USA Today says "Linux waddles from obscurity" 474
JCallery writes "The Money section of Monday's USA Today carried a feature article entitled "Linux waddles from obscurity to the big time Momentum builds as upstart operating system proves it can compute". It carries a discussion of time and monetary savings in business, basic Sun and Microsoft arguments against Linux, growing popularity with Wall Street, Hollywood, and government organizations, and the credibility of Linux due to alliances with other industry companies."
Linux is the only option. (Score:3, Interesting)
The functionality is pretty close to that of WinXP, so why pay $300 a copy? Sure it requires a bit more elbow grease to get configured just right, but it works great, and with distro's like Mandrake, it's almost easier than Windows to install...
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:3, Interesting)
The idea of loading up an unsupported OS from download makes most managers nervous. They'll happily pay the $100.
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:5, Insightful)
The idea of loading up an unsupported OS from download
I'm an IT manager and it doesn't make me nervous. I can purchase a CD set of RedHat 7.x with whatever level of support I want. I can purchase one copy of it and install it on ALL of my PC's and servers. That means I can purchase all of my computer equipment that will run Linux with no OS installed, saving anywhere from $100 to $10,000 on the price of the equipment.
Get the facts a bit straighter
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:3)
The main reason is because the user want Windows. The team here would very much like to go Linux, but the users are the real hold-up. Honestly, $300000 / year could do a lot here.
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:3, Insightful)
And they don't have to relearn much of anything, if they have the right Linux (Windows-Like) environment put in front of them (Lycoris, Mandrake, Suse... Etc). It isn't like you have to force a Gentoo and Blackbox machine with Star Office 5 and Pine in front of the users. There are choices.
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:3, Insightful)
The main reason is because the user want Windows. The team here would very much like to go Linux, but the users are the real hold-up. Honestly, $300000 / year could do a lot here.
You might be surprised at what your users "want".
Sure, many have invested their precious time in climbing the learning curves of Word, Excel, Outlook, etc. and can't be bothered to learn alternative open source applications.
But others, usually the more technically adventurous types (like yourself) are willing to try out something new, to invest the time just in case there happens to be a reward for the risk.
Most sites just use Linux as an under-the-radar server OS that is cheap and reliable.
But do take the next step of building up a nice desktop version for your site. With a little tuning, the new Linux desktops can be made into something productive for your users.
After a while, others will notice the new boxes and Linux growth will sell itself as people begin to ask questions that never get asked in the monoculture environment where there are no alternatives.
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:3, Informative)
That's home edition. Its so castrated, I, a home user, am entirely angered after purchasing it.
I decided to set up a samba domain server to make my life of logging in between my laptop and my XP desktop easier. I like to keep settings between logins, and I like to keep my bookmarks between sessions. I also like a little privacy.
Lack of Domain support in XP Home Edition makes this impossible. Removing this feature is like selling a door that cannot have a deadbolt added to it. No thanks.
And, over here, in most shops (such as future shop) Windows XP Professional is $500 [futureshop.ca]. Blech!
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:2)
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:3, Interesting)
But you are right about the fairly easy install of Mandrake, which I tried recently. It was one of the easier installs I've done. And getting things going that weren't part of the default install for the way I had selected turned out to be almost trivially easy.
I still do use Windows, for now, but I think things are at the point where I could make the jump to Linux without much difficulty. It's now not that things are hard or even obscure as they had seemed before, but just different.
The big thing for some might be Windows-only programs they need to run, especially for work. At home the transition can be eased by using cross platform programs where possible on Windows, so that when (if) a jump is made the transition isn't so jarring as many of the applications will then be familiar.
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:2)
Now, people know that XP runs all software and know that Linux is lacking in that department (if they know anything at all).
$300 for XP or $100 for Linux... It's an easy choice for a user.
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:2, Insightful)
You may see Linux listed for $100+, but you don't have to pay for it. It can be downloaded for free or you can legally copy the core disks from a friend. At that, $100 is still less than $300.
XP does not run all software. XP runs all Windows software. It can no more run a Linux binary and than a Linux box can run a Windows application.... oh, wait a minute... there are emulators such as WINE that do allow Windows apps to run under Linux. Score one more for Linux.
There are native Linux apps for every purpose that I need. I run StarOffice currently for word processing, spreadsheets, etc. Konqueror works great as my web browser. I can scan, burn CD's, watch DVD's, play games, listen to my MP3's, etc. What am I not able to do that you can do under Windows.
The only places where I see Linux having a disadvantage is in the commercial software market. The software is not on the shelves of your local Best Buy.
Some people consider maintenance/configuration to be too hard under Linux. I would argue that yes, it takes more work up front, but once you've done that work you can rest easy. With Windows, I'm always wondering when the next lock-up will happen.
I believe that what you've said matches peoples' perceptions. But in this case, perception is not reality.
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:2)
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:2)
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:4, Insightful)
$300/desktop is too expensive to run through a whole business? We've been doing it for years and believe it or not, we're still profitable. In fact, most companies that use Windows like it.
Here at "work" we send and receive e-mail with attachments in Word and Excel. People freak out when some backwards company sends us WordPerfect or Lotus SmartSuite documents. Heck, even Word 97 files throw some people for a loop. And yet, for some reason, you seem to think that people who use XP at home and Word at home will somehow think that Linux and K-Word are "easier", "more powerful", "more user friendly"?
Puh-lease. Make the argument that the Mac is better for the standard knowledge worker and you have a discussion. Make the argument about Linux being better for the desktop and you have an agenda.
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:4, Insightful)
What does the availability of MS Office have to do with the functionality of the OS? And yes, you can run MS Office through Wine, or you can use OpenOffice instead, which does a damn fine job of working with MS Office files IME.
As for the installation issue, I installed Mandrake 8.2 and Windows 2000 (with SP1) on a machine as recently as last week. One went on without a hitch, automatically setting up suitable partitions, installing all required software, connecting to the internet and downloading security updates. The other threw a hissy fit because it didn't like the format of the drive it had just formatted itself and went into a vicious cycle of rebooting. No prizes for guessing which was which.
I remember the days when Windows was easy to install and Linux wasn't. Those days are gone.
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:2, Insightful)
Linux although it's not dominant, is here to stay. It may not have a forced 10,000,000+ copies a year sold from Desktop Vendors (Compaq, HP, Dell, IBM, NEC, etc...) but millions still install it. In 95% of all name-brand machines cases, you cannot subtract the price of the OS/Software from the cost of the machine, therefore you are being forced into a product you don't want (monopoly).
If all PC's came without OS's and people were offered $500 for Windows or $0-50 for Mandrake/SuSe, the general masses would chose linux, in one form or another. Most people surf the net, do office related stuff, use instant messangers, and download music, all of which is easily done in linux.
Linux isn't just a "hackerz" trinket OS, but a new and lethal force on the pc market. The popularity and stability are making people try it at their own will, not their forced will.
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:5, Informative)
And yes, you can run MS Office through Wine, or you can use OpenOffice instead, which does a damn fine job of working with MS Office files IME.
And, at least for me, OpenOffice is a *better* tool than MS Office. It has a significant feature that MS Office lacks, which is an open, and easy to use file format. I've recently discovered that the XML files that OpenOffice reads natively are extremely easy to generate programmatically using standard XML tools. I create a lot of highly-structured documents, like legal documents and software design documents, which are a b*tch to make tight and consistent when you have to edit everything by hand.
So, I create custom XML schemas that define tightly structured "documents" in which I only have to define each thing once, and then use XSLT to transform them into other, more "human-readable" formats. The XSLT stylesheets also "expand" them, implementing all of the structure that is useful to human readers, which means the very redundancy that is such a pain to manage manually.
What I've discovered recently is that OpenOffice files are very easy to generate with XML/XSLT (well, and Zip, you need Zip), and they can then be saved as RTF, MS Word, etc. I'm working on some other stylesheets now that will automatically generate OpenOffice presentations from my documents as well (which are easily convertible to PowerPoint, if necessary).
Oh, and OpenOffice is no slouch when it comes to manipulating MS Office files, either.
However, all of this Office stuff is a red herring when it comes to the Linux/Windows debate, sine both office suites run on both platforms.
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:5, Interesting)
This is interesting. How about working up a mini How-to about this? I bet more than one person would be interested in in your approach.
Re:Windows is the only option (Score:2)
So programmers need to write uninstall scripts that run through the GUI. That isn't hard. It took MS OS developers more than 10 years to do this right.
Re:Linux is the only option. (Score:2)
What a bunch of CR*P !!! WTF are you sayin??? Can you run postgres in windows? no. Can you run the linux XFree86 binaries on windows? no. You see, there is a whole world out there just waiting for you to discover it.
We are talking about OS, you are talking M$ FUD. Why do I need Visual Studio on linux?? I am a Java Developer, I dont need Visual Studio. In fact, Visual Studio would make my life a LOT worse. I dont need MS Office either, you know, a lot of people dont send
I for one consider linux to be a LOT better that Windows. I make a living out of it, as does a lot of other people.
Linux is far better than Windows, it has been for some years now. The fact that a lot more people uses windows can be answered by some of the quotes in the Darwin Awards: "The sum of the IQs of the whole humanity is a constant. As the ammount of people grows, the more idiots there will be".
Cross Distro Compatibility... (Score:2, Insightful)
And that is Linux's best feature and Linux's worst enemy. Compatibility!
Re:Time to play Block That Metaphor (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Cross Distro Compatibility... (Score:2)
That is the beauty of it, in my opinion. Though totally usable, things are still maturing. People need to stop being afraid of "Lack of Linux standards". The major Linux dist. companies will always try to follow certain standards, or will face obsolescence.
Linus is still obscurity (Score:4, Funny)
What a long way Tux has traveled in the 12 years since Linus Torvald
Torvald? You think USA today could manage to get the creator's name right? I've never seen an article misspelling Gattes, Balmy, and Ilison. Other than that, you couldn't ask for a better PR article for Linux.
Re:Linus is still obscurity (Score:2)
Torvald? You think USA today could manage to get the creator's name right?
Have you ever read USA Today before? It's like the MTV of the print news industry. Lots of pretty pictures and flashy colors. It does not surprise me that they spelled his name wrong.
Torvalds with an S (Score:3, Informative)
If you bothered to read "Just For Fun", Linus explains that his grandfather changed his name from Torvald to Torvalds. There is exactly one family with the surname Torvalds, and it's Linus' family.
I suspect that somebody with knowledge of Swedish flagged "Torvalds" as a typo.
What we need now are USA Today polls and graphs (Score:4, Funny)
Wow... (Score:2, Funny)
Nothing like paying good money to read newspaper reporters restate the painfully obvious.
"Breaking news: Some Americans now driving to work in lieu of walking!"
DaveUpstart (Score:4, Insightful)
It never ceases to amaze me how an 11-year-old implementation of a 30-year-old design is called an "upstart".
Re:Upstart (Score:5, Funny)
For the same reason that a structure based on a 2000 year old design, using 50 year old construction techniques, materials developed anywhere from 10,000 years ago to 20 years ago, and architectural designs that are ten years old, is still called a "new building" when it is built.
For that matter, the hardware all our operating systems run on is based on a 70 year old material sciences, a basic transister design that is 60 years old, and semi-conductor technology that is at least 40 years old.
Re:Upstart (Score:2)
i'd fire him on the spot.
time to stop re-inventing the wheel - we've got perfectly acceptible wheels, now its time to perfect and hone them.
This is why I hate reading about IT in the media (Score:5, Insightful)
What they'd do, upgrade from 20mhz Sun boxes to Pentium III 933's?
These kind of performance comparisons are just SILLY
Re:This is why I hate reading about IT in the medi (Score:2)
Re:This is why I hate reading about IT in the medi (Score:2)
In the real world you upgrade pathetic old equipment with powerful new equipment. I upgraded from an old AIX box to a new one and acheived a 500% speed increase.
Sure comparing new equipment to old isn't fair, but the speed you gain is real.
Linux just enables you to make these gains at a very low cost.
No, they're not silly (Score:2, Insightful)
Not really. Go price an Sun 450 with 4 processors. Then price an equivalent Dell/Compaq.
Oh wait...not fair...the midrange sun only goes up to 450mhz. To get the fast processors you talk about, you have to go top-of-the-line Enterprise and pay 6 figures.
Not fair at all, is it?
I like sun stuff, but they're servers are WAAAAAAAAAAAY overpriced for the performance they bring to the table. Years ago, they were the P/P king because they were being compared to RS/6000's and HP/UX machines. They were less robust, but a lot cheaper. Now when they're compared to white-box priced equipment, they lose.
Live by P/P, Die by P/P.
Sun should know better.
Re:No, they're not silly (Score:5, Insightful)
Sun should know better.
Interesting thing is, I would still take the Sun E450, since Dell or Compaq don't sell an equivalent machine. The 450 will hold five independent SCSI controllers for 20 drives. All in one enclosure. It's also robust as hell. They don't have to cost more than $10,000, either, if you find a good used one. Plus, once you find out just how much work an E450 can do, it just might be the only server you need for much of a small company's infrastructure.
Sun competes on things beyond price/performance. Consistency and reliability are one such thing. A more balanced architecture is another (576-bit memory busses, SCSI/FC-AL standard, large CPU caches). Well-engineered enclosures is another. I would also bet that each Sun server design goes through much more testing and quality control than most Intel-based servers (I've read that the UltraSPARC CPUs have a very low errata rate relative to Intel CPUs).
Sun still makes a strong case for itself in its markets. In some ways the prices can be hard to stomach, but, if a company is to the point of affording a real IT infrastructure, they should be as concerned about risk as much as they are up-front cost. Sun equipment tends to be low-risk and very long-lived. It is somewhat harder to claim this for Intel-server Brand X, although I'm sure there are a handful of winners out there.
A lot of these arguments apply to IBM (Power), SGI (MIPS), and other hard-core UNIX server companies as well. The prices vary pretty widely, but they all share a core quality that makes them worthwhile as a long-term investment.
Re:No, they're not silly (Score:3, Insightful)
With that much hardware, what do you expect? That's many thousands of processors, peripheral cards, etc. One call once-a-week doesn't sound bad for such a huge installation of hardware. If all of those machines were Dell boxes, you would probably be making calls several times a day!
Suffice to say, it seems like EVERY new Sun machine has at least 1 CPU problem (read: ecache error) within 1 month of operation.
I thought the E-Cache issue is several years old, now, and has been dealt with. Are you talking about brand-new machines delivered within the last few months?
Other issues could just be the initial shake-down for a newly-installed big server. Electronics fail in a distribution that is heavily skewed towards the first moments of operation. Once the initial "wear-in" period occurs, the server should be good for years with few break-downs, if any.
However, as soon as one of their techs shows up on site, any number of idiotic things can happen.
If you don't like their techs, you are fully capable of learning how to fix things yourself. Even big servers don't take a rocket scientist to maintain; it takes a willingness to learn, critical thinking, a static-strap, and some patience. That's it.
So from my point of view, all that crap about Sun hardware and service being great just doesn't add up. I'd much rather have a fleet of Dells running Linux than one E-4500.
So, how are you going to manage a fleet of Dells? Also, clusters or grids scale well for some types of computation, but can be a real PITA for general-purpose computing. There is a big difference in applicability between a cluster and a single SMP server.
Also a thing to note that people don't usually take into consideration: The more processors a machine has, the more likely it is to fail. The more processors you have, the more chances you have for a CPU panic.
You should be able to work around down processors without much trouble. Thankfully, I haven't had to deal with this.
Re:This is why I hate reading about IT in the medi (Score:2)
Microsoft FUD Parroted (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Microsoft FUD Parroted (Score:3, Insightful)
As a journalist, one should never use such words as "claims" or "asserts". Why? Because both words inject the idea that the JOURNALIST doubts this. Microsoft "warns" is clearly attributed to the MICROSOFT. (To be a real stickler, it should be says/said) Further, the use of PAINT should certainly be enough for you. It implies that this is microsoft's "deliberate attempt to take certain materials and make them look like IT wants them to look". Don't require the writer to be biased towards your side. Especially when you're right
Ummm, consider the source (Score:2)
Remember that you're talking about USA Today, here. It's not exactly the paragon of journalism. They hire "writers". You might as well argue that sentences shouldn't begin with conjunctions.
-B
Re:Ummm, consider the source (Score:4, Funny)
And just what in the hell is that supposed to mean?
Re:Not to worry... (Score:3)
''All the noise and optimism of the early adopters doesn't in any way guarantee Linux will cross into the mainstream,'' says Peter Houston, Microsoft's Windows server products director.
What this tells me is that M$ is in a state of denial. So be it. All it means is that some day, perhaps a few years from now, a sea of change may sweep over the IT sector, and M$ will be fighting for its life.
If I were Billy, I'd be lobbying Congress to enact laws that would ensure my existence - how a law that mandates that the government fork over the cost of one XXXP license (or whatever it's called by then) for each citizen on an annual basis? What better way to insulate against unauthorized copying? And, what better way to waste taxpayer money? It's all there - a perfectly American plan.
Whoa, got scared we were being classified (Score:2)
17 hours to 11 minutes!??!!?!? (Score:4, Interesting)
Come on! They must be leaving out ALL kinds of information here! What kind of machines were they running before? SparcStation 2's? These machines must have been 10 years old! There is no way just simply switching from SOME-OLD-UNIX(R) to Linux is going to improve the performance this much. I'm sure they would have seen a similar performance increase if they upgraded to Sun Fire V120's too.
In fact, there MUST have been some porting of the algorithms used to calculate this data. I'm sure some programmer looked at it, realized it was poor, 10 year old code, and modified it to run faster.
This isn't a valid one-to-one testiment to how Linux is faster than any other UNIX system out there and really shouldn't be in the THIRD paragraph of the article! (if at all!)
Re:17 hours to 11 minutes!??!!?!? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:17 hours to 11 minutes!??!!?!? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:17 hours to 11 minutes!??!!?!? (Score:2)
We're talking about USA Today here. You know, the "All The News That's Fit To Distill Into Cute Little Piture Graphs Somewhere Beneath The Full-Color Ads That Run At The Top Of The Front Page Every Fscking Day"-paper.
Be thankful that it was at least a favorable mangling of facts...
Re:17 hours to 11 minutes!??!!?!? (Score:2)
* Linux servers;
* Windows servers;
* new UNIX servers;
* Sun servers.
Okay, so it's a USA Today article, not a tech rag, but you get the point. They still should have specified how old the UNIX servers are, and perhaps how much it would cost to replace them with new UNIX servers versus the Linux servers.
I loathe these alleged journalists.
Re:17 hours to 11 minutes!??!!?!? (Score:2)
I do find it strange if the architect of those system upgrades was surprised, as the article implies.
Re:17 hours to 11 minutes!??!!?!? (Score:2)
Re:17 hours to 11 minutes!??!!?!? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:17 hours to 11 minutes!??!!?!? (Score:2)
Then the little '*' down the bottom said 'compared to (old) media player using a 2x CD-R drive, and (new) media player using 20x CD-R drive.'
Well, I found it funny
Re:17 hours to 11 minutes!??!!?!? (Score:3, Insightful)
Yep, I'd say so. For example, I just don't buy this:
I don't care how expensive those old unix systems were (when they were new), replacing them with ANYTHING costs more than simply continuing to use the existing machines that are already owned.
Yeah, yeah, I know, maybe they mean new unix boxes would have been $50k vs $3k unix boxen, maybe. But that's not what it actually says. The article is so loose with the language that they probably are comparing NEW boxes at $3k each to OLD boxen at $50k each. Sounds like the real benefit was computing the cash requirement faster, and a fair comparison would have actually compared the cost of new linux servers against the cost of new unix and windows servers, and the resulting performance of each. But that's a lot of work... maybe almost as difficult as it would be for Byron Acochido (the author of that article) or his editor to proof read their text from a critical viewpoint and edit it to be factually correct.
Of course, the poorly worded loose language works in Linux's favor in this case, so it must be ok. If it were in Microsoft's favor, would I be screaming FUD?? Hmm...
Re:17 hours to 11 minutes!??!!?!? (Score:2)
You are ignoring the cost of a service contract, which anyone like Dresdner is going to have for a mission critical system. If Sun Microsystem's service contracts are any indication, the cost could well have exceeded $3,000/node, in which case the savings would have been immediate and very, very real. Replacing 1992 hardware with 1998 hardware and getting a 92x speedup would have been icing on the cake.
Re:17 hours to 11 minutes!??!!?!? (Score:4, Insightful)
In Enterprise systems, you have to have hardware support - you can't just assume that the box will keep working or that you will be able to fix it. It is not at all uncommon for the hardware support costs on a very old box to be substantially more than it would cost to replace the box. This is part of how OEM's encourage people to upgrade - the older the boxes get, the more the support cost, until finally the upgrade is the thing that makes the most sense.
Often, replacing old hardware Just Makes Sense.It's kind of like the point you reach with a car where the repair bills are more than a car payment would be.
tape as primary storage (Score:2)
Dbit's PDP-11 simulator [dbit.com]
Imagine doing table joins swapping large tables in and out of 4 megabytes of memory - or less - and imagine grinding away on the 60 hz processor. The machines they are replacing are probably not that old, but could be close. Two orders of magnitude improvement isn't that hard to believe when you think about Moore's law.
Re:17 hours to 11 minutes. (Score:2, Insightful)
Note that IBM and HP are pushing Linux very hard in banks, and are fining a receptive audience. The version we are using is SuSE's Enterprise Linux, which has proved a superb platform for these applications, they may have a press release about this and similar applications out in the near future.
Sun vs Microsoft (Score:2, Interesting)
That will be tougher for Sun and Microsoft. Both live and die by licensing fees stemming from their proprietary operating systems. To the extent Linux rises in corporate use, they stand to diminish.
That might be true for Microsoft, but Sun has a huge hardware division. Why should it not be possible for them to follow in IBM and HP's tracks? To say that Sun "live and die by licensing fees" is a bit far fetched...
17 hours to 11 minutes. (Score:2)
Does anyone else seem to think that maybe their old Unix servers were considerably slower than the new Linux servers they witched over to?
Re:17 hours to 11 minutes. (Score:2)
Bad place to miss a key huh ;-)
Cost of Servers... (Score:3, Flamebait)
Why in the world did each server cost them anything? They already had 32 servers, and I am sure Linux would have ran on them, so why didn't they save the 96,000 and just use existing hardware..
In addition, they make it sound like "Unix Hardware" is more expernsive than "Linux Hardware", which while Linux works on just about anything, I don't see why they didn't use 3,000 dollar each machines for Unix in the first place. I don't see a 47,000 difference, unless they were stupid and just scrapped important stuff like memory, RAID, good mobos, redundant Power supplies, etc...
The Unix servers took 17 hours to calculate how much cash the bank needed in reserve to offset its investment risk. The Linux servers made the same calculation in 11 minutes
I don't think that if they had ran the same software on the unix servers, with the same hardware, that they would have had a speed increase really. Perhaps it was that they upgraded to new servers for the Linux, and used 8 year old Unix servers? That would make a good speed difference. I am glad that Toms hardware [tomshardware.com] doesn't measure that way....
ie. "Well, Linux certainly beats Windows 95, we put Windows 95 on an old 386sx, and Linux on a spanking new Dell server, and found that Linux must be the faster of the two..." Retards...
Oh, an yea, I like linux, but this article is backwards.
Re:Cost of Servers... (Score:2)
The major cost difference between desktop/consumer class hardware and server class hardware is engineering, not MHz, GBs, MIPS or any of the other numbers that people like to throw around when talking about WinTel vs. IBM/Sun/HP/etc. Try pushing millions of database records through your PC's IO bus, and then do the same with any of the big Unix boxes out there. You'll suddenly understand where those other $47k went.
This article is fatally flawed in a number of areas, but the fact remains that the *IS* a place for "real" servers over the hopped up desktops that a lot of people call Linux servers. For what it's worth (not much), I'm a professional sysadmin on the "big" boxes, and also run Linux servers personally so I see both sides.
Re:Cost of Servers... (Score:2)
Re:Cost of Servers... (Score:3, Informative)
The old boxen were possibly on lease. When they stopped paying for the software/maintenance, the hardware went back as well.
In addition, they make it sound like "Unix Hardware" is more expernsive than "Linux Hardware",
"Enterprise Hardware" is more expensive than "Desktop Hardware". You have things like redundent power supplies, network cards, memory. Not to mention things like really big I/O busses and serious enterprise stuff that common PC hardware falls down at. This is my main argument against using MS Windows for anything "Enterprise".
Re:Cost of Servers... (Score:2)
What makes you think that they would run Linux? The fact that they are $50,000 Unix boxes should give us a pretty good clue that these machines were NOT PC'S
Unix servers took 17 hours to calculate how much cash the bank needed in reserve to offset its investment risk. The Linux servers made the same calculation in 11 minutes
Once again, we have a pretty good clue that not only are these not PC's, but that they are obsolete as well.
Remember, they didn't say when they paid $50,000 for the machines.
Faster too...? (Score:3, Interesting)
The Unix servers took 17 hours to calculate how much cash the bank needed in reserve to offset its investment risk. The Linux servers made the same calculation in 11 minutes.
-------------
I just woke up, but if my math is correct, this is almost 9300% faster?!? I cannot believe that just the optimizations of Linux have done that.
Linux is fast, but they didn't even mention the fact that the new hardware was quite a bit faster then there legacy Unix systems. It is a bias in the way of making Linux appear even better, so I can't argue too awful much, but consider this point.
No program that I have switched over to Linux (IIS to Apache, etc) have gotten that kind of speed gain. The only thing that I have seen with that kind of performance increase was when I put novell 3.12 on a P3 1.3 ghz (from a 33 mhz 486)
I didn't read the article online (I read it at lunch yesterday in the dead tree edition... Had a nice army of Tuxes on the cover of the section).
Re:Faster too...? (Score:2)
You can't get more than 100% faster, or you'd have the answer before you asked the question. It used to take 1020 (17 hr * 60 min/hr) minutes, and now it takes 11 minutes; the time it takes has been cut by 1009 / 1020 * 100 percent, about 98.9%.
Can it really have sped up that much? Yes, but it's hard to believe that the OS is the cause. They almost certainly got faster hardware when they switched, the compiler technology may be better, and if they have to consult a database to do the calculation, they quite possibly have a different or newer (and one would hope improved) DBMS.
Taco's priorities.... (Score:2)
</geek type="journalism">
Correction: (Score:2)
What they lack in journalism they make up for with large fonts and color.
That being said, I like the WSJ's new(ish) color format!
Wrong about Sun: (Score:2)
Are you sure? (Score:2)
Where Sun cleans up and this is something they pioneered well, is the multi-layered support system which has a yearly fee for each piece of hardware (and in some cases components inside of hardware).
Re:Wrong about Sun: (Score:2)
They fixed that with Solaris 9 -- they charge a couple hundred bucks for a 2 cpu version...
Sun is talking about compatibility? (Score:2)
With so many cooks, Linux is destined to splinter into incompatible versions, Sun says.
Not as long as they follow published, open standards. They may not LOOK compatible, and may not have the same, homogeneous interface, but they will be compatible. The strongest will survive the best, but the others will still be allowed to live. That is how things will be different than today.
The Media reaction is interesting (Score:4, Insightful)
For a long time the media took everything MS said as the literal truth. So today, when a newspaper that lives and dies by it's advertising is running a front page article that praises Linux and doesn't fully support Microsoft, it's an interesting situation. I'm sure that Microsoft is an advertising customer of USA Today and this article is hardly in their best interests. Will Microsoft use the same sort of threat tactics against the newspaper that they did against PC manufacturers? Probably not, since the media usually doesn't threaten easily, but MS isn't known for being smart about PR either.
This sort of thing will become more and more prevalent though because people are interested in it, and newspaper/magazine readership drives advertising sales. Media coverage will help to build momentum for Open Source software, which will help to build interest in reading about it, creating a neat little circle that helps immensely.
Over all a good article for the non-IT folks and helpful to the Open Source cause.
Real Computing?? (Score:2)
Serious computing takes place wherever downtime cannot be tolerated. That is the very reason many web and e-mail servers have been running linux. An interesting article that shows the amount of ignorance about Linux that exists "in the mainstream".
cluge
Re:Real Computing?? (Score:2)
Re:Real Computing?? (Score:2)
Re:Real Computing?? (Score:2)
depends on your definition of uproar..
Sure lotsa people will whine when the email server is down, but if the financials are late in a publicly traded company in this market, you'll see that stock drop faster than an unpached Windows ME box on an IRC chat.
Patience (Score:2)
Nobody knows how long it will take to 'correct' Microsoft's nasty effect on the the market, but remember, MS wouldn't mention Linux 5 years ago, then they laughed at it, now they're competing against it.
I think that some in the Linux community got scared because business people were pronouncing defeat for Linux because of, well, think of any reason you can: no apps, performance and security problems, no support, lousy interface. Recently we've been seeing that those opinions were just immature impatience, as Linux adoption continues in spite of 10 years of gloomy forcasts from the pundits.
Quit being so negative. (Score:5, Insightful)
This article isn't for us. It is for our bosses, and their bosses, and so on and so on. It is a momentum builder. So the next time you mention Linux, instead of blank stares, your boss will dig into his memory and find a positive image of Linux as a REAL OS, and it will be a little easier to get him/her to go with your suggestion to use our OS of choice.
Use this article for what it is, and don't complian about what it isn't.
Re:Quit being so negative. (Score:3, Insightful)
Despite popular belief, Windows 2000 (and even XP) is reliable. Plus, it's the defacto standard that both software developers and your onboard staff can use. Linux has gotten a lot better over the last couple of years, but it still needs some end-user refinement. When the Linux community starts focusing on GUI design (as opposed to fixing 'bugs'),MS will really have something to wee-wee in their pants about.
Take a good hard look at OSX. It's built on top of BSD. It's fully functional as an OS, and it's useful! You don't even need to know the root password to get around on OSX. The user uses it, and doesnt feel like he/she's gonna break it. The Linux Community should be observing OSX under a microscope. Apple has put a lot of design effort into this OS to make it useable. This type of usability can be done with Linux.
Today, Linux is still a niche OS. Chalk me up to trolling if you like, but I would strongly recommend the Linux community listen to my criticisms. The worst case scenario is that Linux becomes a better product.
Great article (Score:2, Interesting)
This article is DEVASTATING to MS... It's main point basically was:
Linux: Better, faster, less restrictive, and you can't beat the price!
I noted that the usual MS FUDddie-duddy response was in there, the fear of "importing your app to Linux means that you jeopardize your IP" crap.
What shit, deliberatly aimed at implying that the GPL means that the FSF owns all programs that will execute on a GPL'ed OS...
I believe that MS's licensing system (which leaves you open to BSA audits and ANY future condition they care to slip into the EULA for the priviledge of downloading a fix for a product defect) is FAR more "viral" than a license that simply says that "if you make use of our code to make an application you have to let the next guy build off your code"...
The opening example of the bank that saved so much money and got a faster system as a bonus is a killer one...
And everyone ripped MS's cost of licenses... MS can't be happy that this is running.
Oh, I can't resist (Score:5, Funny)
In other news, BeOS left a sharp stinging pain.
FreeBSD claimed the souls of the damned. There was much wailing and gnashing of teeth.
Sun shined brightly. Mario was unsurprised.
Windows has been shattered.
Unix has been castrated.
USAToday Hacked Again? (Score:5, Funny)
what horrible journalism (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Waddles ???? - WADDLES ? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Waddles ???? - WADDLES ? (Score:5, Insightful)
On land, the penguin waddles, and isn't terribly fast.
Under the water, the penguin is slick, fast, and marvelous - but only where you can't see it.
Almost reminds you of the desktop versus server depiction for Linux.
Re:Waddles ???? - WADDLES ? (Score:2)
(yes, I know the story is an urban legend [snopes.com])
Re:Totally useless article... (Score:2)
Linux FUD!!!!! Torvald Shills!!!! And all the other
Please try not to be so blinkered, slashbots.
In other news (Score:5, Funny)
The Germany-based bank sought a less-costly way to calculate risks associated with its portfolio of investments. So it replaced 40 Pentium II computer servers, based on the Linux operating systems, at an average cost of $50 each, with 50 Windows.Net servers based on Intel Xeon VI processors, at $50,000 each.
The Linux servers took 11 minutes to calculate how much cash the bank needed in reserve to offset its investment risk. The Windows.Net servers made the same calculation only in 3 minutes (not including several reboots time)
With a better and more frequent handle on its finances, the bank could shift tens of millions of dollars from its reserve account to active investments of MSFT
Re:Question. This is a good article... (Score:2, Funny)
The average USA Today reader doesn't know that burgers are unhealthy, or that coffee is hot. They're AMERICAN.
Re:upstart!!?!?! (Score:2)
The Financial Times, while having interesting business and political analyses, is sometimes very biased towards big corporations, particularly Microsoft. In fact, I canceled my subscription when they published an article in support of Microsoft's proposition to donate computer equipment and software to public schools -- blatantly deceptive propaganda, which sounded eerily similar to a Microsoft press release.
Both the New York Times and the Washington Post possess a heavy political bias, and tend to have the annoying pseudo-liberal tendencies that are so common among Western journalists these days. I really wouldn't allow either of those newspapers to affect my political and/or social viewpoints. A matter of preference, I suppose.
Re:upstart!!?!?! (Score:4, Insightful)
In desktops, it is less focused and doesn't have a lot of market share because of a few major factors. The first is the issue with MS threatening OEMs to only sell Windows desktops. This causes the second problem, lack of momentum to catalyze the development of comercial software packages for home users. So what? That will change with due time. Eventually, open source Linux software will be very mature, and different things will start to merge, making way for the commerical, closed software.
You can't change that. It is showing no signs of slowing down.
Linux was never intended to be a desktop OS, but continuous tweaking over time will make it an awesome desktop OS (it already is, if you know how to make use of it). If you've used the right distribution of Linux, then you will find that many of them are easier to set up than WinXP. Face it... Most computer users couldn't install Windows, let alone any Linux distribution. If Linux was able to make its way, preinstalled into retail computers, then a lot of things would begin to change... Slowy, but it will change.
While most of the USA Today readers may have never seen a server (or even know what one is), many of them are hearing about this amazing Linux thing everywhere. On TV, on the radio, on the Internet. My parents are about as computer illiterate as can be, but they are still eager to learn more about this Linux thing that they keep hearing about.
Re:Just had to announce... (Score:2)
Re:Just had to announce... (Score:2)
I was able to find some helpful sites (most of them inaccurate as to what needed to be done), and got a program called pcmcia-cs. This had the drivers I needed, and with some little tweaks I had everything working. I will admit though that I don't think a newbie user (to computers) would've been able to figure it all out, and that a technician would have to help out a bit in getting it working, but I would expect the same with some versions of Windows.
I will be doing a journal entry in the next week with more details on how it was all done so it will be easier for other people to do.
Re:Is Linux really THAT much faster? (Score:2)
$1.6MM and 1020 mins vs $120K and 11 mins.
What they see is the the price/performance going through the roof, at 1/10th the price.
Re:Is Linux really THAT much faster? (Score:2)
But from a business standpoint, that is exactly correct. They have a legacy, Unix based system for performing these calculations. Getting it to work on Windows would be extremely expensive if possible at all. Also, getting Windows to work as they expect in a clustering configuration would also not likely help the cost of migration in any case....
But when stuck with whatever Unix they had, they were also tied down to Sun, HP, or IBM equipment. Those pieces of hardware are expensive as *hell*, upgrading a few systems is bad enough, but a cluster of 32 would take some serious cash.
Now enters Linux (from the business perspective). They can run a full-fledged Unixy system on commodity PC hardware. Coughing up the cash for 40 PCs is no problem at all. The commodity, high speed hardware is the difference here, and Linux is perceived as the enabling technology to let this happen.
Now was Linux required? No, not at all. x86 Solaris might have worked, but it is seen (rightfully so) as Sun's red-headed stepchild, dismal hardware support and performance, meant to give a taste for Sparc computing or learning the system rather than be a production system. Any BSD could have been used just as easily as Linux, but Linux was tipped into the light by the lingering hype and broader userbase/community support. They aren't looking at redistribution, so the GPL/BSD argument is a moot point, so Linux is just a valid choice as FreeBSD.
The point is a new PC with Linux can compete competently with super-high-priced Unix workstations. In the really super high end single servers where intel architecture cannot adequately scale on a hardware, Unix systems are still king (Linux may run on some of them, but if you are dishing out that much cash, you can get the system supported top to bottom by a single source), but in the workstation and clustering arena, PCs with a competent *nix (Linux or BSD) are quickly becoming king....
Re:Hey, they misspelled Linus's name (Score:2)
I believe that he is one of the many clones of Linus Torvalds. Linus finally got tired of hearing that he didn't scale.