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Archive for January, 2010

Java vs .Net

January 30th, 2010

The argument of .NET vs Java has been around for a long time and there’s no clear cut winner. Both are valid development environments, with pros and cons to both. Here are 4 links to balanced articles on .NET vs Java:

Article 1
Article 2
Article 3
Article 4

From “There’s More to Java vs .Net Than Technology”, I found some interesting excerpts:

According to Gartner analyst Mark Driver, that’s the reality—most large organizations are using both platforms. In fact, he rarely encounters a company running only one. And although he sees plenty of momentum right now around .NET, Driver says that’s simply because it’s a newer platform. “There’s a lot of hype around it,” he says, while Java isn’t as exciting because it’s no longer new. The Java programming language has been around for about 10 years; Sun first introduced J2EE in mid-1999 as a platform-independent, Java-centric environment. Microsoft, in turn, announced .NET in 2000 as a major new platform and infrastructure strategy for the company.

Given that large corporations need to keep both environments strengthens the fact that it is based on requirements. We believe for the LMMS current and future requirements, Java is the best fit for us. A common theme in all articles is that if you’re looking for a portable and robust solution, Java would be the one to go with.

Another interesting point from this article is from the cost prospective:

His advice includes carefully considering the product development lifecycle. If you’re looking at a three to five-year lifecycle, he says, where time to market is dominant, .NET might be a better choice, other things being equal. That’s because in shorter development cycles in which upfront costs are dominant, Microsoft can be a plus. “For ease of use and produce-ability, Visual Studio is a very, very nice development environment.” Although there are no absolutes, he emphasizes, Visual Studio can mean that .NET is a faster and cheaper choice for shorter development cycles. On the other side are the larger costs and longer development time of a five- to 10-year lifecycle, or projects with more than 500 concurrent users and heavier legacy integration features. In those cases, Driver says, consider the additional flexibility of being able to change course over time with less impact. That points to a Java platform, because “I can switch middleware and I can switch tools, not at zero cost, but at less cost.

This is a comforting fact for us given the potential scale of the project and the ever changing requirements for humanitarian aid work out in the field.

Another key question to the .NET vs Java argument is the availability of programmers, especially on the Java side. This has changed in recent times. Given that when I went to University, the majority of classes used Java, open source projects and tools, it’s no surprise that the numbers have balanced out. The comment that I pay special notice to is in regards to skill level, where the higher the skill level, the more balanced the availability of programmers from both sides are.

Who you can find also depends, of course, on what skill level you’re looking for.

At Number Six, Lyons says, the company needs high-end, sophisticated developers for both platforms. “At that level, I can’t say that there’s any difference,” Lyons says, “either in salary or in ease of finding [candidates].” If you’re just beginning a .NET project, Lyons says, “you might find people on the Visual Basic side, but [they’re] not really enterprise designers.”

And I definitely like the way this article ends, because it not only helps reassure that using one of the two platforms is not a cause for a concern, but being that they have to compete only makes these development platforms stronger.

fruffolo Technical Ramblings

Accountability!

January 21st, 2010
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As a good example of why LMMS is so needed as a tool to ensure aid gets to who needs it and to hold agencies accountable for aid, consider this report today from the UN’s news agency:

In Brief: Alleged food aid seller arrested in Afghanistan

KABUL, 21 January 2010 (IRIN) – A man who allegedly sold 72 tons of food aid destined for internally displaced persons (IDPs) along the border between the southern provinces of Zabul and Paktika, has been arrested, the National Security Department (NDS) said in a press statement on 20 January.

“The accused has confessed that he sold 1,212 sacks of wheat, 224 cartons of cooking oil, 145 sacks of pulses and 12 bags of salt which were given to him by WFP [World Food Programme] for IDPs – to a merchant in Qalat City [Zabul Province] for one million Afghani [over US$20,000],” the statement said. NDS is Afghanistan’s intelligence agency and its officials do not respond to media queries.

WFP spokeswoman in Kabul Challiss McDonough told IRIN WFP was taking the food diversion allegations very seriously. “We will aggressively investigate this case,” she said, without confirming the food aid sold had been donated by WFP.

UN agencies do not have direct access to insecure southern provinces but run aid projects through local partners such as NGOs and government offices.

Reported from http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=87819

Jay Narhan Uncategorized

Haiti Support

January 17th, 2010
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Readers – please consider support for the Haiti Earthquake. One option: http://bit.ly/Help_Haiti

I will be posting more info on Haiti support soon.

Jay Narhan Uncategorized