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The Dulin Report

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Strategic activity mapping for software architects May 25, 2025 On the role of Distinguished Engineer and CTO Mindset Apr 27, 2025 The future is bright Mar 30, 2025 2024 Reflections Dec 31, 2024 My giant follows me wherever I go Sep 20, 2024 The day I became an architect Sep 11, 2024 Are developer jobs truly in decline? Jun 29, 2024 Leadership is About "We," Not "I" Jun 9, 2024 Form follows fiasco Mar 31, 2024 Software Engineering is here to stay Mar 3, 2024 Some thoughts on recent RTO announcements Jun 22, 2023 On Amazon Prime Video’s move to a monolith May 14, 2023 One size does not fit all: neither cloud nor on-prem Apr 10, 2023 Some thoughts on the latest LastPass fiasco Mar 5, 2023 Comparing AWS SQS, SNS, and Kinesis: A Technical Breakdown for Enterprise Developers Feb 11, 2023 Working from home works as well as any distributed team Nov 25, 2022 Why you should question the “database per service” pattern Oct 5, 2022 Stop Shakespearizing Sep 16, 2022 Why don’t they tell you that in the instructions? Aug 31, 2022 Monolithic repository vs a monolith Aug 23, 2022 Automation and coding tools for pet projects on the Apple hardware May 28, 2022 There is no such thing as one grand unified full-stack programming language May 27, 2022 Most terrifying professional artifact May 14, 2022 If you haven’t done it already, get yourself a Raspberry Pi and install Linux on it May 9, 2022 Good idea fairy strikes when you least expect it May 2, 2022 Kitchen table conversations Nov 7, 2021 Application developers like to think their app is the only one Apr 5, 2021 A year of COVID taught us all how to work remotely Feb 10, 2021 What programming language to use for a brand new project? Feb 18, 2020 The religion of JavaScript Nov 26, 2018 Teleportation can corrupt your data Sep 29, 2018 Let’s talk cloud neutrality Sep 17, 2018 What does a Chief Software Architect do? Jun 23, 2018 Nobody wants your app Aug 2, 2017 TypeScript starts where JavaScript leaves off Aug 2, 2017 Singletons in TypeScript Jul 16, 2017 Emails, politics, and common sense Jan 14, 2017 Online grocers have an additional burden to be reliable Jan 5, 2017 Collaborative work in the cloud: what I learned teaching my daughter how to code Dec 10, 2016 Apple’s recent announcements have been underwhelming Oct 29, 2016 What I learned from using Amazon Alexa for a month Sep 7, 2016 Why I switched to Android and Google Project Fi and why should you Aug 28, 2016 Amazon Alexa is eating the retailers alive Jun 22, 2016 In search for the mythical neutrality among top-tier public cloud providers Jun 18, 2016 In Support Of Gary Johnson Jun 13, 2016 Files and folders: apps vs documents May 26, 2016 What can we learn from the last week's salesforce.com outage ? May 15, 2016 Why it makes perfect sense for Dropbox to leave AWS May 7, 2016 JEE in the cloud era: building application servers Apr 22, 2016 Let's stop letting tools get in the way of results Apr 10, 2016 JavaScript as the language of the cloud Feb 20, 2016 LinkedIn needs a reset Feb 13, 2016 In memory of Ed Yourdon Jan 23, 2016 Our civilization has a single point of failure Dec 16, 2015 IT departments must transform in the face of the cloud revolution Nov 9, 2015 I Stand With Ahmed Sep 19, 2015 Setting Up Cross-Region Replication of AWS RDS for PostgreSQL Sep 12, 2015 Top Ten Differences Between ActiveMQ and Amazon SQS Sep 5, 2015 We Live in a Mobile Device Notification Hell Aug 22, 2015 What Every College Computer Science Freshman Should Know Aug 14, 2015 On Maintaining Personal Brand as a Software Engineer Aug 2, 2015 The Three Myths About JavaScript Simplicity Jul 10, 2015 Book Review: "Shop Class As Soulcraft" By Matthew B. Crawford Jul 5, 2015 Attracting STEM Graduates to Traditional Enterprise IT Jul 4, 2015 Your IT Department's Kodak Moment Jun 17, 2015 The longer the chain of responsibility the less likely there is anyone in the hierarchy who can actually accept it Jun 7, 2015 Big Data is not all about Hadoop May 30, 2015 Smart IT Departments Own Their Business API and Take Ownership of Data Governance May 13, 2015 The Clarkson School Class of 2015 Commencement speech May 5, 2015 My Brief Affair With Android Apr 25, 2015 Exploration of the Software Engineering as a Profession Apr 8, 2015 What can Evernote Teach Us About Enterprise App Architecture Apr 2, 2015 Microsoft and Apple Have Everything to Lose if Chromebooks Succeed Mar 31, 2015 Do not apply data science methods without understanding them Mar 25, 2015 On apprenticeship Feb 13, 2015 On Managing Stress, Multitasking and Other New Year's Resolutions Jan 1, 2015 Why I am Tempted to Replace Cassandra With DynamoDB Nov 13, 2014 Software Engineering and Domain Area Expertise Nov 7, 2014 Docker can fundamentally change how you think of server deployments Aug 26, 2014 Wall St. wakes up to underinvestment in OMS Aug 21, 2014 Software Engineers Are Not Doctors Aug 3, 2014 Thanking MIT Scratch Sep 14, 2013 Have computers become too complicated for teaching ? Jan 1, 2013 Thoughts on Wall Street Technology Aug 11, 2012 Scripting News: After X years programming Jun 5, 2012 Java, Linux and UNIX: How much things have progressed Dec 7, 2010

What programming language to use for a brand new project?

February 18, 2020

Try as I might I can't bring myself to like JavaScript. In a debate with a colleague, I was asked, "If not JavaScript, what language would you use if you had to start over?"

If someone asked me that question 3-4 years ago, I would have likely said Java. At that point in my career, I spent some solid fifteen years building enterprise applications in Java, and I was perfectly happy with it.

The rise of Node as an enterprise platform forced me to adopt JavaScript for a good chunk of my work. My verdict on JavaScript is simple: I believe that the corporations who have chosen to use it as an enterprise application platform will pay for their mistake dearly in the years to come. I no longer feel it is a platform suitable for large complex applications.

There are situations where there is no choice of a programming language platform. For example, making native applications for iOS is best done in Swift. JavaScript is the only viable platform for interactive web applications.

In the past three years, I have been doing more and more of my work in Golang. If I had to pick a language for backend microservice development (which is where 99% of my career has been), I would now gladly choose Go.

Cross-platform nature of Java has not been relevant for at least a decade now

Java's biggest selling point used to be platform independence: "Write once, run anywhere." The reality is that in my career, I don't think I ever needed to run my software on anything other than a Linux x86 server.

The problem of portability has long been solved by containers, like Docker. Therefore, it is no longer relevant for compilers to produce cross-platform bytecode and require a complex virtual machine to run it.

It turns out that JavaScript is not that simple

I feel that JavaScript was forced upon me by management types who perpetuated myths about its simplicity.

In JavaScript, there is an infinite number of ways to do the same task. The resulting code is borderline unreadable. Developers may not even find bugs long after the system is in production.

Pointers aren't that complicated

Developers have been building applications in Objective-C for iOS, and pointers have never been an issue. In Java, just about everything is referenced via pointers. The real problem with pointers is knowing when to deallocate memory.

Java solves it with a complex and resource-intensive garbage collection mechanism. Go also relies on garbage collection, but optimizes it for low latency.

Concurrency in Java has become too bloated with too many ways to shoot oneself in the foot

Go concurrency is vastly simpler than Java yet more flexible than the Node.js model.

Back in the 1990s, Java supported the concept of "green threads," but they were ridiculously inefficient. The community was ecstatic when Java began to support native operating system threads.

Go does green threads far more efficiently, resulting in much better utilization of multi-core servers.

Object orientation isn't that critical

Go is not object-oriented. In practice, there is rarely a reason to use more than three layers of inheritance.

Despite not being object-oriented, Go supports inheritance by composition, which is good enough for most projects.

Deployment package size matters

Both Java and JavaScript are dynamically linked and require the final deployment package to have all of the dependencies. If your code is using one function out of hundreds offered by a module, you need to include the entire module in your deployable package. A complex application can reach hundreds of megabytes in size, not gigabytes.

Large deployable packages are costly when used with modern-day containers and serverless functions. Large containers take longer to bootstrap, longer to build, longer to deploy. Large functions have long wake up times and may not work at all as they exceed the maximum footprint enforced by the cloud provider.

Go, on the other hand, is statically linked and produces a single executable binary all dependencies in it. A complex application can be no more than a few megabytes in size. It is quick to start, ready to run, and exerts little pressure on computing resources.

Final thoughts

There is little reason not to use Go for a brand new application, or brand new services for an existing application. It's a platform ideal for cloud-native applications due to its compactness and efficiency.