[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"sanity-b_EXMzhIhJDIlTu34z6d3gc3v-YLRQRgKmddx_eYWU0":3},{"data":4,"sourceMap":-1},{"info":5,"latest":13,"pinned":54},{"_createdAt":6,"_id":7,"_rev":8,"_type":9,"_updatedAt":6,"descriptionText":10,"slug":11,"title":12},"2023-05-23T16:43:21Z","wp-tagcat-latency","9HpbCsT2tq0xwozQfkc4ih","blogTag",null,{"current":12},"latency",[14],{"_id":15,"author":16,"commentCount":27,"comments":28,"excerpt":29,"featureTag":10,"image":30,"publishedAt":33,"slug":34,"sponsored":10,"tags":36,"title":53},"wp-post-17494",[17],{"_id":18,"avatar":19,"name":24,"role":10,"slug":25},"wp-author-cap-17178",{"_type":20,"asset":21},"image",{"_ref":22,"_type":23},"image-3cf478fecda35dcc16d4a4617d19208ad7e281e0-1108x978-png","reference","Theodoros ‘Theo’ Karasavvas",{"current":26},"theodoros-theo-karasavvas",137,true,"When it comes to developing low latency software systems, the received wisdom is that you would be crazy to use anything but C++ because anything else has too high a latency. But I’m here to convince you of the opposite, counter-intuitive, almost heretical notion: that when it comes to achieving low latency in software systems, Java is better.",{"_type":20,"asset":31},{"_ref":32,"_type":23},"image-9d8fba38274409e407628a3e9b1c6af29f281db8-1200x630-png","2021-02-22T14:49:27.000Z",{"current":35},"choosing-java-instead-of-c-for-low-latency-systems",[37,42,47,51],{"_createdAt":6,"_id":38,"_rev":8,"_type":9,"_updatedAt":6,"slug":39,"title":41},"wp-tagcat-c",{"current":40},"c","c++",{"_createdAt":6,"_id":43,"_rev":8,"_type":9,"_updatedAt":6,"slug":44,"title":46},"wp-tagcat-code-for-a-living",{"current":45},"code-for-a-living","Code for a Living",{"_createdAt":6,"_id":48,"_rev":8,"_type":9,"_updatedAt":6,"slug":49,"title":50},"wp-tagcat-java",{"current":50},"java",{"_createdAt":6,"_id":7,"_rev":8,"_type":9,"_updatedAt":6,"slug":52,"title":12},{"current":12},"Choosing Java instead of C++ for low-latency systems",[]]