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Walmart went live with Node on Black Friday specifically to handle the
higher-than-average volume of business. Things went well. I'm just not
buying the idea that Node doesn't "really" scale well in light of
real-world examples by well-known businesses that have very high volumes of
activity. If they made it work, so can others.
If your main point is that Node isn't the only technology that can scale,
then yes. Other technologies can scale. Node is not magical or unique in
this regard. I hope no one got the idea that I was ever saying otherwise.
If your main point is that scalability should not be the only reason why a
shop chooses Node, then again yes. Node-like any other technology-should be
evaluated in terms of an entire context: What are the problems you need to
solve? What are the skills you have? What is the budget you're being given?
Where do you want to be in 5 years? 10 years?
Node uses a reactor pattern (event loop) architecture, which makes Node
opinionated about how things get done. If someone doesn't like that
opinion, then Node will always be low on that person's list of preferences.
I personally find the idea of asynchronous programming with an event loop
both challenging and interesting. I might even call it stimulating. :)
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