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Archive for March, 2010

Grails job trends – what are you seeing?

Saturday, March 20th, 2010

I’ve counted 5 Grails jobs cross my desk in the last 2 months.  That’s probably about as many as in most of 2009.  This graph from indeed.com certainly shows an upward trend in Grails job posting as well.  It’s pretty easy to hit 1000s of percentage points of growth in a few months when you’re moving from a few hundred up a few hundred more, to be sure, but the results are encouraging.


grails java Job Trends graph
What’s been your experiences with Grails and Groovy jobs over the past 6 months or so?  Are you seeing or hearing of more adoption recently?

grails java Job Trends grails java jobs

Groovy and Grails adoption holdups?

Sunday, March 7th, 2010

What are some issues holding up Groovy and Grails adoption that you’ve encountered?  The biggest I see have less to do with the technologies itself and more about the marketplace.  Specifically, issues about finding developers familiar with the technology in the first place seem to be a major issue affecting a company’s confidence in adopting Groovy or Grails for a project.  This seems very much a chicken/egg situation – where will people get the experience using it if it’s not used, right?

Fortunately, I’ve personally been able to see some Grails and Groovy projects launch over the last year, helping to bring the numbers of experienced developers up, if only by a small amount, but I’d like to hear about more success stories.  Matt Woodward’s piece in the March 2010 issue is encouraging as well, because it may help prod developers from other camps (ColdFusion in his case, PHP in mine) to come in to the Grails camp, expanding the total pie.  While it’s great to get Java developers to use Grails as their primary web framework, we’re only growing Grails at the expense of other frameworks, and that does nothing to enlarge the share of the JVM as a web platform.

I see commodity hosting as a longstanding (but hopefully not eternal) stumbling block in the Java world, and keep hoping someone will address this with an offer targeting Grails.  Ideally a customized hosting solution with the breadth of plesk or webmin with custom management for Grails apps.

Maybe I’m too much a stick-in-the-mud, and not with the current ‘cloud’ bandwagon.  Perhaps everyone is content with Google App Engine, but I don’t see those sorts of solutions (AWS, etc) as providing much beyond mechanical plumbing.  There seem to be issues with SSL support for GAE as well, so it’s not something suitable for a majority of security-minded apps.

What’s your view on the state of the Groovosphere?

GroovyMag March 2010 Now Available

Friday, March 5th, 2010

In this issue

Griffon Plugins

Andres Almiray digs in to the Griffon Plugin architecture

Magic Numbers

Bjoern Wilmsmann takes us behind the scenes of his Magic Numbers plugin to walk you through adding magic runtime functionality to basic numbers

Ivy DSL

Henryk Konsek demonstrates the power of using Ivy in Grails 1.2

Grails for Switchers

Switching to Grails from a non-Java background? Matt Woodward gives you the dos and don’ts from someone who’s been there

Easy E-Commerce with Grails – Part 2

Matt Stine wraps up his look at setting up an e-commerce site with Grails.

Monthly Columns

Groovy Under the Hood – Groovy Maps Part 1

This month, Kirsten Schwark covers Groovy’s maps.

Community news

Catch up with the latest Groovy and Grails news with Dave Klein.

Plugin Corner

Dave Klein covers the ‘Email Confirmation’ plugin.

Page count: 40

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