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I can't choise between Microsoft stack and Java stack. I'm start to develop highload system. Over 500 000 transactions per day. Best choice is Java stack or Microsoft ?

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    You kind of need to define "best".
    – Goibniu
    May 21, 2010 at 13:33
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    @interesting: The problem in the Microsoft stack is its ties to Windows. Is rebooting considered a reliable to way to execute in your case? The NYSE ain't running on boxes that will become zombies if they miss the patch tuesday. Voca (processing 70 millions payments per day in the UK) is an all-Java babe deployed on Unx boxen. When MS bought Hotmail and tried to run it on Windows, the OSes melted. For Real-World [TM] workload, get (top500.org) real. Windows is fine for non-tech savvy companies buying the MS kool-aid and for mom & pop SMEs. For the rest, there's Java and Unx :) May 21, 2010 at 14:42
  • Windows is fine too for SO, that's why SO only has a "3 nines" uptime or so (don't know: in less than 6 months I think I already see it already three times telling me "we're down for maintenance, we should be back in one hour or so"... I don't know if I should laugh or cry ; ) May 21, 2010 at 14:44
  • @WizardOfOdds, 500,000 transactions and 99.999% uptime are not synonyms.
    – Yishai
    May 21, 2010 at 15:40
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    That is 'only' 6 transactions each second. I would not call that highload. Your only problem might be that your transactions are not comming spread out over the entire day, so first you need to find out how many transactions/second you need to be handle at the most busy time. May 21, 2010 at 15:54

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The Microsoft and Java stacks are comparable in performance terms. Whether you can achieve 500,000 transactions per day (or better) depends more on what those transactions are doing and whether you get your system architecture right.

So I would recommend that you design your system architecture first, then decide between the various implementation alternatives based on:

  • how well the stacks (and related third party technologies) can implement your design,
  • a "total cost of operation" assessment taking into account hardware, software licenses, staff and training costs, and
  • consideration of your organization's long term IT plans.
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Between those two I would say it's not the stack itself that will be the key to success (or failure). You can write a brilliant service using both, as well as writing one that sucks. The important thing is to study how to get what you need using the stack that you choose.

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The number 500,000 on its own isn't determinative because the size (in terms of computation power) of each transaction is not known, but assuming it defines a very heavy load, although a properly configured Windows cluster could handle that, I think you will find many organizations are more comfortable on *nix systems in production for that kind of load (at least in my geographic area), where things that you don't think much about in development (such as simultaneous network connections) come into play, so that may need to play into your considerations. This system will be maintained by someone. Are they agnostic about Windows vs. Linux or Unix?

I think that will be the first driving factor here. If you truly have freedom with regards to the OS this will be deployed on, then either technology will get the job done, or fail to if not done right.

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The only real differentiating feature would be cost. Every server you have running Windows costs you a new Windows license. If you run Java on some flavor of Linux/Unix, you can probably get away without paying the "Microsoft Tax."

Beyond that, your developers' expertise, familiarity and availability of local resources is your best indicator.

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Both technologies will let you build your system. Both have great communities. You should really choose the one you are better familiar with.

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  • I agree. However if you expect sustained peak loads > 100 transactions per second then J2ee etc. etc. is the way to go but at the cost of increased complexity, longer dev times etc. etc. Jun 22, 2010 at 9:42
  • You never know. If you are great in Java you will do it faster and better. If you are .NET master - you should choose this platform.
    – Everyz
    Jun 22, 2010 at 9:48
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Both Java and .Net stack can support most of your needs. Also look at other solutions such as memcached, Solr, etc. that are designed to solve specialized problems. Both .NET and Java have connectors available to work with these systems. I would personally prefer .Net platform for reasons such as better tooling, language support, ASP.NET MVC.

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