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An assumption that seems to be built into the question is that new projects are greenfield projects. Many organizations have made a huge investment in Java over the last decade+ and require any new project to work within the existing (internal) code ecosystem. As pointed out, there's a huge bonus in all the publicly available Java libraries (whether free/OSS or commercial), but the need to work with existing code and even as a component within an existing system is at least as important (if not more so) to large organizations.

A lot also comes down to the maturity and capability of the platform, which is to say the JVM and everything that comes with it (the entire Java ecosystem). A few examples off the top of my head:

  • You can plug a remote debugger into a running JVM and get all kinds of information about a running application that is simply impossible with Python, Ruby, etc. Going a step further, there's JMX, a standard way to write code so that objects can be monitored and even tweaked in a live application. Take a look at JConsole and see if you don't drool just a little (despite the ugliness of the interface).

  • Going even further in this direction, there's OSGi, a standard for writing highly modular code that can be deployed, started, stopped, and even upgraded in a live application. With OSGi you break a large application into many smaller "bundles" which can then be maintained (deployed, started/stopped, upgraded) separately. This is a really big deal in large applications, or any applications that need to remain running at all times.

  • The platform has very good support for asynchronous, reliable messaging. You get JMS as a baseline, and many excellent and powerful libraries built on it for doing complicated things with very little code (cf. Apache Camel, ServiceMix, Mule, and many others). This is another feature that's extremely valuable in larger applications or those which must run within a larger code universe.

  • The JVM has real (OS-level) threading, while Python et al. are very limited in this regard (notoriously so). (That being said, shared state concurrency -- threading -- is the wrong approach; cf. Erlang, Alice, Mozart/Oz, etc.)

  • There are numerous JVM choices beyond the standard Sun implementations, like JRockit, IBM's JVM, etc. This is a developing area with other languages -- Python has Jython, Iron Python, even PyPy and Stackless; Ruby has JRuby, Rubinius, and others -- but as good as these are they can't match the maturity found in the various JVM offerings.

All that being said, I really don't like Java the language and avoid it as much as possible. These days with all the excellent alternative languages for the JVM I don't have to. Groovy gets my vote for its accessibility and tight integration with the platform (and even the language), and because of Grails, which I sometimes like to call "Rails for grownups". I like other JVM languages better, particularly Clojure and Scala, but these aren't as accessible to the average programmer. Scala is popping up a lot lately, though, especially thanks to its high profile use at Twitter, so there's hope for interesting and truly excellent languages making it in larger environments. But that's another topic.

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An assumption that seems to be built into the question is that new projects are greenfield projects. Many organizations have made a huge investment in Java over the last decade+ and require any new project to work within the existing (internal) code ecosystem. As pointed out, there's a huge bonus in all the publicly available Java libraries (whether free/OSS or commercial), but the need to work with existing code and even as a component within an existing system is at least as important (if not more so) to large organizations.

A lot also comes down to the maturity and capability of the platform, which is to say the JVM and everything that comes with it (the entire Java ecosystem). A few examples off the top of my head:

  • You can plug a remote debugger into a running JVM and get all kinds of information about a running application that is simply impossible with Python, Ruby, etc. Going a step further, there's JMX, a standard way to write code so that objects can be monitored and even tweaked in a live application. Take a look at JConsole and see if you don't drool just a little (despite the ugliness of the interface).

  • Going even further in this direction, there's OSGi, a standard for writing highly modular code that can be deployed, started, stopped, and even upgraded in a live application. With OSGi you break a large application into many smaller "bundles" which can then be maintained (deployed, started/stopped, upgraded) separately. This is a really big deal in large applications, or any applications that need to remain running at all times.

  • The platform has very good support for asynchronous, reliable messaging. You get JMS as a baseline, and many excellent and powerful libraries built on it for doing complicated things with very little code (cf. Apache Camel, ServiceMix, Mule, and many others). This is another feature that's extremely valuable in larger applications or those which must run within a larger code universe.

  • The JVM has real (OS-level) threading, while Python et al. are very limited in this regard (notoriously so). (That being said, shared state concurrency -- threading -- is the wrong approach; cf. Erlang, Alice, Mozart/Oz, etc.)

  • There are numerous JVM choices beyond the standard Sun implementations, like JRockit, IBM's JVM, etc. This is a developing area with other languages -- Python has Jython, Iron Python, even PyPy and Stackless; Ruby has JRuby, Rubinius, and others -- but as good as these are they can't match the maturity found in the various JVM offerings.

All that being said, I really don't like Java the language and avoid it as much as possible. These days with all the excellent alternative languages for the JVM I don't have to. Groovy gets my vote for its accessibility and tight integration with the platform (and even the language), and because of Grails, which I sometimes like to call "Rails for grownups". I like other JVM languages better, particularly Clojure and Scala, but these aren't as accessible to the average programmer. Scala is popping up a lot lately, though, especially thanks to its high profile use at Twitter, so there's hope for interesting and truly excellent languages making it in larger environments. But that's another topic.