Evans Data research on App Servers is begin reported in a new article posted on Software Development Times On The Web. It includes the following quote:
ColdFusion, in particular, rated highly in scalability, performance and support options. Evans Data attributed this spike in ColdFusion appreciation to last year’s release of ColdFusion 8.0.
So we’re comparing four J2EE servers, a programming language and an operating system? Ben, does this make sense to you?
I did not comment on the research itself, just on that quote. 😉
— Ben
This makes sense, a lot of people do not consider ColdFusion a language. CFML is a language, ColdFusion is much more. If the only thing included with ColdFusion was CFML then I would not use it.
@ Jaime
I believe they are referring to WIndows Server as the .NET platform. They are not referring to ColdFusion as a language as Kris points out.
I take your points, gents, but I still find this a bizarre comparison. What are we to think of ColdFusion running on JBoss running on Windows Server 2003? They do say nice things about ColdFusion, but it’s hard to credit such a muddle-headed analysis.
And even though there *is* a particular point of view where if you squint the right way you can consider these technologies comparable, the report writers then do their best to undermine it:
"ColdFusion’s competitors are older server page technologies like ASP and
JSP, as well as newer dynamic languages like Ruby and PHP."
Ben, I start to appreciate how hard your job is.