I have 2 words to say about the .NET stuff

"Springfield monorail"


On Wednesday, Jun 11, 2003, at 20:14 Europe/London, Davidson, Glenn wrote:


Chris,
I tend to agree with your assessment of JavaPro but I'd like to open this up
a little. Right now we are faced with two choices for web development .Net
or not .Net. I can over-simplify the arguments for and against .Net as the
following:


.NET
Pluses
Developer Productivity
Negatives
Vendor lock in.

Others (including Struts)
Pluses
No vendor lock in
Negatives
Less developer Productivity

It seems like many if not most companies are more interested in developer
productivity.


Does anyone know of, or foresee any means by which we (developers) will be
able to be as productive using Struts/JSP/DHTML/JavaScript etc. as people
are using .Net? I'd love to be able to make a case against .Net .


Thanks

Glenn


-----Original Message----- From: Chris Gerrard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, June 11, 2003 12:07 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Stuts can't "get its act together" - JavaPro


I found this announcement today on JavaPro's August Issue online "In Brief"
site:
http://www.ftponline.com/javapro/2003_08/magazine/departments/inbrief/ defaul
t.asp


The blurb:
Developer Tools
TurboM2
Tired of waiting for The Apache Group to get its act together with the
Struts initiative, Virtuas has launched a framework of its own. Virtuas
released TurboM2 previously under the name Web Application Model (WAM).
Since then, the company decided to alter the product to perform many of the
features Struts offers, and like Struts will be released under the open
source model.


There's more, but on casual inspection it appears that JavaPro has simply
regurgitated some marketing poo from Virtuas intended to convey the
impression that Struts is in a funk and not moving forward. (so one should
naturally move to Virtuas' TurboM2 product)


Upon casual inspection it appears that TurboM2 is a fairly direct clone of
Struts. On of Virtuas' value-added claims is that TurboM2 has available
support and training that Struts does not.


Links:
Virtuas TurboM2: http://www.turbom2.org/index.html
Struts/TurboM2 comparison: http://www.turbom2.org/docs/Comparison.pdf

The part that disturbs me is JavaPro's presenting this whole pile as if it
were truth. Someone reading this article could well be persuaded that yes,
indeed, Struts is in trouble and they should look elsewhere. I've been less
than impressed with JavaPro's content for some time, and this erodes my
confidence in their editorial control and knowledge of the Java world even
further.





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