<<Java versus .NET for service-oriented architecture (SOA) development
is something less than the war of the worlds, but as an industry
debate analysts offer contrasting views.

The Java side got something of a boost earlier this month when an
Evans Data Corp. survey of 400 developers and IT managers actively
working on Web services found an uptick in Java usage and a decrease
in Microsoft .NET. Java was up slightly and .NET was down 20 percent
from previous Evans surveys. But the net (no pun intended) result was
that the two technologies were "virtually tied" in overall usage, with
one in five respondents planning to use both, according to Evans.

Support for both is common say two analysts who offered contrasting views.

"I don't think this is as much a religious war as some people make it
out to be, at least on the back end, the infrastructure end," said
Bradley F. Shimmin, principal analyst of application infrastructure at
Current Analysis LLC. "Most SOA server platforms support both Java and
.NET environments fairly equally."

Both Java and .NET have strengths and weaknesses in SOA development,
said Jason Bloomberg, senior analyst with ZapThink LLC., who suggested
that the results of the survey may indicate more of a temporary blip
than a trend.

"My sense is that these data indicate a short-term effect that doesn't
represent the longer-term trend," Bloomberg said. ".NET's weakness is
integration with other platforms, while Java's weakness is in building
flexible user interfaces. So the current data implies that many
organizations are still focusing on building their services, which
often involves dealing with heterogeneity in a legacy environment --
an area where Java is stronger."

As SOA projects move forward this may change as Web services are
composed into applications, he said

"As these organizations reach what we call the Services Tipping Point,
the focus will be on the consumption and composition of services, and
in this area, Java no longer holds a lead," the ZapThink analyst said.
"It then becomes a battle among .NET, Adobe and a whole range of
UI-centric and business process-centric tooling that becomes less
about the platform and more about process and interface. When that
happens, we'd expect these survey results to be quite different."

However, Shimmin sees the possibility that the survey may indicate a
trend, citing the open source community aspect of Java, which was also
noted by John Andrews, CEO of Evans when the survey data was released.

"There are two primary tenets that drive architectural decisions,"
Shimmin said. First, in his view is that companies select technologies
and products that will give them the most bang for their buck,
including increasing developer productivity. Second, companies are
looking for flexibility in the long term.

"Java-based SOA technologies such as the Spring framework and
Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB) certainly speak to that first point by
greatly simplifying and shrinking development requirements and
constraints," Shimmin said. "To the second point, open source
development tools and technologies, most predominantly typified by the
Eclipse environment, give customers the assurance that investments,
including human knowledge investments, such as developer training,
will remain relevant across projects and over time. I think those two
facets combined are at the heart of this shift in customer focus."

In Shimmin's view the lack of an open source community may be
hampering Microsoft's SOA play, even as it offers developer
productivity. He said .NET technologies like Windows Communication
Foundation (WCF), and .NET-tuned development tools like Visual Studio
employing C# provide the simplified development path to SOA.

"But they lack a thriving open source ecosystem, such as with Eclipse,
capable of making that platform something that can aggressively grow
beyond the bounds of Microsoft-built technologies," Shimmin said.>>

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Gervas

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