Microsoft Phasing Out FAST Search For Linux, Unix 146
viralMeme writes "Microsoft plans to begin phasing out Unix and Linux platform support for its FAST enterprise search products, as of its next release. According to a Thursday blog post from Microsoft Distinguished Engineer Bjørn Olstad, 'We’ve continued to sell, support, and update the Linux and UNIX versions of FAST ESP, and we’ve designed the next wave of FAST products (scheduled for release in the first half of calendar year 2010) to include a cross-platform search core that has been extended to take advantage of web services and support mixed-platform deployment models. With our 2010 products scheduled for release in a few months, we’ve just started to plan for our next wave of products. As a part of that planning process, we have decided that in order to deliver more innovation per release in the future, the 2010 products will be the last to include a search core that runs on Linux and UNIX. Many of our customers run FAST ESP on Linux and UNIX today, and we recognize that our future focus on Windows means change. To ease the transition, we’re investing in interoperability between Windows and other operating systems, reaffirming our commitment to 10 years of support for our non-Windows products, and taking concrete steps to help customers plan for the future.'"
Fear and Opportunity (Score:2, Insightful)
It's a clear sign that MS still has a (probably growing) fear of *nix, especially Linux.
It's also an opportunity for some enterprising company or group to fill the void. All it will do is cost MS some sales. I doubt many organizations will migrate to Windows Server just for FAST.
Re:Fear and Opportunity (Score:5, Insightful)
You'd be surprised... This is how MS got in to start with.
Years ago, windows machines were only used for lowend desktops (hence why its called windows - named after its gui) but they gradually got pushed out to servers because users built up a familiarity with it.
And nothing was lost (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:And nothing was lost (Score:4, Informative)
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<facetious>Well I'm surprised they don't go for an open source enterprise solution from the likes of IBM or Oracle...</facetious>
While I fully support FOSS and use it exclusively for my personal needs, I sometimes wonder if MS is really all that different from the other
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You have no idea what you are talking about. Gardner has consistently rated FAST as either the #1 or #2 search engine technology. And under the hood, FAST was very open-source friendly -- most of the building blocks to make it came from open source projects. It was a VERY Linux friendly product. But when they sold out to Microsoft the writing was on the wall.
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My company was seriously considering FAST it was by far the best performing solution at the time. Then MS bought them, and since we run on a Linux (RHEL5) platform, we ended up going with a Lucene/Solr solution. a bit slower, but we saw the writing on the wall for FAST when they were purchased.
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But there will be some that migrate, so it would appear to be a net plus for them.
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Well, I'd certainly not migrate to Windows for FAST. I'd guess it would make my machine SLOWer.
cool (Score:4, Interesting)
The more they tighten their grip, the more the world will slip through their fingers.
But. (Score:4, Funny)
Your lack of faith is disturbing.
.... gorrrgling sound of Justniz grabbing to this throat.....
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Re:cool (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, but how much does it hurt the world to be squeezed out through someone's fingers...
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this is part 1 of a strategy (Score:2)
First they eliminate FAST search, but it will soon be replaced by Microsoft's patented SLOW search technology, and the world will again belong to M$!!
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The more they tighten their grip, the more the world will slip through their fingers.
The original quote and variations of it- such as yours- appear here on a fairly regular basis. Despite the implied tongue-in-cheek (self-consciously geeky), it's still being used sincerely to make a similar point to the one Leia was arguing in the film.
The absolutely massive irony here is that if you see the original film- which I caught on TV recently and I'd have assumed the fanboys knew inside out- you'll know that this is a prelude to Darth Vader's somewhat effective verbal response and his significan
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Something something DARK SIDE. ...
Something something COMPLETE.
Uh, yeah... (Score:5, Insightful)
"...As a part of that planning process, we have decided that in order to deliver more innovation per release in the future, the 2010 products will be the last to include a search core that runs on Linux and UNIX...."
Translation:
"We are canning Linux and UNIX support to solidify Microsoft lock-in."
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Yeah, no kidding.
Of course it would be impossible to do innovation on the *nix platforms too.
Re:Uh, yeah... (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm REALLY confused now. So they are dropping *NIX support, to futher their goal of interoperability? WTF? Can someone explain how these 2 are NOT related?
Either that, or the subtext of "reaffirming (their) commitment" by dropping non-win os support sheds some insight on their "commitment" in the first place...
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That's certainly considerate of them, isn't it? /sarc
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What do you mean it's not interoperable? It works with ALL versions of Windows!
Kind of like how they have both kinds of music at Bob's Country Bunker... Country and Western! [youtube.com]
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Easy, they said they drop UNIX (and Linux) support, and will encourage people to migrate to Windows. In the
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transitive verb 1 a : to put into charge or trust : entrust b : to place in a prison or mental institution c : to consign or record for preservation <commit it to memory> d : to put into a place for disposal or safekeeping e : to refer (as a legislative bill) to a committee for consideratio
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Remind me... why is MONO a good thing (Score:5, Insightful)
This is exactly why nobody should ever get sucked into Microsoft 'interoperability' ploys. They are not about interoperability. They are always about extending the MS monopoly into areas that they could not reach without paying lip service to interoperability.
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True. If they care, they buy Google's enterprise search instead.
I actually had to look up what these guys do (did), since I've never heard of them. Got these Google appliances all over, though.
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And of course, your lack of familiarity is the benchmark for quality.... I don't know how good their product still is, but I evaluated it vs Google a number of years ago and they were faster, cheaper, easier to integrate with across multiple languages, and they had lower hardware requirements. I don't doubt that Google has subsequently made substantial improvements to their offering, so I wouldn't extrapolate that to today, but they certainly used to have a fantastic, developer friendly product.
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Very cool - so you're saying that you support them regardless of OS integration? Good.
All I said was that if people care what they run on, they most likely use Google Appliances (since in my experience they are more associated with enterprise search). I didn't say they were any good ;)
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* Yes, I know there are others...
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Many people find Java or Qt a good solution, but many others don't.
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For those there are GTK, PHP, Ruby, Perl...
Anyway, writing cross-plataform software only starts to get hard* when you are working on kernels or one of your plataforms is Windows. I really don't understand why so many comments feeding that troll.
Annoying, yes, there are a few bugs that will show up on bad C code, for example, but not hard.
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Cross-platform problems are always a two-way street. If there are problems between Windows and Linux than it is meaningless to blame it on Windows.
Of course, creating code that runs of different varieties of Unix isn't really a cross-platform problem anyway unless you are using different processors types and programming them in assembly.
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Re:Yes (Score:2)
A great example of the wikipedia problem (Score:2)
This is a bit off topic, but you just gave us a great example of what is so terribly wrong with a number of Wikipedia articles. You were referring to some thing called XtUML, and helpfully provided the wikipedia link. Unfortunately, after reading the 1st paragraph, I still don't have the faintest idea of what it is. Here are the 2 first sentences:
Executable UML, often abbreviated to xtUML [1] or xUML [2], is the evolution of the Shlaer-Mellor method[3] to UML. Executable UML graphically specifies a system using a profile of the UML.
Would someone who does know what that means please insert a paragraph for lay people at the beginning of that wikipedia entry?
It's a company after all... (Score:5, Insightful)
Reads:
"We'll try to force everyone to use Windows in the future."
Well...who expected something different anyway?
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Well...who expected something different anyway?
Well, I did... [Find / Replace] "in the future" --> "Right now"
I'll continue using Linux (Score:2, Insightful)
Thanks Linux.
F.U. Microsoft.
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Monoculture, yes monoculture! (Score:4, Insightful)
All hail the IT monoculture! Praise and glory to the brand!
Re:Monoculture, yes monoculture! (Score:5, Insightful)
You know what's funny? How German and English words look and sound the same but have entirely different meanings. "Gift" means poison in German. "Mist" is dung. And "brand" is burning (the fire kind as well as the technical grinding wear kind). It could also mean mildew. And necrosis.
I find it funny how often English words unintentionally have a far truer meaning when used as their German homonyms.
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Oh no!! (Score:5, Funny)
Oh no!! How will the Linux and Unix communities cope?!?
Who gives a shit?!?!
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I went looking for someone that had already stated the obvious.
I second your, 'who gives a shit' and will raise you a 'shove it up the moderators' ....'.
How in God's name did this even make it on to /.?
Really people, you are telling me there is not one piece of more worthy, important, or at least interesting piece of IT or other news today? That the cancellation of a feature in some obscure failed piece of MS technology (even in MS land) is the most news worthy thing out there?
Really, until this thread, I
Thats why theres lucene (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Thats why theres lucene (Score:5, Funny)
That's clearly nonsense. Which of these programs is named after the very concept of high velocity?
BTW: What does FAST do, anyway?
Re:Thats why theres lucene (Score:4, Interesting)
Heh. I'm wondering why anyone is concerned about it myself.
Welcome FAST Customers
On April, 25, 2008, Microsoft completed its acquisition of FAST Search & Transfer, opening a new chapter in enterprise search. By combining the innovation and agility of FAST with the discipline and resources of Microsoft, our customers get the best of both worlds: market-leading products from a trusted technology partner.
http://www.microsoft.com/enterprisesearch/en/us/fast-customer.aspx [microsoft.com]
So - they acquired something less than two years ago, now they decide they don't like it, can't support it, and many of us never knew about it to start with. To my knowledge, I've never made use of it. Unless it was used on the net by some god-awful behind-the-scenes server.
For the most part, Google has satisfied all my search requirements for years now. Do they use FAST? Didn't think so, LOL
Re:Thats why theres lucene (Score:5, Interesting)
We went with FAST as opposed to a Google Search Appliance because at the time the Google box couldn't do one thing we needed desperately without some serious hacking and ill-advisement from Google (I'll give it to Google, they were straight up with us that it was a bad idea at the time with their software. Kudos to them for honesty, makes me want to buy their stuff in the future). We have documents, several thousand, that come in nightly by HTML that need to be indexed complete with search term highlighting by 7am the next morning. The system has approximately three hours to do this job. If it cannot, an essential resource in our business (which shall remain nameless but suffice it to say "lives are at stake") suffers. Google's indexing at the time was somewhat lazy in that it would index things as fast as it could but could not guarantee that 21 hours of intake would be ready to search perfectly 3 hours later. FAST could. Simple as that.
It deeply saddens me that they're dropping the Linux platform as that's how ours was built and even the engineers that came out to build it loved working on it (RHEL for those interested). It's not unexpected, and we'll find another indexer in a few years just like we always have to due to bullcrap like this but I was hoping that once, just freakin once, MS could actually use someone else's work to their advantage WITHOUT slapping their customers. Seriously, is Not Invented Here such a big freakin deal?
But hey, whatever, we all knew it would happen anyway. For what it's worth FAST on Linux is fucking awesome from our experience (and we've got nearly a million non-trivial documents and workload it has to contend with).
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"FAST on Linux is fucking awesome" I'll have to share that with the rest of the support team.
Speaking purely as an individual, I wish Microsoft wouldn't have gone this way, although obviously it doesn't surprise me. On the bright side - for your organization at least - you've got another 8 years where we'll be supporting ESP 5.3, so you have a few years before you have to worry about finding another solution, or deciding that maybe running a few Windows servers wouldn't be too bad. Just saying. :)
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Fuel And Sensor Tactical (Score:2)
BTW: What does FAST do, anyway?
Well, see, while the Valkyries were developed to work in both atmospheric and space flight, the intakes (which act as hydrogen scoops for the fusion reactors in the engines) aren't able to get sufficient fuel out in space, so the fighter's operational range is quite limited. The FAST packs address this problem by providing a large reserve of fuel for the fighter, as well as a bit of extra armor and missiles to increase the fighter's offensive power... But with the added bulk of the FAST packs the Valkyrie
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Lucene has the same abilities as FAST and is a lot more efficient , its used by most of the ediscovery vendors and its free in it base format yes you will have to do some work on the interface and other support areas but its the solution to MS ditching Linux support for search
You clearly know less, or assume more, than you think you do.
Lucene is a great search engine. But neither it nor its commercial add-ons can touch what FAST can do in its entirety. When you have hundreds of millions of document to search, tens of millions of those documents to update throughout a single day, a requirement to deliver any single updated document within minutes of the update to an end user, and keep it all running 7x24, you don't want to use Lucene.
Sure, you could "do some work on the in
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I have seen also mentions of the Xapian [xapian.org] which is written in C++.
What kind of music do we like? (Score:4, Funny)
Both kinds.
Country AND Western.
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Don't mind the offtopic mod, some of us got it.
Poor design? (Score:1)
we've designed the next wave of FAST products (scheduled for release in the first half of calendar year 2010) to include a cross-platform search core
but immediately after that he says:
in order to deliver more innovation per release in the future, the 2010 products will be the last to include a search core that runs on Linux and UNIX
It sounds to me like one of two things happened. Either they decided to stop designing their product, or management decided that they didn't like *nix. And to think, you'd be hard pressed to find a mainstream open source app not ported to three or more platforms. Proprietary software is silly. :(
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Wait, what? (Score:2)
Microsoft makes a search product? Really?
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Nonono, you got that wrong. They're searching for a product. One that could sell without cramming it down everyone's throat by the market share of Windows.
Basically MS sinks or swims with the continued success of Windows. None of their other products would have a sensible market share if it wasn't for Windows.
SLOW Search Thingie? (Score:2)
It is a tiny market. (Score:5, Informative)
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I could see that measly 2 billion growing as it becomes more integrated into other stuff in the enterprise.
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Now the market pendulum has swung around. Venture capital would flow to every niche vacated by Microsoft. Microsoft would be blamed
do the math (Score:2)
it's not chump change.
I make a little over $10,000 quarterly.
For $1700 I will dance a jig.
Hell, for $1700 I might even try windows.
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Would you dance a jig for 34$?
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Why not? Doesn't cost me a dime to dance, it's no inconvenience, it's not disgusting (well, for me, can't talk about people subjected to it) so it's 34 bucks profit for nothing.
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Amateurs. A good manager would have found a way to take the million and still walk away.
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um, in a word?
yes
you got so much money that $34 is nothing to you?
give it to me.
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These guys do things that appear to literally be magical in nature, organizing millions of highly custom data points into a coherent data set and slapping a slick UI over top in a matter of weeks.
When the salesmen of the vendors do things that appear to be magical, I hold on to my wallet tight if it is my decision. Or set up a paper trail to protect my tail if it is not.
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You don't deal with corporations a lot, do you? It's 1.1 billions they do not have yet.
So they want them. At least if it costs less than 1.1 billions to get them.
obligatory (Score:2)
That was fast..
Bjørn Olstad (Score:1)
Invention of Lock-in (Score:5, Funny)
Trend? (Score:1)
They just dropped support for the original XBox live too. Are they looking for ways to tick off customers or what?
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I also like how they put a spin on it in each case, and tell you its the best thing for you.
This just in! (Score:1)
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No word from Santa yet on how this will affect next year's operations.
As the South Pole is on a continent, as opposed to temporary ice, it should be easier. Also, the South Pole has daylight in December.
Whoah... (Score:4, Insightful)
amazing how nobody saw that one coming...
Seriously, folks, is this really news? I'd imagine that when Microsoft does a takeover these days, one of the criteria they're using is "are we going to have a repeat of the Hotmail clusterfuck?" They were planning on doing this before they bought the company, and the only question was when and what excuse they'd be using...
c.
Surprising (Score:2)
Microsoft not wanting to support a competitor to its core product, particularly a competitor that is kicking their ass in the server market...how surprising.
We swiched from FAST ESP to Apache Solr (Score:2, Interesting)
I've been runing FAST ESP 5 clusters on RHEL for since 2008, used for web and site search. I found FAST ESP 5.2 especially to be terribly buggy on large deployments, and some issues their support never did resolve.
Moving to a unit that just needed to search a db, we ran ESP 5.3 for a year, but have now switched completely to Apache Solr. For searching records from a database, Solr does everything we need without gouging the company for $$$$$$ in annual support fees.
In just a few weeks we were able to set
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Re:"more innovation per release" (Score:4, Informative)
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It isn't an acronym, it is a product name.
FAST Search. Microsoft bought them last year. Microsoft tried to get their Enterprise Search to work and failed multiple times and finally gave up and bought FAST since FAST kept taking their business.
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Fast Search And Transfer (FAST) (Score:5, Informative)
Actually the full name of the company is Fast Search And Transfer (FAST).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fast_Search_%26_Transfer [wikipedia.org]
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Fast Search And Transfer ? That would seem to spell FSAT, in my book. I guess there's something like selective dyslexia.
Expect Nothing (Score:2)
If you read the link you would see that the company was formally called "Fast Search & Transfer", and that it's a recursive acronym.
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Embrace, extend, and what, exactly? Oh yeah - EXTINGUISH FAST!! Tell me it isn't so - wasn't Microsoft turning over a new leaf, or something? Phhht.
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Would it kill you to spell out the damn acronym at least once in the article summary?
Fuel and Sensor Tactical [wikipedia.org]