Wicket beats all other Java webframeworks

There is something magical about Wicket, but I’m having a hard time to put a finger on it…

Graph taken from http://canetrash.seesaa.net/

The way the numbers are generated seems to be a secret, and probably means something mysterious…

Funny how the language barrier makes such articles unclear, even after automatic translation. But for now I’m not complaining (I think it is a positive article on Wicket).

7 Responses to “Wicket beats all other Java webframeworks”

  1. Tim Fennell Says:

    I stumbled across this too. It’s intriguing for sure. As happy as I am with the progress Stripes has made, I find it quite hard to believe that it is beating out WebWork yet ;) Makes me wonder if these are mindshare stats as opposed to usage stats?
    -t

  2. n8han Says:

    Coolness, maybe. Wicket is on track to be the preferred framework of Harajuku set!

    “The JSP you are disgusted already, the ? putting out * & *”

    I’m down.

  3. Martijn Dashorst Says:

    All your base are belong to us?

    Google translate really makes Japanese work :-).

  4. Michael Jouravlev Says:

    Don’t forget about Struts. It clicked 240 parrots or whatever measuring units they used. It is not represented on the diagram apparently because of its evil nature ;)

  5. Jonathan Locke Says:

    Sweet! Maybe we will all have high paying contracts in Japan soon… ;-) I’ve always wanted to visit Tokyo.

  6. Alexandre Bairos Says:

    It’s the number of times the framework homepage figures as a del.icio.us bookmark.
    The clue is the first line of the translated document.

  7. Alexandre Bairos Says:

    See the numbers…
    Good geek popularity metric. ;)

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