"I think Scala is going to win the corporate mind-share. - very unlikely. Java 8 will (continue to) win corporate mindshare. Scala added the missing elements to java, but Java 8 adds them into the base line so the need for scala goes away. Corporations have too much invested in java and there's not enough differentiation between scala and java 8 to make the cost of that transition likely. I predict that we'll see a steady decline in Scala as Java 8 gains traction in the enterprise development world.
I was referring to the Clojure vs Scala as a Java replacement
competition, by if you think Java 8 is a Clojure/Scala Killer your mistaken.
First things first, Java 8's Lambda implementation is shoddy at best compared to first class function support in Scala/Clojure. The entire idea of having to explicitly convert a collection to a stream to access map/filter functions is non optimal. You don't just add lambdas to a language and automatically expect them to lift it's collections libraries to the level of Scala's and Clojure. The collection's lambda operations are the real benefit of using a language with first class function support.
The other inconvenient truth is that you still will be writing Java code, in all of it boilerplate glory. Still no Scala like type inference, no Clojure esque homoiconicity, no ability to reduce everything to a value like in Clojure/Scala, just plain old "it'll work" Java.
Java 8 did not add all the missing elements. It did not add even the most of them nor the most important. Sure, it added some, but I doubt it is 5% of what Scala has to offer, and I doubt they are the things that people primary choose Scala for. Also, even if we compare the features that Java 8 added, e.g. lambdas - they are nowhere near as nice to use as in Scala, and they don't play so nice with the rest of the language as it is in Scala. IMHO Java 8 will only help Scala in becoming more popular, by improving Scala's performance and Java interop.
Right, and there are some really big things in Scala which already got quite a lot attention from enterprises: Play Framework, Apache Spark, Akka. Funny, I know some people using those things from... Java even though it is very cumbersome to do so.