T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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697.1 | Nope | RICKS::CALLANDER | | Fri May 23 1997 10:04 | 8 |
| > Will the EB146LX be certified to run OpenVMS. If so what will be the
> minimum supported version?
No, the EB164 was the last DS motherboard supported by VMS and at this
point there are no plans to support any of our newer boards under OpenVMS.
/Mike
|
697.2 | | RICKS::CALLANDER | | Fri May 23 1997 10:06 | 5 |
| Just noticed you said "EB146LX" - there is not such board. I assumed you
meant AlphaPC 164LX, our EV56/Pyxis based motherbard.
/mike
|
697.3 | What about Non Digital Alpha | SCASS1::MARIA | John Maria | Fri May 23 1997 11:15 | 9 |
| Mike is correct, I intended to state AlphaPC 164LX, but was unable to
go back and correct my slip up.
So it seems that DS will produce any new OpenVMS capable mother boards.
Would anyone care to predict the OpenVMS direction of some of the non
Digital logo Alpha workstation and servers?
|
697.4 | Not a priority for the OpenVMS people.. | RDGENG::SPINKJ | | Wed May 28 1997 09:38 | 17 |
| I think that this anser is better from the OpenVMS guys, but from
experience, they are less than enthusiastic about supporting OEM
boards. It took a long while for the DMCC K2 board to get proper
OpenVMS support - & that support is the key - it probably works, but without an
entry in the SPD, who will support the customer - either the OEM or the
end user?
As an FAE for DS in Europe, I have been asked on several occasions if
OpenVMS was supported on the DS boards & I had to say no - but that
things may work. This was fine for an academic education institution
but not for a commercial facility that values the robustness of OpenVMS
- not having a proper support policy of testing & qualification
would, IMHO, cause quality problems & bring the good name of the
hardware & OS into disrepute...
Jim
|
697.5 | not strategic? | BBPBV1::WALLACE | john wallace @ bbp. +44 860 675093 | Thu May 29 1997 06:41 | 4 |
| VMS is for servers, not desktops. OEM motherboards are for desktops.
[This is of course not 100% true but appears to be the business model
The 'Management' are keen on pursuing]
|
697.6 | Right, not strategic... | STAR::CROLL | | Fri May 30 1997 10:40 | 14 |
| OpenVMS's strategic direction is toward servers and the high(er) end.
OpenVMS does support some workstations, but generally only the higher-end
ones. The major reason is money: we have too much to do and not enough
engineers to do it. So, we've decided to concentrate our efforts in
servers. Another reason is that NT or W95 on the desktop is the corporate
(and the industry) direction.
This has been discussed ad nauseam in various places. If you would like
to complain, or to make a case for supporting one or another platform we
don't support, contact one of the responsible OpenVMS product managers:
Bill Hanley (STAR::HANLEY) or Shay Johnson (STAR::SJOHNSON).
I don't know the details about future support for K2 or the other
third-party systems; contact Bill or Shay if you want the real scoop.
|
697.8 | Excuse me, but OpenVMS *IS* on Workstations! | PERFOM::LICEA_KANE | when it's comin' from the left | Fri May 30 1997 13:50 | 31 |
| |OpenVMS does support some workstations, but generally only the higher-end
|ones.
Of the currently shipping (not "mature") workstations:
NT UNIX VMS
DIGITAL Personal Workstation 200i Y N N
DIGITAL Personal Workstation 266i Y N N
DIGITAL Personal Workstation 433a Y N N
DIGITAL Personal Workstation 500a Y N N
DIGITAL Personal Workstation 433au Y Y Q4CY97
DIGITAL Personal Workstation 500au Y Y Q4CY97
Digital AlphaStation 255/233 Y Y Y
Digital AlphaStation 255/300 Y Y Y
Digital AlphaStation 500/333 Y Y Y
Digital AlphaStation 500/400 Y Y Y
Digital AlphaStation 500/500 Y Y Y
Digital AlphaStation 600 5/333 Y Y Y
Digital AlphaStation 600A 5/500 Y Y Y
OpenVMS is not supported on Intel workstations. (Neither is Digital
UNIX.)
But generally, OpenVMS is indeed supported on Alpha workstations.
From lowest end to highest end.
For those people who would like to run OpenVMS on a PC164LX, there
will be an alternative, OpenVMS on the DPW au-Series.
-mr. bill
|
697.9 | | STAR::KLEINSORGE | Fred Kleinsorge, OpenVMS Engineering | Tue Jun 03 1997 11:27 | 40 |
| OpenVMS never got into the OEM market as a general business, as Digital
UNIX had started to do. We have taken an approach which is to make
specific investments where we believe there is a business case for it.
We developed the EB64/164 support because we didn't know if there was a
market there, but we knew that it might have a positive marketing
message about OpenVMS.
The sales in this market for both VMS and UNIX have been *very* low.
Now there are lots of reasons for this, but in the end it means that it
isn't a good place to spend development dollars.
VMS will continue to make specific investments where we believe there
is a business reason to do so.
We will also discuss doing the engineering for a specific product where
another group *or* company is willing to make the investment (that is,
pay for our development costs). This is what we did with the K2
realtime board. K2 does not fit into a general VMS market strategy, or
have a payback for us to invest. But for a modest cost, the realtime
group who *did* have a business need got support for their product.
If Digital Semiconductor, or one of the OEMs spinning products based
on the reference design wants support for the PC164LX, we will be more
than happy to consider working something out to provide the support if
*they* wish to make the investment.
This is *unlike* the products that DIGITAL builds in the workstation
and server groups. We will support ALL hardware that these groups WANT
to put OpenVMS on. In this case, our product management uses as input
the business case that the hardware product group develops which has
the justification for OpenVMS support in it.
At *present* OpenVMS runs on pretty much the same hardware as Digital
UNIX. Only NT has spun off OS-specific hardware lines. However, this
is likely to change soon as the workstation group is actively moving
away from OpenVMS support (that is, they are *not* requesting support,
*not* providing a business justification, and *not* providing
engineering support for the development of OpenVMS, and *not* doing any
further graphics development for OpenVMS).
|
697.10 | EV6 substantially delayed ? | MINNY::rahel.zuo.dec.com::dolder | | Tue Jun 03 1997 14:29 | 19 |
|
Rumors start to spread over here (through some WS channels)
that EV6 will be substantially delayed, ie. we will not see any
EV6 based HW before Q1FY99.
Anyone of those that know dare to comment ? What is the actual status ?
Since we have a EV6 fact sheet publicly accessible on WWW, i'd
be surprised. Could it be that only systems will be late but
chips on time ?
Same sources also say that to bridge this delay we plan to
buld a EV57, ie. a .25u EV5 which can be clocked to 800+Mhz.
It would be nice to learn the truth from inside and not in
front of much better informed customers.
rgds
-matthias
|
697.11 | re .10 - wrong button | MINNY::rahel.zuo.dec.com::dolder | | Tue Jun 03 1997 14:31 | 7 |
| re.10
oops, wrong button....
this should have become a new topic..
sorry..
|
697.12 | re .10 - now topic 700 | MINNY::rahel.zuo.dec.com::dolder | | Tue Jun 03 1997 14:33 | 1 |
| re .10 - moved to topic 700
|
697.13 | What about continued support for existing devices? | GLDX02::ALLBERY | Jim | Tue Jun 03 1997 15:10 | 21 |
| >However, this is likely to change soon as the workstation group is actively
>moving away from OpenVMS support (that is, they are *not* requesting
>support, *not* providing a business justification, and *not* providing
>engineering support for the development of OpenVMS, and *not* doing
>any further graphics development for OpenVMS).
Dow Chemical uses OpenVMS-based workstations as supervisory control
stations for approximately 20-30% (and growing) of its manufacturing
facilities. (VMS was selected as the platform for this software
when it was developed about 6 years ago, for ease of integration with
their other VMS-based manufacturing systems, and because of its
robustness and reliability). What should they do? Stock up on
the currently supported graphics devices? Will these devices be
supported on future Alpha workstations?
These systems will likely be in place for another 15 years...
Oh well-- they already have numerous reasons to hate us, but that's
another story.
Jim
|
697.14 | | STAR::KLEINSORGE | Fred Kleinsorge, OpenVMS Engineering | Wed Jun 04 1997 11:47 | 18 |
| Yes. There is the rub. Your story is relatively common...
A major government prime builds a critical military aircraft that
contains VAX servers, and 18 Alpha workstations -- all running OpenVMS.
They want to move to all Alpha systems on board, and continue with
OpenVMS... guess what - they need mid-range 3D graphics. And guess
what the workstation group has told them... no more OpenVMS 3D
graphics.
A common story. Because 18 workstations per aircraft is piddly
business for the workstation group, they will put a multi-million
dollar per year business at risk. You see, they see this as another
sign that they may need to get off VMS, and if they need to make
another major investment to get off of VMS on their graphic heads, then
they may as well look at getting out completely.
A common story indeed.
|
697.15 | | BGSDEV::MORRIS | Tom Morris - DS Light & Sound | Thu Jun 05 1997 02:59 | 24 |
| I see these as two very different situations. If it were me making the
investment decisions, which it most decidely is not, :
.13 - I'd do my best to support this customer's requirements despite the
fact that they no longer were on my strategic investment path. The
sole reason for supporting them is that past treatment of customers is
the best predictor of future treatment (unlike the stock market), so
I'd go out of my way to treat them well to keep from scaring off future
customers.
.14 - I'd look for the business unit that thought this was a profitable
business to fund the development since 18 workstations obviously
doesn't represent a very attractive opportunity. Like it or not, this
is the behaviour that product line/division/business unit organizations
are intended to drive. You look out for your own interests and let
everyone else look out for theirs. I might be talked into donating the
"opportunity cost" of having my engineers do/supervise the work to the
greater corporate good, but no out of pocket money.
There's no question that these situations require delicate balancing
acts, but it's just as important to know when to move on as it is to be
loyal to the existing customers.
Tom
|