault.   I run a tiny development business.   I havent sat idly by and
 waited for the world to push dollars into my hand.  As I said in the
 outset, if I hadnt gone out and hustled my own opportunities I'd have
 starved.     I just wish I wasnt doing it all alone.

No one is blaming you for, well, anything except starting another in a
long list of CF is dying threads. But the amount of effort you've
put into this thread would have been better spent on marketing
yourself as a CF solution developer - doing a user group presentation.
How many have you done lately?

 If you're a Toyota dealer you dont do it alone.  You get backup
 support from the manufacturer.  If you're a Dulux Paint dealer you
 dont do it alone.  You get backup support from the manufacturer.   If
 you're a Microsoft reseller you dont do it alone.  You get FLOODED
 with support from the manufacturer.  If you're a McDonalds franchisee
 you dont do it alone.  You get backup support from the manufacturer.

We're Adobe and Microsoft partners, and I don't see the vast
difference that you see. But in any case, the two really aren't
comparable, as nearly all Microsoft products exist to help sell
Windows and Office. Adobe doesn't really have that sort of underlying
base product to fall back on.

As for the rest of your examples, let's just say that selling cars,
paint and hamburgers is different from selling software. If you can't
see the difference, I honestly don't know where to start.

 If you're an Adobe dealer/reseller/developer in Australia you get
 nothing, not even brochures.   You dont get any support advertising
 appearing in trade mags.  You dont get any help developing sales
 strategy unless you are prepared to tell a competitor about it all,
 because the only thing they'll do to help is refer you to a
 competitor.   If you want to sell LiveCycle you get told to piss off.
 If you need help to sell server products you get told to stop being
 such a crybaby and get off your ass.   All of those things have
 happened to me personally while trying to make business for Adobe.

Well, I don't know anything about how things are in Australia. But I
can tell you that here in the US, Adobe helps those resellers who help
themselves. I don't know any companies that would help my company
develop a sales strategy. That's our job. Having done that, we might
approach them for funding for specific marketing events, and
historically that's worked out pretty well.

As for LiveCycle, yeah, they pretty much want you to piss off, because
it's INSANELY COMPLICATED and EXPENSIVE. Unless you're a big company,
or you specialize in LiveCycle development, chances are you're not
going to be qualified to sell it. And every LiveCycle sale is a big
sale, because it's such an expensive product. So they sell it
themselves. We do LiveCycle training and consulting, but we don't sell
it ourselves either.

Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
http://www.figleaf.com/
http://training.figleaf.com/

Fig Leaf Software is a Veteran-Owned Small Business (VOSB) on
GSA Schedule, and provides the highest caliber vendor-authorized
instruction at our training c

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Dave Watts

 Dave, I have spent enough time in the sales operations of corporations
 to know that it doesn't matter a damn what the board of directors says
 - if the general sales team in a company has a widespread view that
 the product sucks, it doesn't sell.   Or if they dont get the right
 support, or if they dont know how to sell it,   it doesnt sell.
 This is especially true if the sales people have a whole raft of
 products they can sell to make quota.  The CEO can jump up and down
 and wave his/her arms all he/she likes and it ain't gonna move.

 So thats why i started asking myself what if this person's attitude
 was representative of  the general attitude of the Adobe staff?

Adobe doesn't have a general sales team. Again, it's a very, very
large company. Sales people tend to be fairly parochial, as their
primary concern is meeting their quotas selling the products they're
in charge of selling. And different products (and regions, and
vertical markets) have different sales teams. So, again, picking out
one guy from Adobe and asking yourself whether his attitude is
representative of anything larger than, well, his own attitude, is a
pointless exercise.

 And dont start talking about bloody LiveCycle.  It was the Adobe
 LiveCycle guy at WebDU who told me that he would never allow my
 company to have anything to do with selling LiveCycle.  I guess he
 took a look at me and decided I wasnt 'the right kind of person' or
 something. Perhaps he didnt like the colour of my shirt.   Even after
 i had told him that I had known the product for at least 15 years and
 had built my career on printed and electronic forms and work flow
 since the 1980s.   And i had known this product well since before it
 was bought by Moore and then Adobe.  (A substantial part of the
 product that eventually became LiveCycle was developed by Hugh
 Millikin's company in Sydney)   Even after he knew I had extensive
 experience with this kind of market, he still slammed the door in my
 face (very rudely too i might add )  so i walked away from the whole
 LiveCycle thing.  I'm not going to plead and beg to be 'permitted' to
 be a customer.

How many LiveCycle-certified developers do you have on staff? Have you
deployed any LC servers? Have you developed any LC applications?
Because you have to do ALL OF THAT before actually reselling the
product. You are simply not going to be considered as a reseller for
LiveCycle unless you've demonstrated a strong familiarity with the
product line, and the ability to handle large customer deployments.

Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
http://www.figleaf.com/
http://training.figleaf.com/

Fig Leaf Software is a Veteran-Owned Small Business (VOSB) on
GSA Schedule, and provides the highest caliber vendor-authorized
instruction at our training centers, online

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Dave Watts

 Is that so strange?    India has different problems that the rest of
 the world does not.  Canada  has different problems that the rest of
 the world does not.   England  has different problems that the rest of
 the world does not.  France  has different problems that the rest of
 the world does not.  China  has different problems that the rest of
 the world does not.  Indonesia  has different problems that the rest
 of the world does not.  Hell, even the USA  has different problems
 that the rest of the world does not.

 Why wouldnt Australia?

Why would you then generalize your specific problems to the world?

Look, if your problem is with the Australian sales team at Adobe, what
is the point of posting CF is dying to a worldwide programmers'
list?

Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
http://www.figleaf.com/
http://training.figleaf.com/

Fig Leaf Software is a Veteran-Owned Small Business (VOSB) on
GSA Schedule, and provides the highest caliber vendor-authorized
instruction at our training centers, onli

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Qing Xia

Now, here's the ultimate test: let's post a ASP.NET is dying thread to
their mailing list and see if the response is as strong.  [?]

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 4:36 PM, Dave Watts dwa...@figleaf.com wrote:


  Is that so strange?India has different problems that the rest of
  the world does not.  Canada  has different problems that the rest of
  the world does not.   England  has different problems that the rest of
  the world does not.  France  has different problems that the rest of
  the world does not.  China  has different problems that the rest of
  the world does not.  Indonesia  has different problems that the rest
  of the world does not.  Hell, even the USA  has different problems
  that the rest of the world does not.
 
  Why wouldnt Australia?

 Why would you then generalize your specific problems to the world?

 Look, if your problem is with the Australian sales team at Adobe, what
 is the point of posting CF is dying to a worldwide programmers'
 list?

 Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
 http://www.figleaf.com/
 http://training.figleaf.com/

 Fig Leaf Software is a Veteran-Owned Small Business (VOSB) on
 GSA Schedule, and provides the highest caliber vendor-authorized
 instruction at our training centers, onli

 

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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Eric Nicholas Sweeney

Well - just because my inbox needs another 50 messages...

I'm interested in the opinion that has been offered a few times in a few
iterations: Developers make Coldfusion (Successful) 

This intrigues me - because it seems to be of the logic: If you build it,
they will come. I mean - I see where you are going. The Developers are
really the Customer... And it's the strength of their community that propels
the product - blah blah...

Maybe it's my marketing background, but that story just doesn't hold up. The
success rate of anything based on that sort of fairytale/whimsical/lucky
business plan is extremely low. I am sure you can all point to one or two
that break through that boundary - but not thousands.

Additionally: I am not saying that Adobe doesn't consider the Developers
as part of their Marketing and sales strategy - I am sure they do - I'm just
not sure we're all that self important. 

And to that: I do think that part of Adobe's marketing is elitism. (Same as
Apple for that matter.) It's been true of their graphics suite forever. They
place a premium (price) on their software as a way of indicating how
important it is. If you need a metaphor/example, I would use Debeers and
Diamonds. There are more than enough diamonds to go around - and in the end
they are just rocks - but Debeers have been able to make you think they are
extremely rare and more precious than love - or a Detective Comics #27.  !!
And that my friends - was due to some GREAT marketing. Not because the rocks
are really that sparkly and marvelous. Still not clear?  How about Tom
Sawyer and the Fence? Sure is fun painting the fence... You should try it.

Adobe could stand to show more people enjoying the fence painting...

And - in regards to price - I will say - that for small shops like mine -
in very small markets - Adobe's price point does/can make it difficult to
compete. From software on to hosting - the prices start higher, because
there is more cost built in. It's a strange conversation to have with a
client who knows and cares zero about it all - but when they ask: Why does
it cost $30 to host your site and only $5 to host his? I have to have a
better answer than Because CF is made for Big Companies -  The customer
doesn't know or care about Coldfusion or PHP... He cares that my bill is 6
times more.

Anywho  - - -

So - the argument would be - I should really push Coldfusion!  AS a CF
believer I should get more involved! Spreading the word spreads the product!
I should start a group and get all my friends to start programming in CF!!!
- I'm not buying that. That's Adobe's job. It's THEIR product. I have my own
job to do.

As a company owner - I need to push MY company. I need to push My services.
And I need to stay ahead of the next guy. Adobe doesn't always help with
that. I'm not saying Adobe's responsible for whether my company makes or
breaks it any more than me to them - heck no - I'm also not saying I don't
use CF as a way to differentiate myself from the next guy - I do - But I
will offer: making a $300 vs a $1300 server license would be a hell of an
olive branch to the community at large. 

Could be great marketing. Could help CF spread like wildfire. IF done
correctly.

So - there's my log on the fire for this discussion. Carry on. Complain away
and point out the dozen reasons I am wrong. Just go easy on the name
calling.

- Nick

ColdFusion's not dead - It's Frozen! We're gonna break out the anti-virus
and thaw this mutha out! - Drunk IT Executive making no sense at all at
quarterly board meeting.




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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Andrew Scott

That's because Adobe are not here, actively doing what their predecessors
used to do and promote their product. The job market for ColdFusion in
Australia has been drying up for 10 years, you Americans don't get to see
that. But that doesn;t mean we are saying that ColdFusion is dying, far from
it. We now for a fact that overseas markets are thriving, but they are only
thriving in Adobes own backyard. This discussion comes up every now and
then, and every time it does there is no recession when it was brought up in
the past.

The recession is a scapegoat to the real problem.

We don't have the luxury of the conferences like you guys over their,
although one individual has taken it upon himself to try to change this. But
it will be hard for even that conference to keep its head above water, when
it is only marketed at existing or should I say extinct ColdFusion
developers here in Australia.

It is a catch 22, the product is not promoted here. It's harder to stay in a
development role with ColdFusion, as there are no jobs. Companies are moving
away because Microsoft are coming in and offering more than what Adobe is
doing.

If Adobe was being proactive in Australia, then maybe there would be more
companies here in Australia starting to use ColdFusion more, or even staying
with it.

But realistically, I had this conversation when I was in my last position.
They were a 100% ColdFusion house, we began moving direction and the number
one thing that the company looked at was what resources where at our
disposal in the future.

And it boiled down to developers, there were next to no jobs available.
Which means that developers are off learning other technologies, so if our
company was to continue down the ColdFusion path we would be spending more
money in training than was worth it. This is an all too common scenario here
in Australia, it might not be the case in America. But it is here.



On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 5:03 AM, Sean Corfield seancorfi...@gmail.comwrote:


 Well then maybe the Australian market in completely unique in the
 entire world and has different problems that the rest of the world
 does not?

 On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 1:42 AM, Andrew Scott andr...@andyscott.id.au
 wrote:
  If anyone wishes to reflect that we are in a recession then please
 Explain
  how the jobs for ColdFusion began declining in 1999, and have continued
 to
  drop for ColdFusion?
 
  Again let me say this, the Australian IT industry is thriving, just not
 the
  ColdFusion side of it. If there are no developers to replace, then the
  companies have no choice but to look at moving to another technology
 where
  developers and resources can be replaced, this hasn't changed in the last
 10
  years either.
 
  It really sickens me that the excuse of a recession is used, are you
 saying
  that we have been in a recession for the last 10 years Sean? I don't
 thinks
  so.

 

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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Josh Nathanson

I tend to agree with you Eric.  My feeling is that ColdFusion has been
profitable with little or no marketing, so what is Adobe's incentive to
actively market it?  They can plug along with a few developers working on
it, cranking out new versions every so often, and as long as it's not losing
money that's ok with Adobe.

-- Josh



-Original Message-
From: Eric Nicholas Sweeney [mailto:n...@bigfatdesigns.com] 
Sent: Thursday, January 21, 2010 3:18 PM
To: cf-talk
Subject: RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

So - the argument would be - I should really push Coldfusion!  AS a CF
believer I should get more involved! Spreading the word spreads the product!
I should start a group and get all my friends to start programming in CF!!!
- I'm not buying that. That's Adobe's job. It's THEIR product. I have my own
job to do.

As a company owner - I need to push MY company. I need to push My services.
And I need to stay ahead of the next guy. Adobe doesn't always help with
that. I'm not saying Adobe's responsible for whether my company makes or
breaks it any more than me to them - heck no - I'm also not saying I don't
use CF as a way to differentiate myself from the next guy - I do - But I
will offer: making a $300 vs a $1300 server license would be a hell of an
olive branch to the community at large. 

Could be great marketing. Could help CF spread like wildfire. IF done
correctly.

So - there's my log on the fire for this discussion. Carry on. Complain away
and point out the dozen reasons I am wrong. Just go easy on the name
calling.

- Nick

ColdFusion's not dead - It's Frozen! We're gonna break out the anti-virus
and thaw this mutha out! - Drunk IT Executive making no sense at all at
quarterly board meeting.






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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Mark Mandel

* Sigh *

You know what.  This kind of stuff really upsets me.

If you want change - then its time to step up and do something about it.

Get involved in your local UGM, start presenting to people, go to local
techups, or non-CF conventions or twitter meets.  There are SO many avenues
out there for intigating change its ridiculous.

Being more proactive also allows you to find work through multiple avenues
as well as you build relationships with people.  I would say almost the
majority of contract jobs out there are fulfilled by word of mouth, that I
think that Seek is almost a waste of time.

The only thing you can control the change of is yourself. You can't control
the change in other people.

Mark


-- 
E: mark.man...@gmail.com
T: http://www.twitter.com/neurotic
W: www.compoundtheory.com

Hands-on ColdFusion ORM Training @ cf.Objective() 2010
www.ColdFusionOrmTraining.com/


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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Justin Scott

 They were a 100% ColdFusion house, we began moving
 direction and the number one thing that the company
 looked at was what resources where at our disposal
 in the future.  And it boiled down to developers,
 there were next to no jobs available.   Which means
 that developers are off learning other technologies,
 so if our company was to continue down the ColdFusion
 path we would be spending more money in training than
 was worth it. This is an all too common scenario here
 in Australia, it might not be the case in America.

Just so we have this straight, not enough CF jobs were available elsewhere,
so the company assumed there must be no developer interest in CF, so they
changed directions?  That seems entirely self-defeatist to me.  Instead of
contributing to the solution (create more CF jobs) the company did the
opposite and started moving away from CF, which just contributes to the
problem you're complaining about.  It's not like those developers who had to
go learn other technology suddenly forgot how to do CF.  Some of them
probably preferred CF and would love to have a CF job, but none were
available.  So, instead of going forward and potentially creating some CF
jobs in the future to lure those developers back, the company just gave up
and changed directions.  No wonder CF isn't getting anywhere in Australia.


-Justin



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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Sean Corfield

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 3:18 PM, Eric Nicholas Sweeney
n...@bigfatdesigns.com wrote:
 Maybe it's my marketing background, but that story just doesn't hold up. The
 success rate of anything based on that sort of fairytale/whimsical/lucky
 business plan is extremely low. I am sure you can all point to one or two
 that break through that boundary - but not thousands.

Well, we're talking about programming languages and most of them
succeed because of community momentum, not because of ACME Inc.
marketing them...
-- 
Sean A Corfield -- (904) 302-SEAN
Railo Technologies US -- http://getrailo.com/
An Architect's View -- http://corfield.org/

If you're not annoying somebody, you're not really alive.
-- Margaret Atwood

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-21 Thread Sean Corfield

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 3:36 PM, Andrew Scott andr...@andyscott.id.au wrote:
 We don't have the luxury of the conferences like you guys over their,
 although one individual has taken it upon himself to try to change this.

webDU?

Web on the Piste?

cf.Objective(ANZ)?

MXDU/webDU is pretty much a fixture on the calendar and now
cf.Objective(ANZ) has joined the line-up - and is even more focused on
CF.
-- 
Sean A Corfield -- (904) 302-SEAN
Railo Technologies US -- http://getrailo.com/
An Architect's View -- http://corfield.org/

If you're not annoying somebody, you're not really alive.
-- Margaret Atwood

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Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-20 Thread Mike Kear

I know that's a 'Chicken Little kind of subject line.  I hope my
impressions are wrong.   Might be - i have been wrong before.  I
remember i was wrong once when i thought i was incorrect, but i wasnt.

Anyway,  these are the reasons i think the trends tell me ColdFusion
is either a dead duck of soon to be a dead duck at least in Sydney
anyway.  I dont know about other places.  ...

[A] there is almost no new development going on in ColdFusionIn
the last 12 months there has been just a handful of coldfusion jobs
advertised.   And most of those have been advertised by time-wasters
who didnt end up appointing anyone. I'm sorry Mike, they've put that
project on hold for now ... yada yada yada   (or so they said  maybe
they were just too gutless to tell me i didnt get the assignment)   In
the last 12 months i have had NOT ONE assignment as a result of any
advertisements for CF developers.   If I hadnt dug up business on my
own I'd have starved.   Contrast this with a few years ago when
freelancers like me had jobs lined up one behind the other.   Maybe
its just me,   maybe everyone else has lots of jobs lined up.  But
somehow i doubt it.

[B] There is next-to no apparent activity in the Usergroups on
coldfusion, at least as far as I've seen.  Everyone's fussing about
Flex and Flash and Railo and Ruby on Rails and no one's talking about
ColdFusion.I'd have made the 4 hour trek into the user group
meeting if there'd been anything to do with coldfusion on.  Apparently
developers think there is nothing to talk about with ColdFusion.   How
newer developers are getting on learning the product I have no idea.

[C]  Adobe dont seem to be doing anything to promote ColdFusion here.
 I might be wrong on that,  and its just that they dont tell us what
they're doing,  but I havent seen any evidence that they're putting
much effort into marketing ColdFusion. I dont consider sending
speakers to a COLDFUSION conference like WebDU or CfObjective to be
promoting new ColdFusion installations because they're preaching to
the choir there.   Those folks are already sold on CF.  Yes it's
important to keep those lines open with the developer community but I
dont see much use for gaining new users that way.   ( I said something
similar a few years ago, and Mark Blair got highly indignant about it
- called me and told me all the things he was doing to promote
ColdFusion.   But after that, nothing)   I would like to know that
Adobe care enough about their server product to put some money behind
it and promote it a bit here.It would make me feel more
comfortable about building my business around it.


So if IT departments arent looking for CF Developers,   Usergroups
arent interested any more,  Adobe isnt bothered with it any more,
what long term future does it have?

Boy i hope I'm wrong!
-- 
Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer
AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com
ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from AUD$15/month

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RE: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-20 Thread Eric Roberts

Three's not much hiring going on period.  Just in  case you have been living
in a cave, we do have a crappy economy with buttloads of unemployment.  I
was getting several calls a week up until about June...then it died.  It has
nothing to do with CF, it has to do with lack of funds to do projects.  I
have a couple of projects waiting in the wings that are just sitting there
because the company that needs to get them done can't get the loans to pay
for it.  Has CF ever been properly marketed?  Seems to have been doing fine
for the past what 13 years with little to no marketing.  I think the only
thing you got right here was the Chicken little part ;-)

-Original Message-
From: Mike Kear [mailto:afpwebwo...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, January 20, 2010 11:52 PM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs


I know that's a 'Chicken Little kind of subject line.  I hope my
impressions are wrong.   Might be - i have been wrong before.  I
remember i was wrong once when i thought i was incorrect, but i wasnt.

Anyway,  these are the reasons i think the trends tell me ColdFusion
is either a dead duck of soon to be a dead duck at least in Sydney
anyway.  I dont know about other places.  ...

[A] there is almost no new development going on in ColdFusionIn
the last 12 months there has been just a handful of coldfusion jobs
advertised.   And most of those have been advertised by time-wasters
who didnt end up appointing anyone. I'm sorry Mike, they've put that
project on hold for now ... yada yada yada   (or so they said  maybe
they were just too gutless to tell me i didnt get the assignment)   In
the last 12 months i have had NOT ONE assignment as a result of any
advertisements for CF developers.   If I hadnt dug up business on my
own I'd have starved.   Contrast this with a few years ago when
freelancers like me had jobs lined up one behind the other.   Maybe
its just me,   maybe everyone else has lots of jobs lined up.  But
somehow i doubt it.

[B] There is next-to no apparent activity in the Usergroups on
coldfusion, at least as far as I've seen.  Everyone's fussing about
Flex and Flash and Railo and Ruby on Rails and no one's talking about
ColdFusion.I'd have made the 4 hour trek into the user group
meeting if there'd been anything to do with coldfusion on.  Apparently
developers think there is nothing to talk about with ColdFusion.   How
newer developers are getting on learning the product I have no idea.

[C]  Adobe dont seem to be doing anything to promote ColdFusion here.
 I might be wrong on that,  and its just that they dont tell us what
they're doing,  but I havent seen any evidence that they're putting
much effort into marketing ColdFusion. I dont consider sending
speakers to a COLDFUSION conference like WebDU or CfObjective to be
promoting new ColdFusion installations because they're preaching to
the choir there.   Those folks are already sold on CF.  Yes it's
important to keep those lines open with the developer community but I
dont see much use for gaining new users that way.   ( I said something
similar a few years ago, and Mark Blair got highly indignant about it
- called me and told me all the things he was doing to promote
ColdFusion.   But after that, nothing)   I would like to know that
Adobe care enough about their server product to put some money behind
it and promote it a bit here.It would make me feel more
comfortable about building my business around it.


So if IT departments arent looking for CF Developers,   Usergroups
arent interested any more,  Adobe isnt bothered with it any more,
what long term future does it have?

Boy i hope I'm wrong!
-- 
Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer
AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com
ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from AUD$15/month



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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-20 Thread Mike Kear

Eric, I hope you're right and i'm just panicking unnecessarily.

But when i see little or no promotion,  very little discussion about
CF,   bugger all interest from the user groups,  and no jobs that adds
up to a pretty serious malaise i fear.

Every night i have some of my favourite job boards send me an email
with IT jobs that meet my search criteria.   Every night all 2009, I
got at least 150 jobs on the email.There are plenty of web dev
jobs.   but the ones containing the word ColdFusion  have dropped
from 4-5 every day about 18 months ago, to less than 5 in the last 6
months.Based on this information (which i admit might be giving me
a misleading impression) its hard not to conclude that the other
technologies are chugging along ok, but CF isnt.

I am eager to be proved wrong in this.I dearly hope i am.

Cheers
Mike Kear
Windsor, NSW, Australia
Adobe Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer
AFP Webworks
http://afpwebworks.com
ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from AUD$15/month



On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 5:01 PM, Eric Roberts
ow...@threeravensconsulting.com wrote:

 Three's not much hiring going on period.  Just in  case you have been living
 in a cave, we do have a crappy economy with buttloads of unemployment.  I
 was getting several calls a week up until about June...then it died.  It has
 nothing to do with CF, it has to do with lack of funds to do projects.  I
 have a couple of projects waiting in the wings that are just sitting there
 because the company that needs to get them done can't get the loans to pay
 for it.  Has CF ever been properly marketed?  Seems to have been doing fine
 for the past what 13 years with little to no marketing.  I think the only
 thing you got right here was the Chicken little par

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Re: Why i fear ColdFusion is on its last legs

2010-01-20 Thread Sean Corfield

On Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 9:51 PM, Mike Kear afpwebwo...@gmail.com wrote:
 I know that's a 'Chicken Little kind of subject line.  I hope my
 impressions are wrong.   Might be - i have been wrong before.  I
 remember i was wrong once when i thought i was incorrect, but i wasnt.

Ah, Mike, how long's it been since your last ColdFusion is dead post?

 Contrast this with a few years ago when
 freelancers like me had jobs lined up one behind the other.

Contrast this with a few years ago when we weren't in the biggest
recession since... when? WWII? The Great Depression?

 [B] There is next-to no apparent activity in the Usergroups on
 coldfusion, at least as far as I've seen.  Everyone's fussing about
 Flex and Flash and Railo and Ruby on Rails and no one's talking about
 ColdFusion.

OK, now you're the *fourth* person to say the same thing to me
today... What is up with user groups that I'm hearing this so much
lately?

I don't actually see it locally - there are three CFUGs within easy
driving distance for me and they're all active and have lots of
interesting (and CF-focused) talks. But I am hearing it from various
parts of the world. Is it a UG manager problem perhaps? i.e., nothing
to do with CF or Adobe specifically.

FWIW, I started looking for active PHP and Java groups (to do some
CFML marketing to) and had a hard time finding those. There's one
local PHP group but it doesn't seem very active and the only Java
group I could find in the area hasn't updated its website for ages and
hardly ever seems to meet.

UGs for Scala, Clojure and other new and/or hot languages do seem
to be more active - but that's because they're new tech for a lot of
people. CFML, PHP and Java have been around forever, they do their
jobs well and they're just... well, less interesting perhaps?

 [C]  Adobe dont seem to be doing anything to promote ColdFusion here.

That's been a long-standing complaint since the Macromedia days
{insert country here} gets no love. Adobe added a European
specialist (Claude Englebert) and were looking at how best to support
the APAC market - but these are not simple problems to solve and there
is no unlimited marketing budget.

 Boy i hope I'm wrong!

You are :)

The pool of CFers is constantly growing. Rates are still higher for
CFers than most other web technologies. There are more CFML
conferences and events than ever.

But there is a recession going on - and that hurts everyone.
-- 
Sean A Corfield -- (904) 302-SEAN
Railo Technologies US -- http://getrailo.com/
An Architect's View -- http://corfield.org/

If you're not annoying somebody, you're not really alive.
-- Margaret A

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