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[nycphp-talk] CQHost and JSP vs. PHP

Oktay Altunergil nyphp at altunergil.com
Tue Oct 29 09:57:02 EST 2002


It's not worth all the support calls for less than $15 :)
Seriously.. you mentioned that JSP/Servlets is more popular with employees. My observation is that people who want to deal with JSP/Servlets/Java are ready to pay the price for it. Because you actually do need faster hardware and much much more support.

oktay


On Tue, 29 Oct 2002 08:27:56 -0500
Liquid M3 <liquidm3 at hotmail.com> wrote:

> I had an extremely bad experience with CQHost.  Poor uptime, poor 
> communication.  My site was down for days at a time.
> 
> I was drawn to CQHost by the JSP support (and, in fact, I'm writing a JSP 
> version of LiquidClassifiedsXML right now - and have nowhere to host it, now 
> that I'm letting my CQHost account expire).
> 
> Ever wonder why PHP support is widely available while JSP support is offered 
> by relatively few hosts on hosting plans that cost less than $15/month? 
> (even though JSP appears to be far more popular with employers)
> 
> CQHost blamed its uptime problems on Resin, which it said was causing 
> resource utilization problems.  This seems plausible enough to me - I can 
> see that with client-side apps that Java tends to be a memory and processor 
> hog, and I believe that it behaves similarly on the server-side (see 
> http://www.chamas.com/bench/index.html and look, especially, at the red bars 
> indicating memory usage).
> 
> But I don't want to give the appearance of claiming that PHP is good while 
> JSP is bad.
> 
> My belief is that PHP tends to be better suited for small websites/companies 
> while JSP/servlets/EJBs tend to be better suited for large 
> websites/companies, particularly ones for which data loss or downtime can 
> have catastrophic implications.
> 
> I would use JSP/servlets/EJBs if I needed things like failover and message 
> queueing - probably important if I am processing trades.  I wouldn't want to 
> lose a few Soros Fund trades just because the server went down temporarily 
> (rather, I'd like them to go into a message queue, to be processed later 
> when the server comes back up).
> 
> I would use PHP if I needed to make a quick and cheap website that primarily 
> serves information as opposed to processing financial transactions.
> 
> But this is just my opinion; no doubt, lots of people on this list will 
> disagree with me.
> 
> And I'll note, before other people point this out, that at least one large 
> company appears to be adopting PHP: 
> http://public.yahoo.com/~radwin/talks/yahoo-phpcon2002.htm
> 
> But as far as I can tell, the major Wall Street firms are big 
> JSP/servlet/EJB users rather than PHP users.
> 
> 
> Ted
> 
> LiquidMarkets
> Financial data and free classifieds
> http://www.liquidmarkets.com
> 
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