> Clojure, because of the JVM, doesn't tie your hands this way. If you want to
> do everything evented go ahead. Do everything with threads? Go ahead. Want
> to mix the two designs together like Aleph? Sure. All while not losing the
> elegant brevity of a Node.js app.

Something like ring-aleph-adapter, however trivial it might be to
implement, will help in seamlessly switching existing applications to
aleph/netty.

> I like JavaScript, and I like Node.js. But I think Clojure opens up some new
> avenues to explore when building web applications.

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