St. Louis interop panel report
Weiqi Gao provided some interesting notes on a St. Louis .NET User Group meeting where the panel topic was ‘.NET Meets Java.’ One of the expected Java voices could not make it, so the .NET side had a bit of a better chance to be heard. The sides were 2-to-1.
.NET vs. Java panel-Jeff Grigg, Adam Esterline, and Robert Fischer. It’s not surprising that all three have experience in both the Java world and the .NET world and had I not known these people, I can’t tell who’s the advocate for Java and who’s the advocate for .NET. As a matter of fact, one of the .NET panelists is working on a Java project with some heavy Ruby on Rails mixed in.
When and where you seek interoperability seems to vary depending on the input. In Gao’s words: The panels answers are pretty much what you can expect from experienced consultants: it depends. It depends on the nature of the business and the existing infrastructure.
http://www.weiqigao.com/blog/2007/09/25/the_net_meets_java_panel.html
St. Louis interop panel report
Weiqi Gao provided some interesting notes on a St. Louis .NET User Group meeting where the panel topic was ‘.NET Meets Java.’ One of the expected Java voices could not make it, so the .NET side had a bit of a better chance to be heard. The sides were 2-to-1.
.NET vs. Java panel-Jeff Grigg, Adam Esterline, and Robert Fischer. It’s not surprising that all three have experience in both the Java world and the .NET world and had I not known these people, I can’t tell who’s the advocate for Java and who’s the advocate for .NET. As a matter of fact, one of the .NET panelists is working on a Java project with some heavy Ruby on Rails mixed in.
When and where you seek interoperability seems to vary depending on the input. In Gao’s words: The panels answers are pretty much what you can expect from experienced consultants: it depends. It depends on the nature of the business and the existing infrastructure.
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The .NET meets Java Panel - weiqigao.com
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