T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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246.1 | | STAR::MANN | | Mon Feb 20 1989 19:43 | 5 |
| I guess these guys do not have such a product to offer,
but they seem worried about it.
Bruce
|
246.2 | Its a pretty good question... | ANTPOL::PRUSS | Dr. Velocity | Mon Feb 20 1989 21:55 | 10 |
| The discussion in UNIXWORLD was centered on X-Terminals. In fact
the cost-effectiveness of the X-terminal approach is apparently
one of our big concerns in deciding whether to build such a product.
If a VAX 6310 can only support (say) 20 terminals, providing 0.25
VUPS per X-terminal, are the users really going to be better off
than if they had VAXstation 3100s?
|
246.3 | Which would you rather have: a color vt340 or a b/w X-terminal | CVG::PETTENGILL | mulp | Tue Feb 21 1989 14:38 | 20 |
|
> If a VAX 6310 can only support (say) 20 terminals, providing 0.25
> VUPS per X-terminal, are the users really going to be better off
> than if they had VAXstation 3100s?
But that isn't the likely tradeoff. What is more reasonable is the option of
a color VT340 connected to the 6310 versus a b/w X-terminal connected to the
same 6310. The VT340 supports graphics and multiple sessions and color and
lower overhead on the host. An X-terminal would support multiple sessions and
graphics, but might not have color and would probably load the host more.
And the X-terminal would probably cost more, maybe 50-100% more than the VT340.
(My guess based on the amount of memory I'd expect, say 4 meg to make up for
no virtual memory).
Now, which would you rather have, good VT340 interactive performance or somewhat
poorer response with DECwindows?
Not many people are going to be given the option of `would you like a PVAX or
would really rather have a VT340?'
|
246.4 | Can't really say much about DEC products, but heres the competitions... | IO::MCCARTNEY | James T. McCartney III - DTN 381-2244 ZK02-2/N24 | Tue Feb 21 1989 16:12 | 47 |
| There are severl vendors currently offering X terminals, and it goes without
saying that Digital is also intensely looking at the area. While I won't comment
on any effort currently under way in DSG, I will relate what the competition
has announced. If you want information about what is happening in Digital, then
contact Vic Belemere at VIDEO::BELEMERE who is the <unannounced product name>
product manager.
The Visual 640 X terminal is currently shipping and comes standard with three
button mouse, 2MB of memory and a MC68030 processor. Ethernet attachment and
TCP/IP transport integral. The terminal retails for $1295 (competative with the
VT330) and has a 15 inch screen of approx 100dpi. The terminal has gotten good
reviews to date, although some complain that the server is not as highly
optimized as the DECwindows native server. It does seem to function with
DECwindows applications and if the server optimizations are forthcoming, could
be a real competitor to our existing workstation platforms.
Human Designed Systems (HDS), a traditional aftermarket vendor of VTxxx clone
terminals has announced an X terminal under the trade name of ViewStations.
Citing that it is "... more of a stripped-down workstation [than a terminal]",
the processor is available with both serial asynch and Ethernet communications.
Two resolutions of display monitors are available. Low resolution is 800 by 480
while the high resolution is 1280 by 1024 pixel on a 14 or 19 inch monitor
respectively. The processor is an Intel 80186, with a TMS 34010 graphics
co-processor. Addin boards will provide TCP/IP or DECnet over Ethernet. Beta
test is beginning ths month and the quoted price is "under $2000."
GraphOn, another aftermarket terminal vendor, announced a $1395, X compatible
terminal, which communicates via RS232 to an X server running on the host. The
indications given is that performance is not to acceptable levels since the
bit-blit speed is limited by the RS232 line speeds.
The claim that X terminals will not be compettive with X workstations is
hollow. There concrete products on (or coming on) to the market which are
compettive with terminal prices. As memory prices continue to drop and the
CPU speeds continue to increase, the blur of what's a workstation and what's
a terminal is expected to become greater.
As a result, I expect that customers will quicly be asking not "Do I want the
performance of a VT340, or a PVAX?", but rather, "Why do I need to buy a PVAX
when I can get an X-terminal (with integral server) and use the resources of
my cluster?" I must admit that the latter solution is very attractive to the
large MIS dept. director who doesn't like PCs/Workstations because they
decentralize his operations, cause upgrade and reliability headaches and
don't like the cost and manageent complexity of the LAVC.
James
|
246.5 | Dumb terminals are dead, long live X terminals ? | STAR::MANN | | Tue Feb 21 1989 19:11 | 19 |
| Network Computing Displays (NCD) is also offering an X terminal.
I believe we are seeing a major departure from the trend of
Terminal->PC desktops which started in 1982/3. X terminals offer
the potential of shared resources being a cost-effective model
in office computer systems.
Obviously this is a strategic market for Digital, and especially VMS
which can scale up nicely using multiprocessor/VAXclusters as the
number of temrinal is increased.
For those who assert "why not use a P-whatever", elsewhere in this
conference there seemed to be consensus that a 6 meg VS2000 should
be operated as an "X" terminal. Which is easier to install, power
on, secure, buy, listen to, upgrade, repair, fit on your desk ...
... a terminal or a 6-meg workstation ?
Bruce
|
246.6 | VT's are not in the equations | ANTPOL::PRUSS | Dr. Velocity | Tue Feb 21 1989 23:11 | 51 |
| re: .3 et al
I think you may be missing the point. The trade-off is not:
VAX 6210 and 20 X-Terminals
v.s.
VAX 6210 and N VT340's
It is:
VAX 6310 and 20 X-terminals w/ 0.25 client VUPS per user
v.s.
VAXserver 3600 and 20 VS3100 w/ ?2 client VUPS per user (assume 1
VUP for the X server)
The cost of the large VAX systems MAY be avoided if the processing
is done on the Desktop system.
An informal report on some in house testing indicated that the cost
of a usable VISUAL terminal was higher that the ~1300 quoted since
4 Mb appeared to be the minimum useful configuration. I think the
list price was more like 1800-1900.
The VAX 6310 may not be the most obvious example to work with, given
the similarities in capacity between the VAX 6310 and the uVAX 3600
as hosts for the X-terminals. It might be a clearer problem if
larger numbers of X-terminals were considered and a VAX 6330 were
posited as a host. However, the 20 X-terminals/VAX 6310 is not
a number that results from rigorous testing either. What if a VAX
6310 can only support 5 X-terminals? Or 3?
At least in our pricing 'architecture', there are considerable cost
advantages in avoiding the purchase of a multiuser VAX. This weighs
in favor of a VAXserver/Workstation approach.
The point is that it is not an idle question to ask if an X-terminal
environment will be truely cost effective.
It seems clear that existing computing environments can find a place
for SOME X-terminals. This file is full of examples were VS 2000's
are being used as such, as a previous reply indicated.
The question is whether it would make sense to design a system where
X-terminals would be the dominant desktop device.
-fjp
|
246.7 | The DECwindows Terminal fills a real need. | IO::MCCARTNEY | James T. McCartney III - DTN 381-2244 ZK02-2/N24 | Wed Feb 22 1989 04:15 | 96 |
| RE: .-1
The choices are not as simple as you describe. It isn't between one
big system and a few low cost terminals or a small(er) system and a few
high(er) cost workstations, rather the choice is where and how does the
customer place computing resources to make the most sense. For some
customers, the configuration you describe fits perfectly. For others
(Office Automation or Tranaction Processing) it is woefully overpriced.
We must provide for this later class of customers.
The OLTP customer typically needs a large number of terminals, usually
in small (1) to medium (48) size clusters in a widely distributed
geographic area. Cost of ownership, simplicity of configuration and
ease of system management are primary concerns. Performance is
absolutely demanded and the customer is usually willing to trade user
interface concerns for higher transaction throughput. Also the
customer is very sensitive to the cost-per-seat.
One way that I believe we can meet this customer's demands is to
provide very low cost DECwindows display stations. The opportunity is
to use an X terminal as a dollar-for-dollar replacement to the
character-cell terminal. These low cost display stations would be
driven from a front-end transaction initiator like a MicroVAX 3x00.
The role of the MicroVAX is to provide for all the front-end activities
(e.g. the "forms" processing, user interface control etc.) and to
initiate transaction requests to the back-end database oriented
machines. The back-end database/compute engines (for instance a 63x0)
would receive and process the transaction requests and would be tuned
specificly for that purpose. It is especially important to note that
the backend machine may not be geographicly close to the front-end 3x00
system (not connected via Ethernet).
I believe that a configuration using DECwindows terminals would be
simpler in design and easier to maintain. Also for most departments,
it would offer the same level of performance at a lower total cost than
a solution that utilized only VAXstation 3100 systems.
This configuration also scales well. On the very low end, in a
customer office with the requirement for only one terminal, a single
VS3100 Model 30 would be sufficient. For offices that require between
2 and 4 terminals a VS3100 Model 30/40 with attached DECwindows
terminals would provide acceptable levels of performance. For offices
requiring between 5 and 8, an additional VS3100 or MicroVAX could be
added to form a LAVC along with additional DW terminals. For the
customer that requires between 9 and 24 terminals, the solution would
be one or more MicroVAX 3x00s in a LAVC with attached DW terminals.
For larger departments, we can keep incrementally adding processing
capability utilizing our basic building blocks. The most important
aspect is that the growth is modular, protects the customers
investement and provides a stable growth path.
While there are some configurations which don't fit this model, most
notable the work group CAD/CAM applications, the OLTP applications are
strategic to Digital. We have to provide a good solution for customers
for which this model applies. The incremental cost-per-seat has to be
competative with the cost of current day terminals.
This discussion isn't counter to our departmental level computing
strategy simply because I'm advocating a front-end systems that behave
more like terminals than standalone computers, nor is it hostile to the
workstation strategies that we currently have. In fact, I believe that
I'm expressing exactly how we see our products being used in this
environment. In a truly enterprise-wide OA and TP application, we must
provide a range of solutions. We need small standalone systems, we
need the workgroups which you describe, and we need the large
centralized systems. A number of different computing resources must be
available to solve the application problem.
The "information center" or "transaction processing environment" for
the early 1990s will require proper application of ALL our existing
products. That's what ACMS, DECintact, DECforms and the other TP
related efforts are bringing to the fore - high levels of integration
with some hardware elements being used in very specific and restricted
ways. No longer is is acceptable to simply "set host" or "connect from
the lat" and login. To meet the performance requirements, we must use
the available cycles in specialized ways. The TP network must be
somewhat hierarchical. The display stations need to be dedicated to
display. The transaction initiators should be specialized toward
managing the user interface. The back-end processors should be free of
time consuming "keystroke level" processing. In this environment,
having between 0.25 and 1.0 VUPS for the display station sounds
reasonable. It's also reasonable to expect that a dedicated
transaction front-end (3x00 class) can support a sufficiently large
number of these stations.
One last thought. While the stand-alone workstation market offers
large potential business, we must also recognize that not all Digital's
customers have problems which workstations (alone) can solve. Offering
a DECwindows terminal only strengthens our ability to provide flexible
solutions. I believe there is sufficient justification for the
product, but providing it doesn't free us from having to ask the
question "Is this the correct product to this customer's application?".
James
|
246.8 | more info could be useful | ANTPOL::PRUSS | Dr. Velocity | Wed Feb 22 1989 22:19 | 6 |
| James,
Do you have any contact info for the HDS 1280x1024 model?
fjp
|
246.9 | Only what I've seen in the press. | IO::MCCARTNEY | James T. McCartney III - DTN 381-2244 ZK02-2/N24 | Thu Feb 23 1989 02:42 | 7 |
| The only information that I have on HDS is the statements which have
been made in the publicly available trade rags. Sorry not to be of more
help.
James
|
246.10 | Covering the Bases | TYFYS::MOLLER | Halloween the 13th on Elm Street #7 | Thu Feb 23 1989 13:20 | 44 |
| As far as many commercial customers are concerned, they never want to
have to install anything on thier display device. Plug it in and Go
is a desired feature. If X window terminals can become standardized
(like the VT100 was) by dozen's of companies, then X window terminals
will become wide-spread.
MIS directors often don't like the distribution of random systems
connected to this organization, especially if they have to also manage
them. Software OEM's who are trying to cover a diverse market (IBM, DEC,
HP, WANG, PRIME etc) with a relatively common product (standards are
beginning to allow for this) will lean towards a known commodity rather
than a customisable work station.
I firmly believe that a quality X window terminal will be the choice as
the display device on an average computer system in the 1990's, and not
a workstation running DECwindows. This is not to say that there is no
need for workstations, but there is a place for both and both may be
required for any given set of customers.
If price is an issue, then no-one in thier right minds are going to
choose a $10,000 workstation over a $2,000 terminal if they both are
only capable of being server (Just for example, all of the the 4MB
VS2000's with disks/etc.), and both run about the same speed.
A workstation should be capable of stand-alone processing, and I
suspect that somewhere in the future this distinction will be made.
One day, people will call your workstation a terminal if all it can
do effectively is be an X server. Obviously some companies have
recognised this and decided to make a dedicated X terminal to go
for that market. Right now they can compare performance of a system
that costs mucho $$$ but performs no better than thier X terminal.
It will take a big bite out of any company that can't provide the
functionality in both X Terminals and X Workstations.
I talk to Software OEM's and end users contemplating migration to VMS
or Ultrix (I work in the Center for Migration Services - We are
chartered to do this), and I do hear thier concerns on a daily basis.
X terminals are getting asked about (Usually with questions about
TCP/IP), Workstations are not (This is mostly a commercial customer
base).
Jens
|
246.11 | No competition today, but probably big competition tomorrow... | IAGO::SCHOELLER | Who's on first? | Thu Feb 23 1989 13:54 | 12 |
| > Right now they can compare performance of a system
> that costs mucho $$$ but performs no better than thier X terminal.
NOT TRUE. The X terminals run out of resources very easily. This is because
most of them are low memory (1-6 meg) and no virtual memory (haven't implemented
NFS paging/swap). Until these problems are solved (and solved well) the X
terminal is not really competition even for a VS2000 w/ 4megs. They will
(I hope) be solved soon. At which point X terminals will indeed outstrip
the low end workstations (which will have been phased out by then 8^{).
Dick _whose_30_big_clients_would_trash_a_Visual_X_Terminal_
|
246.12 | Counting on the Competition | TYFYS::MOLLER | Halloween the 13th on Elm Street #7 | Thu Feb 23 1989 14:58 | 25 |
| I'm assuming that most problems will be ironed out with X terminals
in a year or so (I remeber when ASR33's were the rage & then LA36's
re-defined the hardcopy terminal). The issue is that many users of
X terminals will probably not be doing anything fancy (by virtue of
the MIS directors maintaining control over the applications), so, in
that sense, can work around it.
Some of the software that we have been looking at (as recently as
today) has the organization writing code that does not exceed the
limitations of it's current hardware. While those of us used to VMS
tend not to concern ourselves too much about hardware limtations, and
try to write what is the best long term solution, we do not necessarily
share the philosophies of the general computer user base.
I've seen a 4mb VS2000 running DECwindows, and it's nothing to be
impressed about. I suspect that the current X window terminals are
similar in response time or capabilities. A year from now things may be
quite different. I suspect that DEC will be on the fore-front of
solving some of these problems. Things were so much simpler in 1979.
Jens_who_is_working_with_customers_who_are_accustomed_to_less_than_or_
equal_to_VT100_terminal_capabilities_and_whose_software_investment_is_
substantial_enough_that_they_will_maintain_it_for_a_long_time_to_come_
but_want_to_allow_for_future_growth_posibilities_by_migrating_to_a_VAX
|
246.13 | The technology curve isn't level either. | IO::MCCARTNEY | James T. McCartney III - DTN 381-2244 ZK02-2/N24 | Fri Feb 24 1989 11:23 | 20 |
| Dick,
Arguing that memory is a limitation won't last long. There are two
solutions that come quickly to the X terminal builder. The first is to
just add more memory. Since he can dispense with all the logic of the
disk controller, tape controller and etc., there is much more space for
memory. Having 16 to 32 MB in an X term is not unrealistic. Secondly,
with 4MB DRAMS becoming realistic for use in systems, the complexity to
get this ammount of memory is greatly reduced. Also, both the US and
Japan are on the edge of the 16MB DRAM breakthrough. At that point,
the minimum amount of memory that you use for a system building block
is adequate for most current applications.
I understand your objection, but the rate of change of technology is
still too great. We can still say "The next generation will be faster
smaller, and bigger." and realisticly expect that it is not a lie.
James
|
246.14 | | ASIA::MCLEMAN | Workstations 'R' Us | Fri Feb 24 1989 12:42 | 7 |
| With the cost of DRAMS, this terminal with 16 mb of memory will not be cheap.
Another way of doing it is to run a virtual memory system (VMS) in 4 megs
with a server. (Of course a diskless config would need a paging disk on
a server somewhere).
Jeff
|
246.15 | "Virtual memory" is one level of indirection too many for a terminal. | STAR::MANN | | Fri Feb 24 1989 13:34 | 14 |
| Lets remember the difference between instructions and data.
An X terminal could easily write its "data" out to a nearby
disk (ala nfs) which must represent a lot of the memory
required (100KB/terminal emulator for instance).
Data is position independent and therefore does not have to
be "relocated" by memory management mirrors.
"Virtual memory" runs in real memory after all, and pretending
you have it when you don't doesn't help, it hurts.
Bruce
|
246.16 | whatever goes up must come down..(Sir Newton) | MTA::GRAHAM | take no prisoners, kill them! | Fri Feb 24 1989 14:43 | 11 |
|
RE .14 ( ...the price of DRAMS)
If the Smithian theory for capitalistic economies is still valid,
then economies and diseconomies of scale will drive the supply
and demand curves to their optimum thresholds.
Hopefully, the useful economies of large scale production caused
by technological advances could really push down prices.
Kris...
|
246.17 | | GVRIEL::SCHOELLER | Who's on first? | Mon Feb 27 1989 19:02 | 19 |
| Memory prices may indeed come down. How soon? Soon enough to skip the step
of doing an X terminal with remote resource capabilities? I doubt it.
The approach of implementing the allocation of server resources via a non-VM
remote server is interesting. Is it easier than using some known NFS based
VM approach? I don't know.
This technology is interesting. It is indeed the wave of the future. BUT,
if X terminals are implemented badly in the early versions they may scare
customers away before we get it right. Visual Technology seems to be doing
just that. DBMSs did that to databases in the CAD world 10-15 years ago and
we are just overcoming that prejudice today.
Let's do it! But let's do it right and learn from the guys who beat us into
this market.
Dick
|
246.18 | Why X terminals make sense | WINERY::ROSE | | Mon Mar 13 1989 20:47 | 12 |
| There are lots of database-type applications which are easier to write
and manage if all the users are running on just one computer. Yet
everyone is demanding nice mousey point-and-click user interfaces.
X terminals offer one solution to this. There are others: workstations
acting as terminals; splitting the application into a front end and a
back end that communicate via a custom protocol...
True, cycles are usually cheaper in a workstation (or PC or Mac) than
in a server. However, the programming cost of making the application
distributed can outweigh the savings from buying cheaper cycles.
|