If you are interested,
Take part in this, I will publish the results.
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=TQjDx4a4pDlpuzBwxiLW4A_3d_3d
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
Wow,
There have been a lot of responses so far, I'll keep this thing running for a while I think, but might do some interim stats along the way.
There are some very interesting things in there, some of which are very good and some bad
I should also mention that it's only a short one page survey with only 7 questions that doesn't ask for any form of identification.
Day 1 summary. Let me know if there is a stat you might be interested in.
7% of people have used ColdFusion for between 0 & 2 years.
38% of people use ColdFusion 75%-90% of the time
41% earn between 60k-80k
93% of people are on Coldfusion 7
76% of people will upgrade to CF8, 20% not sure and only 4% wont
87% of people are not moving to another technology
50% of the 13% people who are moving are going to .NET
69% of people will never move technology
17% of people will look to move to new technologies 1-2+ years from now.
I'll keep my eye on it, but there are decent numbers, so the % probably won't slide much either way.
Overall, I think the stats are pretty good, only really bad one is the number of new developers, which is a big worry. From an Adobe point of view, lots of good things, big % to go to CF8 and big % never plan on not using ColdFusion.
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Dale Fraser
Sent: Tuesday, 26 June 2007 1:13 PM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] ColdFusion Survey
If you are interested,
Well,
I did the survey...
I am moving into my 13th year as a Coldfusion developer, my Salary is high average and would move to CF 8 if I could. I am moving to another language (java) because I have no choice on the matter and I will be doing that from last week onwards.
The biggest problem is the cost of Coldfusion, and not the difference between the USD and AUD but the cost of Enterprise deployment. Coldfusion has the potential to be a market leader for its RAD, but is let down by the license cost. Open source will kill Coldfusion, and even though there is Railo. It is not open source and even it is too expensive for Enterprise licensing. Then there is the smith project, yes it is open source but it is not ready for what we need in an application now.
My biggest problem was the Coldfusion Survey that Adobe did last year, and I was thinking great there is some stuff there that will be moving in the right direction. But CF8 has not proved that at all. Don’t get me wrong it has some great new features, and speed wise has improved. But the reality is the market, it is not cost effective anymore for developing in CF and this needs to change like yesterday.
Coldfusion 8 should have moved in this direction, and yet it hasn’t.
1) Open sourced engine or free with everything that has no license for 3rd party additions.
2) Provide a mechanism to allow better plugin support, CFX has not been improved since V5.0
3) Provide the extra functionality that requires a license as a plugin an a needed basis at a cost.
4) Provide an API for the user to hook into cftags and introduce extra functionality. (Still debating on this one)
These do not seem that important, but let’s look at a project that we are developing. We are using such things as velocity and sitemesh, to provide great templates on one of our projects and provides an API that allows great additions to anyone wanting to use them. And one day I would like to see how I can intergrate sitemesh and velocity into Coldfusion, or any other rendering engine that might come along.
Even with the argument of RAD and time saved with the features of coldfusion, that we have now duplicated in Java the time taken to incorporate, can’t justify the cost of an enterprise license. And my boss a Coldfusion developer, knows what Coldfusion can deliver but will not look at adding that much cost to an application we plan on selling, it is not cost effective to us and our business model.
It is a shame Allaire / Macromedia wasn’t listening when I was discussing this problem 5-6 years ago..
Andrew Scott
Senior Coldfusion Developer
Aegeon Pty. Ltd.
www.aegeon.com.au
Phone: +613 8676 4223
Mobile: 0404 998 273
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Dale Fraser
Sent: Tuesday, 26 June 2007 4:19 PM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
Day 1 summary. Let me know if there is a stat you might be interested in.
7% of people have used ColdFusion for between 0 & 2 years.
38% of people use ColdFusion 75%-90% of the time
41% earn between 60k-80k
93% of people are on Coldfusion 7
76% of people will upgrade to CF8, 20% not sure and only 4% wont
87% of people are not moving to another technology
50% of the 13% people who are moving are going to .NET
69% of people will never move technology
17% of people will look to move to new technologies 1-2+ years from now.
I'll keep my eye on it, but there are decent numbers, so the % probably won't slide much either way.
Overall, I think the stats are pretty good, only really bad one is the number of new developers, which is a big worry. From an Adobe point of view, lots of good things, big % to go to CF8 and big % never plan on not using ColdFusion.
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.5.476 / Virus Database: 269.9.8/869 - Release Date: 25/06/2007 5:32 PM
$20-40k 3%
$40-$60k 17%
$60-$80k 45%
$80-$100k 15%
$100k + 20%
0% of people using Coldfusion 5 :)
<BR
--
Peter Tilbrook
ColdGen Internet Solutions
President, ACT and Region ColdFusion Users Group
PO Box 2247
Queanbeyan, NSW, 2620
AUSTRALIA
http://www.coldgen.com/
http://www.actcfug.com/
Tel: +61-2-6284-2727
Mob: +61-0432-897-437
Email: pe...@tilbrook.name
MSN Messenger Live: Desktop General
It is called the ColdFusion Australian Developer Survey
And since I only posted here, most people will be Aussies.
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of M@ Bourke
Sent: Tuesday, 26 June 2007 6:42 PM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
I filled it out, how ever being in a diff country I don't think the wage thing would be valid.
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
-----Original Message-----
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Peter Tilbrook
Sent: Tuesday, 26 June 2007 7:06 PM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
Well it’s just a survey.
People lie in Surveys also, put higher salaries etc. So I’d use the figures as a guide not gospel. There are differences between VIC / NSW also but I wanted to keep it simple.
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of M@ Bourke
Sent: Tuesday, 26 June 2007 8:27 PM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
But wage differences would throw out the results if Aussies in diff countries were to fill it out, and then someone in oz wanted to work out market rates of oz roles.
If I ever want to do that, the first place I would end up moving would
be to something like Flex or AIR applications, simply because of the
demand, and because I could keep my hands in CF still.
From there I would probably move to Java - but realistically I would
want to stay in Adobe space for as long as I could - and I think that
there are enough jobs out there to do that without any trouble.
Mark
On 6/27/07, Haikal Saadh <haikal...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> > 50% of the 13% people who are moving are going to .NET
> >
> What about the other 50%? Java?
>
> >
>
.NET 42%
PHP 29%
Other 15%
Java 14%
Ruby 0%
Remember that only 13% of people surveyed are moving.
I wonder what the other is, did I miss some key technology?
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
-----Original Message-----
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Haikal Saadh
Sent: Wednesday, 27 June 2007 10:12 AM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
The reasons are numerous, but in summary
1. It's overly complicated java classes etc
2. It changes too much
3. It's desktop development is years behind .NET
I think that's probably why .NET won, because you can use one language and
framework and develop for web, mobiles, desktop, server etc. But I'm
probably biased as we develop both client and server components, currently
in C++ and ColdFusion.
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
-----Original Message-----
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Mark Mandel
Sent: Wednesday, 27 June 2007 10:22 AM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
But there is perl, awk, lisp to name a few off the top of my head.
Andrew Scott
Senior Coldfusion Developer
Aegeon Pty. Ltd.
www.aegeon.com.au
Phone: +613 8676 4223
Mobile: 0404 998 273
-----Original Message-----
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Dale Fraser
Sent: Wednesday, 27 June 2007 10:32 AM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
Here are the status for people moving to new technologies.
.NET 42%
PHP 29%
Other 15%
Java 14%
Ruby 0%
Remember that only 13% of people surveyed are moving.
I wonder what the other is, did I miss some key technology?
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.5.476 / Virus Database: 269.9.9/872 - Release Date: 26/06/2007
6:43 PM
Seriously?
Someone is moving from ColdFusion to perl, awk or lisp?
I don't think so.
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
Hmm, I think you and I are not on the same page.
As far as over complicated classes, I will disagree. I would love that
complication in CF, and the reason behind that is Design Patterns and
Coldfusion can do these patterns just not efficient enough.
Well we go interfaces anyway, and that will be the most ever used new
feature to come out of CF8.
Andrew Scott
Senior Coldfusion Developer
Aegeon Pty. Ltd.
www.aegeon.com.au
Phone: +613 8676 4223
Mobile: 0404 998 273
-----Original Message-----
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Dale Fraser
Sent: Wednesday, 27 June 2007 10:40 AM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
Personally I would put Java down the list, probably about the position it
got ranked.
The reasons are numerous, but in summary
1. It's overly complicated java classes etc
2. It changes too much
3. It's desktop development is years behind .NET
I think that's probably why .NET won, because you can use one language and
framework and develop for web, mobiles, desktop, server etc. But I'm
probably biased as we develop both client and server components, currently
in C++ and ColdFusion.
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
No virus found in this outgoing message.
So other could be covering up to 20 more technologies that aren't
mainstream.
Andrew Scott
Senior Coldfusion Developer
Aegeon Pty. Ltd.
www.aegeon.com.au
Phone: +613 8676 4223
Mobile: 0404 998 273
-----Original Message-----
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Dale Fraser
Sent: Wednesday, 27 June 2007 10:47 AM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
Andrew,
Seriously?
Someone is moving from ColdFusion to perl, awk or lisp?
I don't think so.
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Simple things become very complicated, reading a text file for example and
writing to a text file are totally different classes with different methods
etc.
There are heaps of examples like this.
Java have hurt themselves more than anyone else has, the create confusion
with branding choices, the have fights with bigger companies getting them
selves excluded.
Just my opinion, but they are right down on my list.
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
What is this % of people moving to from ColdFusion. I can't even think of
another option to consider than what I listed.
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
Provide a mechanism to allow better plugin support, CFX has not been improved since V5.0
The biggest problem is the cost of Coldfusion, and not the difference between the USD and AUD but the cost of Enterprise deployment. Coldfusion has the potential to be a market leader for its RAD, but is let down by the license cost. Open source will kill Coldfusion
And my boss a Coldfusion developer, knows what Coldfusion can deliver but will not look at adding that much cost to an application we plan on selling, it is not cost effective to us and our business model.
The thing is abstraction, both Java and .Net provide a safe mechanism to use
the underlying framework, and it's up to you if you decide to use the lower
level API or the higher level API.
File access is a good example, of how you can raw read, or an the interface
for buffering the file, it is not complicated when you understand why they
exist and when to use them.
One of the best things is that it has been designed to allow for refactoring
easily as has .Net
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
Dale,
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
No virus found in this incoming message.
You will be surprised what people will look at, they might know a perl
evangelist and was talked into going to perl. They might have had a C/C++
background and have been asked to write true CGI interfacing.
Or god forbid they looked at the need for lotus notes development, and have
been persuaded by the dark side.
There are many reasons for one's decision. Like mine to Java, it is forced
upon me and the others if I want to remain with this company. Just like your
Java developers when you took your position, learn or move on.
Yeah, but what?
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
Andrew,
Seriously?
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
No virus found in this incoming message.
Robin,
Yes I am talking about tag / function development.
Web services, can’t fault that as java2wsdl and wsdl2java is the most used. Gateways, well natively I have to use what is implemented, but what if I want to override that functionality with another 3rd party. The only way to do this is to write more code to interface into this, which is not providing a mechanism to override.
Java and .Net access is not the issue, unless I could run the 2 in the same template as CFML (Coldfusion 8 can’t handle that) Bluedragon yes, coldfusion no.
As for cost vs open source, yes they are different.
Open source, let’s look at the .Net integration currently this use the JNDI .Net bridge which costs to use and in 6 months time someone releases an open source version. How can I incorporate that into Coldfusion to override the implemented one in Coldfusion now. So that I could use the same code without having to rewrite every CreateObject? You have to love design patterns, that is why they exist so that refactoring is kept to a minimal.
You can’t compare coldfusion to Application Servers, coldfusion is a scripting interpreter that runs on an Application server. Now JRun is behind the eight ball, sure it has been patched to run Coldfusion 8 but how many J2EE applications do not run on JRun.
I tried to get Roller (apache weblogger) running on JRun, to find that there is an issue running struts on JRun. Jira the most popular ticketing / issue tracker will not install on JRun nor will confluence. So if you want to make a comparison of Application Servers then compare JRun to JBoss, Websphere etc.
Now the argument I make is simple, how can I incorporate rendering engines like sitemesh or verlocity into Coldfusion easily or wish to incorporate our rendering engine for templating API’s into coldfusion it can’t be done at the level it needs to be done.
Now as you can see I am talking at an Enterprise level, these sort of things wouldn’t be the average cup of tea for standard every day users. But the thing is that the Cost of coldfusion is $10k for a 2 cpu license, we spent around $2k developing the infrastructure to incorporate all that we need (open source projects) into an Application to run on any Application Server, except JRun due to the limitations of JRun.
Now in the infrastructure we are looking at, that’s $2k compared to $750k.
Now tell me how Coldfusion cost is valid?
And we get to patch our application anytime we want, we do not rely on a closed application and we can fix the open source code any time and submit back to the application development team. But the thing is that we are not hindered into moving forward at anytime, nor are we waiting 2 years for a solution to a problem and if something is not working we remove and replace with something that is maybe better and due to design patterns in place the factory patterns have allowed us to do this with minimal impact to our application.
Coldfusion is not going to win Enterprise development, unless it is hosting companies where they can maybe make some of their money back by virtualisation of the servers.
Look I am a diehard coldfusion developer, I will remain developing in my spare time but I can’t justify what we need to do in an Enterprise solution, and even consider Coldfusion for that matter. And we are not alone, this is why Coldfusion will not make a serious impact anymore on Enterpirse deployments (notice I said deployments) Because we are not going to tie our application to one Application server and the license of coldfusion places to much cost on our application.
Oh and when I beta Tested the very first carnation of Coldfusion Rebort Builder, I posted a bug that stated while Report builder can not place boxes, lines etc across sections they are cutting their own throats. You can’t use an application like report builder and be serious about providing a service for reports, when open source and free alternatives provide a better solution. And yet there is no way to override the cftags, you need to provide a facade to the problem.
I could go on and on, but after 5 years report builder is still a pathetic abortion to something that was a half assed attempt to provide a solution, this is something that as annoyed me with every new release of Coldfusion and we can’t override or fix these annoyances and have to keep complaining till they get fixed.
We as a company can’t afford to wait 5 years for something that might or might not get fixed, and look for an alternative solution now. And this is why management are not seriously looking into Coldfusion on an Enterprise level. We have a project manager here who used to work for eBay and he hates Microsoft, but he is good at what he does and I tell you know I am only echoing what I and others are up against when trying to defend coldfusion, how can we when we have no leg to stand on?
Andrew Scott
Senior Coldfusion Developer
Aegeon Pty. Ltd.
www.aegeon.com.au
Phone: +613 8676 4223
Mobile: 0404 998 273
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
"when you took your position, learn or move on"
I did learn it, and I did move on, moved on to ColdFusion.
That was worded wrong, I wasn't referring to you I meant your java
developers. But I applauded you for winning over the Java development
mentality.
Andrew Scott
Senior Coldfusion Developer
Aegeon Pty. Ltd.
www.aegeon.com.au
Phone: +613 8676 4223
Mobile: 0404 998 273
-----Original Message-----
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Dale Fraser
Sent: Wednesday, 27 June 2007 12:15 PM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
Andrew,
"when you took your position, learn or move on"
I did learn it, and I did move on, moved on to ColdFusion.
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
No virus found in this outgoing message.
<cfwddx action="cfml2wddx" input="#searchclasses#" output="wddxQueryOutput">
<cfset
recordsetElem=xmlsearch(xmlparse(wddxQueryOutput),"/wddxPacket/data/recordset")>
<cfset fieldNames=recordsetElem[1].xmlAttributes.fieldNames>
_________________________________________________________________
Advertisement: Ministry of Sound's Sessions 4 has arrived. Have a listen!
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Firstly I'm on a free Survey Monkey account, which only allows 100 responses, so we are not far from that, so if you wanted to take part and haven't yet, then do so here.
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=TQjDx4a4pDlpuzBwxiLW4A_3d_3d
Once it hits 100, I will post all the final results.
|
|||
|
Less than 1 Year |
4.9% |
||
|
1 - 2 Years |
1.6% |
||
|
3 - 4 Years |
11.5% |
||
|
5 - 9 Years |
67.2% |
||
|
10 + Years |
14.8% |
||
|
|
|||
|
90% - 100% |
18.0% |
||
|
75% - 90% |
26.2% |
||
|
50% - 75% |
21.3% |
||
|
25% - 50% |
23.0% |
||
|
11.5% |
||
|
Yearly Salary excluding Superannuation |
|||
|
|
||
|
$40,000 - $60,000 |
16.4% |
||
|
$60,000 - $80,000 |
44.3% |
||
|
$80,000 - $100,000 |
14.8% |
||
|
$100,000 - $120,000 |
4.9% |
||
|
$120,000 - $140,000 |
6.6% |
||
|
$140,000 + |
11.5% |
||
|
|
|||
|
Version 5 |
1.6% |
||
|
Version 6 |
8.2% |
||
|
Version 7 |
90.2% |
||
|
Will you upgrade to ColdFusion 8 |
|||
|
Yes |
75.4% |
||
|
No |
3.3% |
||
|
21.3% |
||
|
Are you moving to another technology |
|||
|
86.9% |
||
|
.NET |
6.6% |
||
|
Java |
1.6% |
||
|
PHP |
3.3% |
||
|
Ruby |
0.0% |
||
|
1.6% |
||
|
When are you likely to move technologies |
|||
|
63.9% |
||
|
0-3 Months |
8.2% |
||
|
3-6 Months |
1.6% |
||
|
6-12 Months |
6.6% |
||
|
1-2 Years |
9.8% |
||
|
2+ Years |
9.8% |
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Dale Fraser
Sent: Tuesday, 26 June 2007 1:13 PM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] ColdFusion Survey
If you are interested,
Take part in this, I will publish the results.
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=TQjDx4a4pDlpuzBwxiLW4A_3d_3d
However, no Java dev. worth his salt will limit himself to just that.
There are heaps of libraries and frameworks that make coding in java
much more pleasant. A bold claim, sure, but ask anyone who knows their
way beyond what's available on java.sun.com.
I don't want to have to go search for a library to do something simple, I
should be able to do basic stuff without writing Classes or finding
libraries.
In ColdFusion, there are only 2 external libraries we use. Zip & Image
With ColdFusion 8 there will be none.
With ColdFusion 8 there will be none.
>>
Um CF8 is as much java supported as 6 and 7. What are you trying to
say (without breaking NDA)?
There is no NDA issues, CF8 is public Beta and in case everyone didn't
already know
Coldfusion 8
Has both ZIP and Image tags
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
-----Original Message-----
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Peter Tilbrook
Sent: Wednesday, 27 June 2007 8:32 PM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
I keep thinking that request scope joke is getting old, but I keep laughing.
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of M@ Bourke
Sent: Wednesday, 27 June 2007 8:58 PM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
Gold!!
Haha,
We have a test for that, it’s called SECT
Social Emotional Cognition Test
http://www.cogstate.com/go/clinicaltrials/our-tests/social-emotional-cognition
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Andrew Scott
Sent: Wednesday, 27 June 2007 9:08 PM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
Well, it's easy than saying WTF has java got to do with your statement:-)
It’s testing for schizophrenia.
One of several tests in a battery for this.
Apparently schizophrenics can not read social scenes, this would not be able to detect which image is different.
Mind you our tests detect change in conditions not the presence of conditions, ie is the patient improving or declining after drug X
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Andrew Scott
Sent: Wednesday, 27 June 2007 9:26 PM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
What does that test? Or more to the point, what is it testing for?
It's testing for schizophrenia.
One of several tests in a battery for this.
Apparently schizophrenics can not read social scenes, this would not be able to detect which image is different.
Mind you our tests detect change in conditions not the presence of conditions, ie is the patient improving or declining after drug X
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Andrew Scott
Sent: Wednesday, 27 June 2007 9:26 PM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
What does that test? Or more to the point, what is it testing for?
On 6/27/07, Dale Fraser <da...@fraser.id.au> wrote:
Haha,
We have a test for that, it's called SECT
Social Emotional Cognition Test
http://www.cogstate.com/go/clinicaltrials/our-tests/social-emotional-cognition
Regards
Dale Fraser
I actually Suffer from AllaireiteMacromeStriationAdobe syndrome.
What's wrong with CF ORMs; Transfer, Reactor, fourq (embedded in
FarCry), etc? There are plenty of examples of modern design patterns
in use throughout the ColdFusion community.
Sounds like the only reason Enterprise CF is not a viable option for
your business is that you can't factor in the license cost for
distributing an application. Have you tried an OEM deal? If its a
packaged application you can get inexpensive options for licensing CF/
BD.
-- geoff
http://www.daemon.com.au/
Steve
-----Original Message-----
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Geoff Bowers
Sent: Thursday, 28 June 2007 12:23 AM
To: cfaussie
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
You can't justify the expense of the CF license as your product
doesn't leverage enough from CF. Or you don't sell enough of it to
make the cost of CF work for you. That's fine. Use Java/.NET/Babbage
Difference Engine/whatever and cobble together your own environment.
So there you have it: end of another mind numbing thread.
Please stop belly-aching about ColdFusion and how it doesn't match
*your* requirements. None of us on this list really care.
Regards,
-- geoff
http://www.daemon.com.au/
OEM generally works on the basis that the engine (in this case CF)
will only be deployed to run your solution or extensions of it.
Therefore it has less utility than a standard license, and doesn't
detract from the vendor's market as it only works with your solution.
Pricing:
You have a couple of units to sell --> price approximates reseller buy
price.
You are happy to pre-order a truck load of units --> price rapidly
decreases.
You may even be able to get a fixed price for unlimited units if you
stump up a lot of cash.
Who to talk to? Well at Adobe you could contact the local Partner
manager and enquire about OEM licensing options. If you are talking
about flogging a lot of units you'll find the right person to talk to
very quickly; it's not like trying to get support for an existing
installation ;) Also I hear New Atlanta are very keen for OEM style
deals, just call their offices.
Hope that helps,
-- geoff
http://www.daemon.com.au/
You really did not make sense, my beef is with the cost. Not how much we
leverage of Coldfusion or not.
But all I can say, is that we are looking at a hardware infrastructure that
would see us need to spend in excess of $700k in licensing of Coldfusion
only. Compare that to the $2k we spent and tell me why big enterprises won't
use Coldfusion.
And explain to the rest of us how you would justify going the Coldfusion
route.
Again it has nothing to do about what I develop in, or what I love. It comes
down to what the businesses and companies of australia are prepaired to
spend.
And all I can say to you Geoff, is this. If you where in the position to
create an Application, and hardware infastructure for a very larger project,
and you could spend $2k in software comapred to $700k what business decision
would you take, knowing that there is no way you can recoup the $700k?
And to shut you up Geoff, I will die a Coldfusion programmer if I have the
chance.
Andrew Scott
Senior Coldfusion Developer
Aegeon Pty. Ltd.
www.aegeon.com.au
Phone: +613 8676 4223
Mobile: 0404 998 273
-----Original Message-----
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Geoff Bowers
Sent: Thursday, 28 June 2007 9:49 AM
To: cfaussie
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
Regards,
-- geoff
http://www.daemon.com.au/
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11:54 PM
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11:54 PM
700k would be 100 servers worth of enterprise
I'm assuming that means you have 100 companies with their own servers who
need a licence, in which case that would be their cost not yours.
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
$700k is correct, you have no idea how big this project is and the company
is full steam ahead on this. This is projected based on the penetration
forecast of the project into the market, and what amount of hardware is
needed to run on.
But the company has no way of recouping licensing costs on this project
either.
Don't ask me anymore questions, this is so NDA its not funny.
Andrew Scott
Senior Coldfusion Developer
Aegeon Pty. Ltd.
www.aegeon.com.au
Phone: +613 8676 4223
Mobile: 0404 998 273
-----Original Message-----
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Dale Fraser
Sent: Thursday, 28 June 2007 11:17 AM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
700k? Did you mean 70k
700k would be 100 servers worth of enterprise
I'm assuming that means you have 100 companies with their own servers who
need a licence, in which case that would be their cost not yours.
Regards
Dale Fraser
http://dalefraser.blogspot.com
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Sorry, but I havn't really paid too much attention to all things CF in
the last few years.
What does CF have in enterprise these days thats so important?
Can't you just run your average app on BlueDragon for free anyway?
thanks
Drew Peacock
1) Can't speak for Coldfusion 8, as I believe the differences are changing.
But under CFMX7+, the speed of Enterprise is faster, it also has Gateways to
name a few of the differences. There is a feature edition matrix somewhere
that will go into this in more detail. Also the ability to run of other
Application Servers, which you can't do with the standard version.
2) BlueDragon is not free, please go and double check what you do know about
BlueDragon.
3) Enterprise applications are not average applications, if they were then
the world would have no need for J2EE development.
I really don't know why anyone bothers helping you on these lists.
Seriously hope you get hit by a car and die in a fire.
Have a nice day.
Firstly I'm on a free Survey Monkey account, which only allows 100 responses, so we are not far from that, so if you wanted to take part and haven't yet, then do so here.
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=TQjDx4a4pDlpuzBwxiLW4A_3d_3d
Once it hits 100, I will post all the final results.
How long have you been using ColdFusion
Less than 1 Year
4.9%
1 - 2 Years
1.6%
3 - 4 Years
11.5%
5 - 9 Years
67.2%
10 + Years
14.8%
What percentage of your time do you spend writing ColdFusion code
90% - 100%
18.0%
75% - 90%
26.2%
50% - 75%
21.3%
25% - 50%
23.0%
0% - 25%
11.5%
Yearly Salary excluding Superannuation
$20,000 - $40,000
1.6%
$40,000 - $60,000
16.4%
$60,000 - $80,000
44.3%
$80,000 - $100,000
14.8%
$100,000 - $120,000
4.9%
$120,000 - $140,000
6.6%
$140,000 +
11.5%
What Version are you using
Version 5
1.6%
Version 6
8.2%
Version 7
90.2%
Will you upgrade to ColdFusion 8
Yes
75.4%
No
3.3%
Unsure
21.3%
Are you moving to another technology
No
86.9%
.NET
6.6%
Java
1.6%
PHP
3.3%
Ruby
0.0%
Other
1.6%
When are you likely to move technologies
Never
63.9%
0-3 Months
8.2%
3-6 Months
1.6%
6-12 Months
6.6%
1-2 Years
9.8%
2+ Years
9.8%
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Dale Fraser
Sent: Tuesday, 26 June 2007 1:13 PM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] ColdFusion Survey
If you are interested,
Take part in this, I will publish the results.
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=TQjDx4a4pDlpuzBwxiLW4A_3d_3d
Thanks Scott,
I am overall very happy with the responses, makes me confident that ColdFusion will have a strong take up, that not everyone is changing technologies and that people with ColdFusion skills can earn a decent living.
Thanks to everyone who took part also, really wasn't sure on number of responses I would get.
I also thought that Java would be higher percentage than .NET but I would be in the .NET boat so I can understand why people would pick it.
As for the side debate on pricing, I think it's off topic a bit to this discussion, obviously a large % of people don't care as they are Yes for upgrade, myself included.
I hear/share your pain Andrew.
ZeroOne was a predominantly CF based shop for 9 years and for the last two years I have been battling/arguing with Adobe about the “fact” that it’s cheaper to buy Cold Fusion online with a credit card from the Adobe Store than from the New Zealand distributor (i.e. wholesale price). Significantly cheaper in some cases/versions.
Lots of promised made by Adobe to fix it, and then the departure of Steve from Adobe Auzzy, resulted in dead-silence and no such “fix” of the problem. So as a hosting company we were faced with buying licenses the retail way for clients who were expecting to get something other than retail when dealing with a “reseller” of the product as a bundle for a solution. And on top of that to get a box copy would mean we pay more than retail.
So now ZeroOne has grown to 19 staff, 11 of which are developers and I’m sad (but glad) to say that 100% of the new staff (7 new staff) have been more .Net focused than CF focused. I’m sad about this because CF rocks and I personally love coding in CF. But I’m glad about this because my woes with Adobe won’t become a shadow over client projects anymore and I won’t have to convince clients to pay a license for something that don’t need now that we can develop the same solutions in .Net at $0 additional cost to the hosting side of things (since .Net is a native application server in IIS).
We will always support CF in our hosting facilities (including CF8), and we’ll continue to use the product (including CF8) but it’s no longer the core offering because it’s not financially viable to make it the core offering.
There ya go, shared my view, hope it wasn’t too boring :o)
Cheers
Bruce
-----------------------------------------
Bruce Trevarthen, CEO
ZeroOne (NZ) Limited
---
DDI: +64 4 4714444
Mobile: +64 21 567967
-------------------------------
I hear/share your pain Andrew.
ZeroOne was a predominantly CF based shop for 9 years and for the last two years I have been battling/arguing with Adobe about the "fact" that it's cheaper to buy Cold Fusion online with a credit card from the Adobe Store than from the New Zealand distributor ( i.e. wholesale price). Significantly cheaper in some cases/versions.
FIAWAD
(fall in a well and die).
And if your architecture allowed you could easily leverage a set of CF
servers to handle any of these tasks in a distributed fashion.
> We have sourced all open source solutions, and what licenses we have paid
> for comes to a total of $2k.
>
> What coldfusion would have been good for, is the middle tear application
> that delivered in a very short time frame all those solutions with minimal
> coding, plus the ability to prove the other features we have for client side
> more easily.
The basic problem is your architecture.. pure and simple. You are
trying to suggest that somehow CF licensing is limiting your options
but the reality is your solution is unique and CF licensing is not
designed for it. Only teams developing a packaged solution would
build 100 identical servers to run all the same services side by side
-- a more typical solution is to build a set of servers to run IM, a
set of servers to handle reporting and so on. Isolating each set of
services into an application of its own and connect them all up.
But hey I know nothing about your *actual* set up. What I do know is
that this has nothing to do with CF licensing -- unless you are
suggesting that *all* commercial software licensing is useless. Adobe
is profitable selling CF. They have consistently released a full
product release every 1.5 years for the last decade. Could their
licensing be improved? Yeah, maybe it can. But clearly there are
plenty of people who are happy to use CF as a platform as is.
> Now the regardless or not of what we are looking at, one has to seriously
> look at how many larger companies are looking for Enterprise solutions and
> then look at the cost of a CF license ontop of devleopment costs to deliver.
> The point is it shows that coldfusion is not a competitor (a serious one) in
> that market, I know that there are TLP licensing but I am not the one who
> controls the finances.
This is where you completely miss the point banging on about your
situation as though it fits anybody else. The reality is that for the
*vast* majority of CF installations worldwide the cost of development
and ongoing maintenance greatly exceed the cost of the initial server
license.
Talk to Adobe. Clearly you guys are not serious about CF in your
architecture as you haven't. Who knows, get an OEM deal for 100kAUD
for unlimited embedded version of CF8 and 100 servers is 1k per
server. 1000 servers is 100AU per server.
> Sure there is a lot of work for boutiques, web development for the average
> developer. But seriously how many people on this list as used Coldfusion in
> an Enterprise solution to this sort of scale.
The question is idiotic. Enterprise does not mean 100+ servers. We
have plenty of clients who need and run ColdFusion Enterprise on
single, dual or larger server clusters. We continue to find the
return on investment significant. Adobe themselves run one of the
largest web assets in the world on a cluster of two ColdFusion
servers.
> This is not about me and my gripes, this is about every Coldfusion developer
> and how we are loosing a market due to costings.
If anything we lose market and mindshare every-time we see constant
moaning in forums about the price of CF. To follow your absurd train
of thought Adobe should be dropping the price of CF Enterprise to
200AU.
-- geoff
http://www.daemon.com.au/
PS. apologies to all and sundry, I know I should not feed it...
I'm sorry I obviously didn't make myself clear.
a) i have *no* idea what you are doing
b) i have *no* interest in what you are doing
c) my only interest is clarifying your ramblings for those who might
be confused by them
d) cf licensing per se is not your issue.. *any* licensing above 200AU
per unit is your stated issue
e) you are the only one on this list with said issue
Please desist from hijacking every thread in this forum and turning it
into a personal tirade.
--
Peter Tilbrook
ColdGen Internet Solutions
President, ACT and Region ColdFusion Users Group
PO Box 2247
Queanbeyan, NSW, 2620
AUSTRALIA
http://www.coldgen.com/
http://www.actcfug.com/
Tel: +61-2-6284-2727
Mob: +61-0432-897-437
Email: pe...@tilbrook.name
MSN Messenger Live: Desktop General
Your negotiation skills must be of a very low order. To pay 9.5K would
be ridiculous. You really need to contact a distributor like
RocketBoots to get a fairer deal. Yeas Adobe software is too expensive
compared to US prices but do not be afraid to question this with an
authorised reseller.
I never stated I was THE premier bugfinder - Ray Camden must surely
hold that title. And our efforts made the RC a more stable platform -
but Adobe still need all of us to push it to find any issues before it
goes gold.
At least I bother to ask Adobe about CF8 and got some great answers:
http://www.actcfug.com/index.cfm?actcfug=ArticleView&ArticleID=217
(thanks again for your valuable time Tim).
It's funny because its true ;)
Mark
Robin,
Yes I am talking about tag / function development.
Scott Barnes wrote:
> *snip*
> All i need now is Barry to chime in with some more brand-war bait,
> maybe I could throw in a .NET remark or two to end with maybe a fight
> between Adobe or Microsoft which M@ then can finish off with some UK
> story he's been bursting to tell (actually M@'s <mailto:M@%27s>
> travels in the UK are funny i must admit).
*snip*
That's Tim Hussey in the Sydney Office.
Hands up who thinks 'Derision' is a regular poster who registered a gmail account to anonymously vent their fury :)
I mean to never have posted before and have such a strong opinion is a bit sus to me...
I think this is a symptom of a mature product.. We all pretty much know CF inside and out and have nothing left to talk about. I'm just here for the laughs.
Bye!
---------------------------------------------------
Ryan Sabir
Technical Director
p: (02) 9274 8030
f: (02) 9274 8099
m: 0411 512 454
w: www.newgency.com Newgency Pty Ltd
Web | Multimedia | eMarketing
115 Cooper St
Surry Hills NSW 2010
Sydney, Australia
-----Original Message-----
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Robin Hilliard
Sent: Friday, 29 June 2007 10:25 AM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
Yes. Maybe these "way too expensive" local hosting companies
actually pay for their licenses...
All cones down to a business decision, and if your prepared for the initial
outlay.
Now.....does any one know if I can unsubscribe from specific discussions?
I will chime in here, and Mike Kear and anyone else that is running a
hosting business.
First let me say this, it is easier for you guys to plan the said cost of CF
into your decision. But I am not going to discuss that.
One thing that has puzzled me a little, and this comes from a discussion I
had with a hosting company for one of our clients. Which I am so not happy
with.
When you planned your infrastructure, did you go with Virtual Servers and if
so how many instances did you guys end up setting up? The reason I ask is
that this hosting company, is running one server and one instance of CF and
every now and then some stupid website brings the entire CF server to a
halt. When I asked about setting up another instance, and maybe moving the
more robust apps over for more stability I was laughed at.
I guess what I am asking, is how do you decide how many websites you run of
one CF instance?
Andrew Scott
Senior Coldfusion Developer
Aegeon Pty. Ltd.
www.aegeon.com.au
Phone: +613 8676 4223
Mobile: 0404 998 273
-----Original Message-----
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Steve Onnis
Sent: Friday, 29 June 2007 10:59 AM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
I run a hosting business and I work on the volume principal (I hope I spelt
it the right way). Get enough clients to cover the cost and hopefully make
some op top on it. You need to look at recouping the cost long term because
you will never get it back over night (and no im not gonna say it...)
All cones down to a business decision, and if your prepared for the initial
outlay.
Now.....does any one know if I can unsubscribe from specific discussions?
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.5.476 / Virus Database: 269.9.10/875 - Release Date: 27/06/2007
9:08 PM
If you look at the IP addresses, you can work out who it is.
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of AJ Mercer
Sent: Friday, 29 June 2007 10:58 AM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
How about this for some conspiracy theory:
I personally don't run virtual servers. I haven't gotten to a stage where I
have needed that sort of thing, and even if I did I would be more likely to
purchase more servers then use virtual servers. I know it's a cost factor
and it needs to be planned as part of your growth. Although what you
mentioned does happen from time to time, I am on the servers all day every
day pretty much and I see when something goes funny, and if I don't see it,
my clients are quick to jump. If you do have mission critical application
that require to be up 100% of the time then you would be better of getting
your own server so you don't have to worry about those sorts of issues. To
be setting up a CF instance per hosting client on a single serer would be an
administrative nightmare.
On that though, keep in mind that its not always a CF server issue. People
running dodgy SQL queries can bring the sql server to a halt. Heavy file
system access can spike the CPU and slow things down. Both of which can be
totally non-cf related.
I would, however move you to a different server if you went happy with the
one you were on. That just comes down to customer service. Also, if the cf
server was not set up to be running jrun so you could have multiple
instances, then you would either have to install it again using the jrun
method and have both running in tandem, or uninstall the current install and
go again, just so you could have your own instance. I would have said no
also, but not laughed at you :)
We have just had an infrastructure upgrade with some new equipment and
stuff. Currently I have a server doing nothing because its waiting for CF8
to be released. As for cost, I am surprised how much the prices of upgrades
has come down. From memory, upgrades are like half the price they used to
be. I remember having to pay close to 8k for an initial CFENT license, and
still have to pay 6k for the upgrade. Not the case now.
Steve
Andrew,
You have really hijacked this thread, can you create new topics rather than keep replying to the survey one.
97 Messages
32 Andrew Scott 33%
21 Dale Fraser 22%
Then the next person is only 10 responses
From: cfau...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:cfau...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of AJ Mercer
Sent: Friday, 29 June 2007 10:58 AM
To: cfau...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion Survey
How about this for some conspiracy theory: