Looking through all of these comments we should be glad, as a community, that there are a number players in this burgeoning orchestration space. Nobody has won and nobody should win. They each have their strengths and…
> It is troubling to me that the Akka/Play/Sbt/Slicks of the world get obvious preferential treatment when it comes to language prioritization. Being a member of the Play core team at Typesafe, it hasn't been my…
In fairness to James, I think the comparison he's making is in regard to the idiosyncrasies of developers, and that Java developers tend more often than not to use synchronous blocking calls. It is entirely possible to…
Looking through all of these comments we should be glad, as a community, that there are a number players in this burgeoning orchestration space. Nobody has won and nobody should win. They each have their strengths and…
> It is troubling to me that the Akka/Play/Sbt/Slicks of the world get obvious preferential treatment when it comes to language prioritization. Being a member of the Play core team at Typesafe, it hasn't been my…
In fairness to James, I think the comparison he's making is in regard to the idiosyncrasies of developers, and that Java developers tend more often than not to use synchronous blocking calls. It is entirely possible to…