More Mission-Critical Linux 97
A reader sent us a Datamation article talking about the use of Linux by Southwestern Bell. That's right-if you are in MO or KA, your phone call made it through thanks to Linux. Good press is always nice to see.Update: 09/02 12:06 by H : Yep, I'll admit it. I'm an idiot. Kansas is KS, not KA.
This makes a lot of sense. (Score:1)
excel. It's nice to see that more and more companies are realizing that NT just can't handle this type of thing effectively. It's also nice to see that the unix of choice is increasingly linux.
more stuff (Score:1)
Linux-journal. Are there any websites/articles/whatever with info/articles about the firms that rely on linux each day?
Technical Accuracy (Score:1)
They can get some stuff right:
Linux--the UNIX-like operating system
But other stuff so wrong:
SGI revealed that it is dumping IRIX, its own version of UNIX, in favor of Linux
Not!
I was also amused to see that they are running Red Hat 4.2. Assuming they got that detail correct
Re:Not to be a nitpicking bastard, but... (Score:1)
this is bad (Score:3)
Re:This makes a lot of sense. (Score:2)
Telephone Co. and Unix (Score:1)
now, who would have ever guessed.
Another one saved from the dark side.
Chuck
Maybe Linux is bad??? (Score:1)
Hmmm. This could be bad for Network Admins or IS ppl. More Linux=Less Jobs???
Moderate this up! It's pretty funny! (Score:1)
I have to wonder why they chose Linux... (Score:2)
OK. That was a troll.
"Keeping them running, however, has required only about one-tenth of one percent of his group's system administration time. Kessell calculates that his department has had to hire one less technician, at an average salary of around $40,000 a year, because of Linux' reliability."
Read "Linux costs jobs in Kansas." Certainly if I were a Windows Consultant, I wouldn't want to dry up a potential cash cow by installing a remarkably stable and reliable operating system on a customer's computers. Not when I can continue to rake in those big bucks fixing their system every few weeks at $120+ an hour.
OK. That was a troll too.
"This is partly because, in many regards, Linux is still an immature operating system, says Potter. Symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) support for Linux, for example, only became available earlier this year."
Um, excuse me? I've been using it for close to 3 on my dual pentium box. Please don't quote crack monkies in the future.
Places that already use NT (Score:2)
That's why it's interesting when big companies (or small companies, for that matter) have evaluated Linux (and probably the other obvious choices made by MS, or other versions of UNIX) and said "Hey, we'll go with choice B, which is cheap and has lots of good features!" rather than choice A, conservative and ubiquitous.
I think even people who like the MS OSes would find this an interesting piece of news. The status quo isn't as interesting
It's neat if a person lives to be 120 then jumps straight into Paradise; much less so when a person dies at 79 of long-known causes. Eh?
timothy
Re:Maybe Linux is bad??? (Score:1)
Anything that increases the productivity of a technical person is great. It means that one techie can do even more stuff without breaking a sweat, and the more stuff you can take care of, the more value you create and the more money you can make. Or haven't you noticed that people whose productivity is stagnant, like floor-sweepers, haven't enjoyed the same run-up in income as the tech sector? Remember that.
Re:States (Score:1)
As a resident of the much maligned state of Kansas...Yes it is "KS."
Cody in Lawrence (Birthplace of Lynx)Re:Proof! (Score:1)
There are years of hard work and careful design in the Linux kernel and gnu packages that make up the o/s. It didnt happen by random chance. It makes a perfect Kansas showcase of "intelligent design".
Re:my favorite line (Score:2)
HOWTO: Avoiding Linux Stories. (Score:1)
1. Get an account at Slashdot.
2. Go to your Preferences Page.
3. Scroll down until you see the "Exclude Stories from the Homepage" section.
4. Select "Linux" from "Topics".
5. Scroll down until you see the "saveuser" button.
6. Click it.
7. Shut the fsck up.
Thank you.
Re:Technical Accuracy (Score:2)
SMP (Score:1)
I sent the author a note to the effect that this was bunk, he got back to me and acknowledged that he was incorrect. However, whether that means a correction will ever be posted is another matter.
Re:What about that Navy ship? (Score:1)
Jiffy wrap around (Score:2)
They use RH4.2 (Score:1)
This just confirms it.
The best releases (of RH... maybe) are behind us, but the best is yet to come.
"Well, thats a dumb idea." - Peter Cord of the Jupiter Consultants Group on embedded linux
ACTUALLY you meant *AR*, MO, and KS (Score:1)
Not that I'm defending them. They're good intentioned, customer service is very polite (my company leases about 8 voice T1s), but man they sure are slow to bring services to us (at least in AR).
We just now got ISDN in my home town. THIS YEAR, 1999. xDSL probably won't be here for a decade. *sigh*
James
Look at the article again (Score:1)
You mean Arkansas has phones? (Score:1)
Well I just thought I would beat any smart ass bastard to the punch since people actually think we walk around without shoes here (well maybe we do in the summer..).
No seriously. We're not ALL hillbillies (although its against the law in the state to make fun of hillbillies).
Have a good one:)
James
Re:One less employee? (Score:1)
Or maybe those NT admins that would have been working in Kansas are out of work, at home, and making prank calls all day.
Re:Not to be a nitpicking bastard, but... (Score:2)
BTW -- No offense intended Hemos, I am just kidding.
Re:my favorite line (Score:2)
Wow, they find cheap technicians. Around here (only about 3 hours from KC) you can't touch a decent tech for less than about $45-$50k. That also doesn't figure in benefits or expenses (a computer, a phone, a desk, etc) related to having an employee. The salary is just one factor (albiet a large one) in the cost of an employee.
Re:One less employee? (Score:1)
In that case, why not poison the food in your company's cafeteria, because that'll keep the doctors in business. And also let's remove the sprinkler systems, to put food on the firefighters' tables. Hmmm, and go back to using typewriters, because many a typewriter technician has been put out of work with this new computer fad. Actually, let's get rid of publishing and printing presses altogether, because far too many a professional scribe has been itching for work in the last several hundred years.
It's called progress!! People's occupations change to adapt to the current state of technology. It really pisses me off to see how people's greed for money stagnates the advancement of humanity. For example, audio CD's were capable of being produced long before they were actually produced, but record companies wanted to milk as much out of the tape market as they could. This type of thing permeates the whole economy, argh!
Anyway, I'd rather have my job easier than keep another fat M$ techie in business by fixing my computer several times per year. It's cheaper for all involved, and if this techie then quit and learned linux, (s)he could make a far more respectable living as well!
Linux Winning - will it hurt you? (Score:2)
Just some thoughts..........
http://www.bombcar.com It's where it is at.
Re:Technical Accuracy (Score:2)
A lot of people don't run recent distributions on production machines because they don't want to tinker with a working system (one can certainly debate the wisdom of that). Another thing to consider is the lead time between when stories are written and published. When it comes to webified versions, there is sometimes a lag between when the online version appears and the print version (to help keep the paper circulation going I guess).
Re:What about that Navy ship? (Score:1)
I thought it had been (Score:1)
Re:You mean Arkansas has phones? (Score:1)
Hurry up GT(fscking)E!! Get OUT!
Re:So when can we start posting... (Score:1)
Re:my favorite line (Score:1)
Yes, even interns can admin Linux boxes - it's that easy.
--
Stay on the line, please sir. (Score:2)
I understand, sir. We'll dispatch the police to your house just as soon as we reboot. Please stay on the line, sir. Is the murderer nearby? Yes sir, I understand, but please stay on the line, we're rebooting. Please hold! Scandisk is still running. It'll only be a bit longer. OKAY, THERE'S NO NEED TO SCREAM! Please stay on the line. Sir, I'm sorry, it looks like we've got a problem here... a registry corruption. It won't boot. Can you hold a bit longer? Sir? Sir? What was that screaming sound? Oh, hell... blue screen again.
FYI: the application failed, not NT (Score:2)
Shortly after these incidents, they were reported in a single article (Computer Reseller News, I believe) at moderately competent detail, based largely on the complaints of the "whistle blower" mentioned in this article as well. But that one CRN article was summarized with diminishing fidelity in several other editorials, which were then widely replicated thanks to the magic of syndication, and the incident eventually became the part of Windows folklore in mutated form, along the lines of "the main server blue-screened when the navigator punched in a new course".
It hardly seems fair to blame NT for an application failure. Moreover, the complaints about the Navy cutting costs by using NT seem targeted instead at the broader isssue of replacing expensive, but reliable, fault-tolerant systems with commodity and LAN-based technology, rather than an attack on NT itself. As described, this type of failure could have happened just as easily if the on-board systems had been running Linux.
Misleading article? Not a troll... (Score:1)
Maybe I misread something, but it didn't seem like Linux, contrary to Hemos's claim, had anything to do with people's phone calls going through. The story sounded like Bell was just using Linux for monitoring, not that it was doing any of the actual grunt work; i.e., Linux is just making sure that the computers actually running the show are operating properly. The statement that Linux was only used in about 10% of the computers seems to jibe with this.
Cheers,
ZicoKnows@hotmail.com
The Boeing Evaluation (Score:1)
execs reject it - do they give a detailed explanation?
Re:Technical Accuracy (Score:1)
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Re:Maybe Linux is bad??? (Score:1)
Re:One less employee? (Score:1)
I prefer oatmeal in the morning myself.
Much of this silly way of thinking can be found in the media where economic good news is counted in "job creation" instead of wealth creation. Job creation can augment distribution of wealth but productive jobs do both (distribution and creation of wealth). Two hundred years ago employment was 100% in a realitively unproductive agrarian society.
Sorry for the Econ. lecture in a tech forum but it is a pet peev of mine and productivity is what this game is about.
Re:Linux given "thumbs down"? (Score:1)
MIS curriculum has in my opinion an emphasis on the M-management instead of information technology
in the IT; I have seen some of the curriculum myself. If the aftershave on the suit smells better than the B.O. behind coke bottle glasses then the CIO goes with the suit.
In other words upper management has no clue what the heck is going on in technology.
Re:another fluffy piece of self gratification (Score:1)
LOL _comedic_ innovation
Re:One less employee? (Score:1)
Re:FYI: the application failed, not NT (Score:2)
Without reference to NT, I think the Navy's COTS policy is dangerously insane, and if the whistleblower was right it seems to be a push from a single highly-placed individual that no one can/will stand up to. One can only hope he's due to retire soon, and be replaced by someone who knows the difference between a capital ship and a consumer desktop.
Truth is, I wouldn't even recommend Linux in that particular role, at least not unless they "certified" some version after an extensive audit.
Also, COTS or no, it's alarming that such a simple error wasn't caught by testing on dry land. I doubt that the ship was ever in the least danger (barring a surprise war), but a sea trial was a pretty expensive way to catch one of the most basic of errors ("test the input at the extremities").
Get a clue, Navy. Too cheap can turn out to be unaffordably expensive. A system is no more reliable than the software that runs it, and I notice that you aren't turning to COTS ships and aircraft yet.
Re:another fluffy piece of self gratification (Score:2)
Re:Stay on the line, please sir. (Score:1)
Sorry. I have seen it run so many times lately...
yea but--- (Score:1)
IMVHO
Re:my favorite line (Score:1)
Heh here in NJ you cant touch a decent Unix admin
for under 70k:) And being a Unix Admin I like it
that way:) But yes there are a lot more expenses
that go into an employee then salary. You need to
pay the other 1/2 of social security, Workers
Comp..etc. About 20k of my per hour income goes
into paying those things and benefits for myself.
(I am a contractor). And then I get the remainder
as a paycheck which gets hit with income taxes,
social security, etc.. figure in just salary alone
it cost a company 20-25% more then what you get.
and as the previous poster pointed out. there are
the other associated expenses to help you do your
job. Unfortunatly I have a bad feeling that if
linux becomes prevolent and replaces OS's like
solaris and HP in the corporate environment we may
see a reduction in admin salaries. "Why do I have
to pay a senior unix admin 80k-110k admin a free
os?" (NY/NJ pay scale). Of course I could be
wrong:) Not like it hasnt happened before:)
Malice95
Re:But where one get Linux support? (Score:1)
Re:If Slashdot were a nuclear power plant... (Score:1)
Do you know the difference...probably not. Ohhh the gloves are off. En garde!
BTW ask Rob Malda et all how many pages, not hits, but pages this sucker deals with.
Ohh, and one more thing. That is the dumbest comparison - apples and oranges.
The Internet grows at a phenominal rate...hmm I wonder how much the load a nuclear power plant increases in comparison to the growth of the internet (in the same time span)
Just in case you reply to this, and just in case you tout Microsoft (please don't - it shows your a monkey sys admin that likes your work done for you) please remember Hotmail.
Maybe the Slashdot crew should run their system on an OS of your choice, oh wise all-knowing-one. Do you have a choice they could use, or did you just throw a comment out without thinking that you would have to come up with a better alternative.
Mr anonymous user...get a userid, log in and show yourself. >-) Ppppplease
Ahhh- that venting felt good. Thank You.
Re:The Linux herd - up to 17% market share (Score:1)
Good ol' Kansas school system (Score:1)
ugh.... (Score:1)
Well, maybe this will help Linux go mainstream.
More Linux companies need to do like RedHat and gain money to become more powerful and better know than they are now.
Educate the people and they WILL switch.
Re:Linux given "thumbs down"? (Score:2)
Re:If Slashdot were a nuclear power plant... (Score:2)
How many Proliants with 4 CPUs and 4 NICs would it take to bear that load under your favorite OS?
Re:yea but--- (Score:1)
More places that /SHOULD/ be using Linux.... (Score:1)