Aaron

let me ask you a simple question ...

"Who is going to maintain the trail of different programming technologies
you
leaves behind you when you choses to leave the building?"

On Mon, Oct 19, 2015 at 2:10 PM, Aaron Bartell <aaronbartell@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:

I've been mostly trying to stay out of the debate though have been watching
it. A couple comments:

1 - The internet has never known the amount of workload the likes of
Netflix/LinkedIn/Walmart/etc are processing. Easy for us to sit back with
our 1/10000th of a work load and say the technology/approach is junk.

2 - Each of these shops didn't start out with Node.js and instead moved to
Node.js from something else. I think Walmart said they liked Java/Servlets
but couldn't develop in it fast enough. They more features faster because
of Amazon.

3 - The sheer amount of open source can become unwieldy. That's why the
community started creating things like ruby-toolbox.com to convey stats
about open source categories (i.e. ORM) to lessen the amount of time a
programmer needs to spend researching options. In short, this is
aggregation at its best.

​4 - Jade/haml/<insert other html-lessening technology> are great tools for
creating more whitespace in the view layer code. Less for my eyes to
consume means faster to maintain (for me anyways).

​5 - EGL had(has?) phenomenal technology that I don't know if it has been
accomplished well in other stacks.​ For example, front-end to back-end
line-by-line visual debugger. IBM screwed up and thought it could
manufacture a language and bring it to popularity. They've since learned
you need to buy your way into existing popularity (i.e. purchase of
StrongLoop - a big Node.js player).

6 - Neils, keep pursuing Javascript on JVM and let us know how it goes.
I've also gotten Scala working though haven't developed anything of
significance yet.



Aaron Bartell
litmis.com - Services for open source on IBM i
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