Ruby on Rails Wednesday, March 30, 2011

There are a lot of good responses here already, especially with
respect to ROI, so here's just a different way to look at the
situation:

Has your employer considered the LONG TERM licensing costs for Windows
server several years down the road? Sure they might be buying licenses
anyway, but as load and demand scale upward (depending on the size/
nature/audience/goals of the project), licensing cost does too. This
is where FOSS really shines: cheap initial implementation, serious
cost savings down the road.

Another point: a TRULY purist technology stack, these days, is pretty
much just a pipe dream, at least in my opinion. By getting fanatical
about "stack A" vs "stack B", your employer is missing out on the
leverage that a very cutting-edge
and capable community driven FOSS stack can provide. And aside from
that, you can really make your company's internal or external
infrastructure incredibly fragile by putting all your eggs in one
basket, especially that of a for-profit corporation who has proven
time and again, by shipping crashtastic and buggy software, that
their bottom line is more important than their customer's well-being.
FOSS doesn't have the same conflict of interest.

Additionally, it's certainly true that Rails is ONE of the most
mature, tried and tested frameworks in existence - period. I don't
know that we can hold ASP. NET MVC in the same regard. (Not saying it
can't "hang" with the cool kids - just that I think that argument
would be a much harder sell, even to some apparent Microsoft
fanbois.)

Good luck man! Unfortunately, it sounds like you may need it. :-)

On Mar 29, 11:59 pm, Michael Pavling <pavl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 29 March 2011 19:57, Alpha Blue <li...@ruby-forum.com> wrote:>
> > .. we strongly encourage the use of Microsoft IIS and using a product in
> > the .NET family for the code base..
>
> encourage != enforce
> So say "We took your encouragement into consideration, but in the
> absence of any suggested, measurable benefits, we've stayed with RoR"
>
> > ASP.NET and ASP.NET MVC - I can't
> > stand them.  I refuse to code in them.
>
> ah... well, you might need to update your CV and start looking for a
> new job then, because if your company is orientated on .Net, and you
> "refuse" to code in it, then you might be in the wrong company...

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