Re: Pushing for WebObjects?
Re: Pushing for WebObjects?
- Subject: Re: Pushing for WebObjects?
- From: Q <email@hidden>
- Date: Sat, 15 Nov 2008 01:57:01 +1000
On 15/11/2008, at 12:35 AM, Timothy Reaves wrote:
I'm trying to convince our development staff to drop our
proprietary dev stack and adopt WebObjects. I like WO a good deal,
and things like Project WOnder help too. The problem I have is that
one of the developers has pointed out that Apple has deprecated the
development tools. You can't write code without tools. So it's
clear that Apple is either going to release a new tool set (even if
that is WOLips), or completely abandon the platform.
Apple decided to deprecate the tools without providing a replacement
because of several reasons
a) Leopard deprecated the Java-ObjC bridge support making the legacy
tools fail to function properly without this support being
reimplemented somehow.
b) The legacy tools were well overdue for a rewrite
c) Eclipse + WOLips had gained substantial traction internally and
within the WO community and had reached the point of being a viable
replacement.
d) Xcode was never going to compare with Eclipse as a Java IDE.
Instead of investing resources implementing new tools, apple chose to
refocus their efforts on the runtime and support the communities
existing efforts to build development tools based on Eclipse and
WOLips. Since deprecating the legacy tools Apple has supported
development of the community driven tools both financially and by
means of code contributions.
With Apple not divulging such info, I was wondering if anyone might
have any additional info on the mater: a private response would be
fine. It really comes down to no large company would ever adopt
something without knowing the vendor is going to continue to support
it (FUD, as invented by IBM!).
Apple are internally very committed to WO. They use it for a lot of
projects, the most visible ones being iTunes, the Apple Store and
Mobile Me.
As a framework WO has the advantage of being very mature, has a stable
API and has very little in the way of lacking features or issues that
don't have existing solutions. As a result apple doesn't actually need
to invest a lot of effort to support it, and if it does what you need
now it will most likely continue to do so for years to come.
There are still companies actively developing with versions of WO that
have not been updated for years. It ages very gracefully
Your biggest challenge is going to be with the slim offerings in the
areas of training, literature and employable skilled developers.
--
Seeya...Q
Quinton Dolan - email@hidden
Gold Coast, QLD, Australia (GMT+10)
Ph: +61 419 729 806
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