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Are there any figures for its adoption in corporate environments? Does anyone know of large corporations that have adopted it for projects?

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7 Answers

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Not at all at conservative, Fortune 100, financial services companies.

Then again, software development in general is viewed as something distasteful that can't be outsourced fast enough to suit management.

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That was my suspicion re finance. I wonder who IS using it, then. – Patrick O Connell Feb 7 at 18:31
Smaller, less conservative companies that are already really strong with Spring and Hibernate, whose problems (web-based database apps) fall into the Grails sweet spot, of course. – duffymo Feb 7 at 19:49
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British Sky Broadcasting is using Grails for their main web presence. See here a blog post of Graeme Rocher about it.

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LinkedIn

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Relevant. Thank you. – Patrick O Connell Feb 7 at 17:49
Not for their main site however - last I heard, they were using it for an internal/corperate app. blog.linkedin.com/2008/06/… – Kevin Williams Apr 4 at 19:22
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I know the federal reserve here in Minneapolis has used groovy internally on some projects, though to my knowledge they haven't used grails yet.

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Wired.com grails usage case study

Also, apparently, grails is being widely used in Atlassian.

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About to start a Grails project at a large media company in NYC.

Based on my experiences as a consultant, media companies are about a year ahead of typical corporate america.

Additionally G2One being acquired by SpringSource will increase the overall adoption of Groovy/Grails.

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I've used it for a smaller financial services company, but in their public-facing website, not their backend operations.

Since it compiles down to WAR files for deployment, I suspect that it will have a gentler adoption path than completely out of band solutions like RoR. However, the current financial climate is probably going to put a severe crimp on any development projects, let alone ones that try and use newer, less proven technologies.

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