You seem to be asking three separate questions.
In the title of your post, you allude to the extent to which the
technology is adopted and how this might change over time. But you don't
really explain how the body of your post relates to this question, nor
do you give any data about the level of adoption or how this is
changing. Which is wise, because there is no hard data, and
extrapolating from the morsels of data we have (such as google search
trends) is probably very unreliable.
Then you tell us an anecdote about (if I read it right) a company that
is having trouble recruiting. Well, there could be a million reasons for
that; I'm not sure what we are supposed to read into this story.
Finally you ask for a list of XML applications. Well, you might collect
some, though again, good information is notoriously hard to come by.
Very few of the projects I have consulted to over the years have made
anything public or visible about the fact that their systems are based
very largely on XML.
Different people will see what's happening from different perspectives
and draw different conclusions; every one of them is seeing a tiny part
of the total picture. From my perspective, what I see is that XML (and
with it XSLT) is now a mature technology that is deeply embedded in the
infrastructure, that is doing a very useful job, and that no longer has
any great novelty or fashion appeal.
Michael Kay
Saxonica
On 02/11/2011 19:54, Hank Ratzesberger wrote:
Hi,
Please forgive me if this is off topic, or point me to another list,
(or just ignore)
At a previous job, I built a application/website that for the most
part was
entirely scripted in XML -- eXist database, XSTLT, XForms. Having moved
on, they could not find much interest in filling the job and likely the
application will get ported to "LAMP" with limited features and the
job role more of a data analyst.
Having built an entirely open source (and free) application using W3C
standards with several excellent books for training and helpful mailing
lists, I am wondering why there should be any lack of interest, though
granted the university system has some challenges hiring from the
private sector when it comes to IT.
Perhaps it isn't clear the XML is a technology stack, not simply a
file format. When sitting on J2EE applications, it is using the Java
character encoding, real number and date handling -- I18N and
various floating point issues are consistently handled.
Is there a good list of XML/XSLT/etc. based applications? Where
can reference as examples that use the technology?
Thank you,
Hank
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