Python for me. I supposed I am contrary to what the author means, but the python site shows activity and community of a growing language. The java site shows basically nothing but flashiness in comparison. If I was to choose a language based on its website, I would go with the clean, well-organized one.
I'm not really much of a Python user these days, but yeah, of the two, I'd have to say that the Java site has been completely coopted by the folks from marketing, whereas the Python site is clearly a 'community run' operation. Yes, it's not as good looking, but who cares?!
The Python site looks like its designer placed a higher priority on being organized and informative than being flashy; the overall design says, "This is why Python is a good language, and here's how you can try it out." (The same applies to http://haskell.org, I think.)
The Java site makes it sound like something people would try to sell on TV late at night. ("Operators are standing by!") How many stock images of people with laptops can you put on one page?
This is utter crap. If you're going to compare sites for two languages, don't compare a plugin's site to a programming language's site. It obviously should have been http://java.sun.com vs. http://www.python.org .
Utterly ridiculous. Which young hacker in the history of the world ever picked a programming language based on how "hip," "cool" or "fun" a marketing site said it was? Who the hell ever thought flashier site = better language? I mean... I am speechless. This may be the dumbest thing I've ever seen. Like, I try to flag it more, but it just unflags it.
I think I would pick the one whose website says, "USED BY NASA" as opposed to the language site that has a picture of a dude trying to figure out why he has a laptop in his hands.
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[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 22.7 ms ] threadThe Java site makes it sound like something people would try to sell on TV late at night. ("Operators are standing by!") How many stock images of people with laptops can you put on one page?
Anything driven by buzz more than substance.
http://mit.edu/
http://www.phoenix.edu/