From: Sandy N. <san...@ho...> - 2002-03-14 13:43:54
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Hi folks, I work with a web company that has about 180,000 registered users, and pretty good weekly traffic stats. Their current platform of development includes Oracle for the data server, AOLServer for web serving platform and TCL to script the whole thing together, with everything running on Solaris on a few fat multiprocessor Sun machines. I just had a chat with the CTO (I've been trying to get him to look into python for a while) and it seems his resistance has finally broken (-: he spent a real weekend with the python and his initial misgivings about significant whitespace have disapeared, and now he's raving about how well the language 'flows'. Suddenly, this recent convert wants to incorporate python into the next generation build of the web site. Now he is leaning towards using a combination of jython and java to reimplement and refactor the design as he likes the support and momentum behind java and doesn't want to give up the productivity benefits of a scripting language. Now, I'm really happy to have turned the top tech decision-maker in the company on to python (kinda validates my fascination with the language internally :-) But I'm worried about things like performance and scalability: is it wise to service this number of customers with jython servlets running on tomcat for example? Any advice would be much appreciated. Thanks. Sandy <cross-posted to c.l.py> _________________________________________________________________ MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos: http://photos.msn.com/support/worldwide.aspx |