Financial Business's Linux Use Doubled in 2004 20
A beautiful mind writes "Linux usage got boosted in the financial sector thanks to mainstream suppliers like IBM and Sun from 27 percent last year to 58 percent in 2005, according to a report from financial technology researchers Finextra. In fact the growing support for Linux has been the single biggest technology change in financial organisations over the past 12 months, say the researchers writing in the Financial Technology Strategies 2005 survey."
Re:financial something or other (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:financial something or other (Score:1)
My stability decreased under mid-range 2.4, then got better again with the later versions, then decreased again under 2.6. This is on a Dell Latitude C600 and my desktop (ASUS A7M266 board, SB Live, GeForce3, Athlon XP2000+, WinTV card. No problems with Windows XP on either system.
Not bashing Linux here (or you), but it isn't perfect. I get a feeling of smug complacency from a lot of Linux users that
Re:financial something or other (Score:2, Informative)
Re:financial something or other (Score:1)
Re:financial something or other (Score:2, Informative)
This was apparently a problem with the then-new X.org server; my Dell c600 has an ATI Rage128 chip in it, fully supported by the open source X driver for years. Had to go back to Fedora Core 1. I don't think it's right that X can take down t
Re:financial something or other (Score:2)
Re:financial something or other (Score:2)
1996 called and they want their catch phrase back.
*BSD isn't perfect either, it's just different (unless someone you know has done a study :). That's no bad thing, in it's own way ... but just because it's harder/different doesn't mean it's better (and you there in the back with the debian shirt on, you sit down too).
Chosen for Technological Reasons? (Score:3, Insightful)
However, I question whether companies such as IBM are truly choosing Linux based on technological reasons, or if they are just marketing "Linux" as a buzzword to upper-management types who may have heard something about it.
After all, a quick look at IBM's portal site for Linux, http://www.ibm.com/linux/ [ibm.com], does not show a page detailing the technological benefits of Linux. Heck, it barely mentions financial benefits. What I do see is a bunch of snazzy logos, and some rather devoid-of-meaning slogans such as, "Business and Linux in an On Demand World."
Am I being too harsh on IBM, or are they really just playing the marketing game?
Re:Chosen for Technological Reasons? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Chosen for Technological Reasons? (Score:2, Insightful)
Perhaps a matter of perspective. I'm not claiming that Linux is a gem of engineering perfection; what I am claiming is that it is a useful and reasonably robust system that can provide a large number of services, similar to what you stated. I consider this a technological reason to consider Linux.
Perhaps the point of my post (the grandparent) can best be summarized with this observation: Go to the main site for
Re:Chosen for Technological Reasons? (Score:3, Interesting)
I think you are reading too much into things, IBM's just marketing Linux the way everybody in the same market does. Plus, consider this - the only place that is going to toot the horn for Windows is Microsoft, or one o
Re:Chosen for Technological Reasons? (Score:2)
Actually, it isn't. Free software is about choice and freedom. Open source is about a development model which builds good software. Open source software happens to be also free software in most cases, but open source software supporters and free software supporters have very different goals. Linus, the big name in open source, doesn't care about freedom at all, or at least so it seems. He doesn't have a problem with requiring closed source tools
Front or Back (Score:3, Interesting)