T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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673.1 | File photo | IAMOK::DEVIVO | Paul DeVivo @VRO, DTN 273-5166 | Fri Dec 02 1988 12:43 | 8 |
| Interesting that you should notice that picture. It doesn't look
anything like our data centers. At least not within the last five
years.
We run all of our data centers with Digital Equipment Corporation
computers exclusively. The only place you will find an I*M is in
engineering where they study them. (I suppose there *might* be an
exception somewhere).
|
673.2 | Putting 1K lbs. in 1000 1 lb. sacks isn't efficient... | MISFIT::DEEP | The moving hand NOTEs, then having nit... | Fri Dec 02 1988 15:29 | 9 |
|
I would be very surprised to find that Digital processes payroll for
120,000+ employees on anything other than a mainframe. Other than
the old DEC 10, etc, line, we don't build mainframes.
Anyone know for sure what we use?
Bob
|
673.3 | maybe they were olde blue-cab DEC10s? | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Dept. of Nugatory Research | Fri Dec 02 1988 15:37 | 9 |
| RE:.2
Yes, we do build mainframes! What else do you call a VAX 8800?
I worked in DIS from 1980-85. They used lots of DEC-10s, and phased
in VAXes. Not a blue box in the shop. For a while, the corporation
seemed to be growing too fast to do our own DP, but we kept up,
and with VAXclusters can handle big jobs like the rest of them.
(We just can't do it with magtape, only disk, and with terminals
instead of punch cards. Hardly a real disadvantage!)
|
673.4 | It's DEC gear... | FINSER::STUTZMAN | | Fri Dec 02 1988 16:27 | 1 |
| Look closely at the picture...looked like KL10s and RP03s to me...
|
673.5 | We do have MAINFRAMES... | VMSSPT::BUDA | Putsing along... | Fri Dec 02 1988 22:20 | 13 |
|
> I would be very surprised to find that Digital processes payroll for
> 120,000+ employees on anything other than a mainframe. Other than
Don't under-estimate our computers. Why do you need a mainframe
to to payroll... An 8800 could handle it, as could an 8700, probably
even an 8530. In the end it would just take longer to run...
A IBM 4341 is considered a mainframe by many, but an 8530 has more
CPU horse power than it. An MVII has just a little less (correct
me if I am wrong). Size of box/peripherals has a lot to do with
it for most people.
|
673.6 | Whatever happened to competing products? | GUIDUK::BURKE | I break for no apparent reason | Sat Dec 03 1988 00:25 | 6 |
| Funny...I always thought that our 8974 and 8978 were our entry into
the Mainframe market.
Could I be wrong?
Doug
|
673.7 | | DWOVAX::YOUNG | Great Cthulu Starry Wisdom Band | Sat Dec 03 1988 23:56 | 3 |
| No, DIS uses Digital computers.
It is the mindset (like .2's) that they get from IBM.
|
673.8 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Apologies for what Doug Mulray said... | Sun Dec 04 1988 19:19 | 5 |
| And Digital does not do a 120,000+ payroll on one computer. Europe
et al, do their payrolls locally...
q
|
673.9 | Even Big Blue can't say... | WIRDI::BARTH | Whatever Is Right -> Do It | Mon Dec 05 1988 20:53 | 11 |
| I heard a while ago (say 3 years) that we are the only major computer
corporation that uses *only* our own gear to do *all* of our internal
computing functions.
Naturally that doesn't count the odd PC or even mainframe which
are used for engineering, demos, etc. But all of our internal
production work is DEC based.
Makes sense to me!
K.
|
673.10 | Payroll is done on our POWER! | NICLUS::COLE | | Tue Dec 06 1988 11:15 | 7 |
| By the way....U.S. payroll was processed on a 4 node cluster. When
I left the group in May '88 it consisted of 2 8700's and 2 785's. In
fact, some customers were impressed that we processed 80k + checks
a week on the cluster.
Paul
(former payroll cluster sys mgr)
|
673.11 | | HPSTEK::XIA | | Tue Dec 06 1988 16:07 | 6 |
| Why so much CPU power is needed to process checks? I mean isn't
it just a matter of updating, copying and printing?
Enquiring engineers want to know :-) :-).
Eugene
|
673.12 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Apologies for what Doug Mulray said... | Wed Dec 07 1988 07:28 | 13 |
| re .-1
Well, one takes the input. i.e. Timesheet. The computers then have
to cross post all the project specific person hours to those
projects. Shift loadings, overtime etc etc all cause variations
which have to be checked. Taxes have to be calculated (across
several states). Print 80,000 payslips is hard work, even for a
large print engine. Vacation records need to be updated. Automatic
payments to dozens of different banks need to be collated and
organized. etc etc....
q
|
673.13 | I hate Big Blue as much as the next guy, but... 8^) | MISFIT::DEEP | Sometimes squeaky wheels get replaced! | Wed Dec 07 1988 11:25 | 28 |
|
Well! Apologies to all Deccies for insinuating that we might use a
mainframe to do our payroll.... we are obviously an exception to the
rule! Good for us!
A couple of points...
I don't consider the 8800 series of computers "mainframes." That
was not their intended design, although the definition of a "mainframe"
is somewhat vague. The industry still considers them to be super-mini's.
Also, payroll is not so much a CPU intensive task, as an I/O intensive
task, hence the desire to use a mainframe, rather than a supermini or cluster
thereof.
I think it's great that DEC uses its own equipment for its payroll.
I also think that if I were runnning a company of 120,000+ employees,
and was not in the business of making computer systems, I would use a
mainframe. Thats the right tool for the job.
Mainframes DO have their place... otherwise we wouldn't be trying to
build one.
My 2.44 yen
Bob
|
673.14 | terminological inexactitude | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, VAX & MIPS architecture | Wed Dec 07 1988 12:57 | 12 |
| Many of the last notes seem to dwell on the terms mainframe, mini,
midi, maxi, and the presence or not of the adjective super.
Those terms, and their combinations, may be useful for marketing
purposes, but they are not useful technical terms. It is very hard to
get people to agree on the definitions, and whatever the definitions
are, they change rapidly with time.
For example, why was it reasonable for the Digital payroll to be done
on a DECSYSTEM-10 "mainframe", and not on a VAX-8800 "supermini" (or
whatever non-"mainframe" term you like) when the 8800 has more
capability?
|
673.15 | Capability is a technical term ?!! | SPGOPS::MAURER | We come in peace; Shoot to kill | Wed Dec 07 1988 13:20 | 5 |
| re .14
Tom, you've fallen into your own trap - what exactly is "capability"?
Jon
|
673.16 | "The times, they are a changin'..." | MISFIT::DEEP | Sometimes squeaky wheels get replaced! | Wed Dec 07 1988 13:20 | 9 |
| >> For example, why was it reasonable for the Digital payroll to be done
>> on a DECSYSTEM-10 "mainframe", and not on a VAX-8800 "supermini" (or
>> whatever non-"mainframe" term you like) when the 8800 has more
>> capability?
For the same reason it was possible to do payroll on a System 360 and not
on a PDP-8.
Bob
|
673.17 | Come now, let's get technical for a change! | RBW::WICKERT | MAA DIS Consultant | Wed Dec 07 1988 17:16 | 21 |
|
re .-1;
The key word is "reasonable", not possible. It's possible to do
payroll on a TRS-80, if you want to do it once a month!
What the term "reasonable" implies is more one of acceptance, not
technical feasibility. It also implies acceptance by upper management
and other non-technical folk.
Saying a mainframe is the right system for the application without
strictly defining what a mainframe is sounds an awfull lot like a
marketeer talking. Certainly no technical meat there!
Why is a system (not just ours but anyones?) with more speed and
system throughput than accepted low-end mainframes not considered one?
Sounds like an image problem to me. Too many high-paid "Mainframe
experts" would have to justify their pay!
Ray
|
673.18 | Get the facts staight. | DWOVAX::YOUNG | Great Cthulu Starry Wisdom Band | Wed Dec 07 1988 19:56 | 26 |
| Re .13:
> I don't consider the 8800 series of computers "mainframes." That
>was not their intended design, although the definition of a "mainframe"
>is somewhat vague.
Well Ken Olsen does. And so do I. I would like to hear what
definition you use that excludes 8800's and even more importantly
VAXClusters from being mainframes. It certainly was their intended
design.
> Also, payroll is not so much a CPU intensive task, as an I/O intensive
>task, hence the desire to use a mainframe, rather than a supermini or cluster
>thereof.
I assure you that large VAXclusters have I/O capabilites that would
leave most 'mainframes' (by your thinking) in the dust.
I currently am on the system management team of a customers VAXcluster
that has more CPU than most 'mainframes', more disk space, lots
more I/O bandwidth, more connectivity, more applications, etc.
And it supports a larger user population than any mainframe I have
ever heard of. And this is this customers SECOND largest cluster!
Their largest is 50% bigger than this one.
-- Barry
|
673.19 | Get real. | SAACT0::GRADY_T | tim grady | Wed Dec 07 1988 23:04 | 11 |
|
We may in fact compete with mainframes, but few people outside DEC
believe we build them anymore. And few people realize we ever did.
LCG built the only channel architecture systems I can recall.
To most people you can no more call an 8800 a mainframe than you
can call a MAC 2, or PS/2 a minicomputer.
Incidentally, I doubt we make anything that can match the aggregate
I/O throughput of the big Sierra's. Let's not take our own marketting
too seriously, ok?
|
673.20 | O.K...someone *DEFINE* a mainframe! | GUIDUK::BURKE | I break for no apparent reason | Wed Dec 07 1988 23:56 | 29 |
| Re: .17
Applaud.
Re: .18
Quite right. I myself will not make a comparison between an 8800
and a mainframe, however, when you start talking about clusters...
that's where the competition is.
DIGITAL's thrust of competition in the marketplace has been to
cover the computing range from small minicomputer (ie. the MicroVAX
2000) all the way up to a Mainframe "size" machine (ie. the 8978).
Then the kicker of course...the same exact operating system runs
on every single one! No other company in the industry can say that!
Now, the 8978 may not be considered by certain "experts" in the
industry as a mainframe, but it's purpose was to directly target
that market!
I guess it all comes down to what was said earlier about what you
consider a mainframe...if by definition a mainframe has to have
a processor architecture with more than 32 bits...then a VAX ain't
it. But then, a VAXcluster just might be more powerful than certain
mainframes... *;'}
Sorry for the rat-hole...but I just had to vent it,
Doug
|
673.21 | You asked for it... | DPDMAI::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Thu Dec 08 1988 08:52 | 5 |
| Mainframe - noun. A physically large and difficult to use computer
system that requires an absurd number of technical people to maintain.
See also, IBM
Bob
|
673.22 | mainframe is more meaningless then MIPS | CVG::THOMPSON | Notes? What's Notes? | Thu Dec 08 1988 09:10 | 7 |
| > consider a mainframe...if by definition a mainframe has to have
> a processor architecture with more than 32 bits...then a VAX ain't
> it.
By that definition am IBM 360 or 370 isn't a mainframe either.
Alfred
|
673.23 | HSC50 = DF10 | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Thu Dec 08 1988 16:39 | 8 |
| re: .19
A VAXcluster is a channel architecture system. The HSC50 is just
as much a channel as the DF10 was: it reads and writes memory without
CPU intervention.
What is the aggregate I/O throughput of the big Sierra's?
John Sauter
|
673.24 | constant definitions | COOKIE::DEVINE | Bob Devine, CXN | Thu Dec 08 1988 17:35 | 34 |
|
How to classify a computer based on its processing power is
quite a difficult task. What was once a mainframe task can
now be easily performed by a processor that sits on your desk.
Besides what is one company's supermini is equivalent in power
to a different company's supermicro or even minisuper!
No, a different measurement is needed. I humbly propose the
following taxonomy:
pc = A computer that you can buy over the phone without even
first seeing it. FedEx people deliver it.
mini = A computer that when you buy it, you take it out
of the shipping box by yourself though you probably
won't want to service it yourself.
supermini = Is distinct from a mini because someone else will
unbox it for you though you will have to carry the cardboard
out by yourself.
mainframe = If you have one, it means that not only does
someone unbox it for you but various people stay around
afterwards to see if all the blinking lights blink.
In fact, they may seem like they have taken up residence.
The unboxing specialist may very well be wearing better
clothes than you do.
supercomputer = Anything that is more powerful than last
year's supercomputer, ad infinitum. You can tell when
you have bought a supercomputer because school children
are always arriving on field trips to see it. It is
often situated in a glass-walled room and administered
to by people actually wearing 1950's SciFi lab coats.
|
673.25 | One Engineer's perspective | HPSTEK::XIA | | Thu Dec 08 1988 19:14 | 22 |
| re .24:
Here are my definitions:
PC -- Do game playing word processing and nothing else. Any machine
that runs DOS.
Work Station -- Do windows to bigger machine.
Mini -- Machines you archive the files you never use.
SuperMini -- Machines that do any real work on batch/background
and usually takes overnight.
Mainframe -- Machines engineers do not want to use.
Supercomputer -- Machines that only run FORTRAN.
:-) :-).
Eugene
|
673.26 | A whole lotta ratholin' going on | SRFSUP::GOETZE | Erik Goetze: writer, photographer, poet, S/W specialist | Thu Dec 08 1988 20:16 | 13 |
| My father (who had used computers from their infancy) and I (who
"got" an HP45 in 11th grade in 1975) had tremendous arguments about
whether HP41 "handhelds" were in fact computers. This whole subject
is such a good definition of rathole that .24 is the best antidote
- a humorous alternative viewpoint. I concur completely with .24.
It really indicates, irregardless of this year's leaps in added
mips, what level of computing you are at.
And no, I didn't think the HP41 was really a computer. But did it
matter?
erik
|
673.27 | IBM: "Digital doesn't make Mainframes" | DWOVAX::YOUNG | Great Cthulu Starry Wisdom Band | Sat Dec 10 1988 12:31 | 16 |
| Re .19:
> Incidentally, I doubt we make anything that can match the aggregate
> I/O throughput of the big Sierra's. Let's not take our own marketting
> too seriously, ok?
Perhaps you've heard of VAXclusters?
I think that its a real shame our own employees take IBM's marketing
so seriously. No wonder so few of our customers know better.
I stand by what I said. I work at a customer VAXcluster site whose
aggregate I/O throughput is greater than 90% of the worlds IBM
"Mainframe" systems. Thats not marketing, thats a fact. In fact
I really wish that our marketing organization would pay more attention
to this.
|
673.28 | Lets not get carried away with ourselves... 8^) | MISFIT::DEEP | Sometimes squeaky wheels get replaced! | Mon Dec 12 1988 14:11 | 22 |
|
Like I said, there are a lot of ways to carry 100lbs of sand...
You can use a 100lb sack, or twenty 5lb sacks ... And it all comes down
to trade offs. Vaxes are not the be-all and end-all of computing, and are
not the "right solution" for all situations. To try to argue otherwise
is not reasonable.
As with all computing solutions, there are tradeoffs. If you use a 100lb
sack, you only have to load one sack, but if it breaks, you're in trouble,
and if you only have 40lbs of sand, you're inefficient.
If you use twenty 5lbs sacks, you are not in as much trouble if one sack
breaks, but you have to handle loading multiple sacks, and you're in
trouble if you need to get 10lbs in the same sack...
I hate IBM marketing BS as much as anyone, but you can't argue with the
power of a 3090-600. Fortunatly, we can argue the price/performance
for customers who don't need that much horsepower in one shot.
Bob
|
673.29 | Look whos talking | DWOVAX::YOUNG | Great Cthulu Starry Wisdom Band | Wed Dec 14 1988 17:49 | 17 |
| The problem with your analogy is that is does not apply to VAXes
and 3090's and the applications that we are talking about in the
topic.
The only thing that is critically affected by single-CPU power VS.
multi-CPU power is single-stream turnaround time. Ie. when you
must get something out as fast as possible and you cannot multi-stream
it and you are willing to shutdown everything else on your system
to get it done.
With years of experience in commercial programming I know of no
commerical or accounting type application that requires that.
Almost ALL financial applications are ideal candidates for
multi-streaming and parallelization. And it that case 10 6-mip
cpu's are just about as good as 6 10-mip cpu's.
Everything else is just IBM's marketing hype.
|
673.30 | | HPSTEK::XIA | | Wed Dec 14 1988 19:43 | 11 |
|
re .29
I got my M.S. at the Center for Supercomputing R&D in Illinois,
and my impression about supercomputer is that there is a very limited
number of scientific problems that need true supercomputer performance.
If this is also true in the commercial market (as you said), wouldn't
everyone go out and buy lots of uVAXen or Sun's and cluster them
together rather than buy big systems. I mean the MIPS/dollor
is much higher with the low end systems.
Eugene
|
673.31 | more than MIPS/dollar | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Thu Dec 15 1988 07:40 | 10 |
| MIPS per doller isn't the only consideration. For commercial
applications, I/O bandwidth is also critical, and sometimes printer
speed as well.
Another important consideration is, or should be, development and
maintenance time. Commercial data processing shops generally have
a large backlog of development and maintenance that is waiting to
be done. A computer system has (or should have) increased value
if it lets them cut their backlog without increase in personnel.
John Sauter
|
673.32 | Devil's Advocate | MISFIT::DEEP | Sometimes squeaky wheels get replaced! | Thu Dec 15 1988 09:33 | 17 |
|
Now that sounds like *OUR* marketing hype! Really, gang... I own stock...
I'd love to see the commercial world come around to our way of thinking, and
I think we are on the right track.
However, that doesn't explain the continuos increase in mainframe sales in
the commercial marketplace. Someone's buying them... there must be a reason!
IBM's marketing? Probably accounts for a lot of it. But there still must
be applications that justify the use of mainframes vs clusters of minis, at
least in the perception of the customer, if not in reality. So I think our
job is to change that perception.
However, we have to avoid the position that says "We can do anything a
mainframe can do"... because the customer isn't going to buy it. Even if
it were true.
Bob
|
673.33 | Different is bad! | CADSYS::BAY | Don't happy, be worry | Thu Dec 15 1988 12:45 | 13 |
| I agree with .32, but I can't help think that, although there may be
SOME good reasons for buying I*M, the most predominant one I've seen in
the I*M ships I've been associated with in the field is summed up in a
saying I heard once:
DON'T CHANGE: INERTIA IS A TERRIBLE THING TO WASTE
The best reason to buy I*M is cause you've already bought one (and
brainwashed the staff, and gotten the high up politicos indebted to
you, etc., etc.)
Jim
|
673.34 | | HPSTEK::XIA | | Thu Dec 15 1988 13:27 | 13 |
| re .33
This reminds me a conversation I once had with a professor who used
to work in the industry. He gave me the followig senario:
Suppose you work in a commercial company as a computer expert, and
your boss tell you to shop a computer for the company. If you buy
an I*M, and later the computer screw you up, you boss will say:
"Dam, I*M sucks". On the other hand, if you choose some other vendors
and the computer later screw you up, you boss will probably say:
"You are fired". Of course, this is an extreme senario, but....
Eugene
|
673.35 | Big Blue: IBM's Use and Abuse of Power... | MISFIT::DEEP | Sometimes squeaky wheels get replaced! | Thu Dec 15 1988 14:44 | 19 |
|
Fortunately, the old adage that "No one ever got fired for buying IBM..."
no longer carries as much stigma as it used to. There are, as .-2 said,
many reasons to preserve the status quo... the most obvious of which is
the investment in custom software.
For some good reading on why mainframes, particularly the Blue ones,
are doing so well in the industry, as well as a good inside look at how
IBM does business, I highly recommend a book called "Big Blue: IBM's
Use and Abuse of Power", by Richard Delameter. The author was an
economist with the US Department of Justice, who worked for 8 years on
the IBM antitrust case. That case, incidentally, was mysteriously
dropped shortly after the Reagan Administration came to power.
If all of our customers read this book, we wouldn't be having this
conversation... 8-)
Bob
|
673.36 | Don't Read Your Own Press Releases | WORSEL::DOTY | Russell Doty, ESG | Thu Dec 15 1988 16:11 | 20 |
| Uh, I hate to be the one to point this out . . . but, IBM systems
work.
In the high end, IBM systems have us outgunned by a large margin
in performance (both single stream and multi-processing), in I/O
capabilities, in Transaction Processing, in Databases, in Operating
System (for mainframes -- minor little matters like backup, for
example), in business applications, and in wide area networking.
On the other hand, the big IBM boxes are extremely expensive, require
a large support staff, are not especially good interactive systems,
and are not the worlds most productive programming environment (I'm
a VAX bigot today because I learned to program on IBM).
We have a strong competitive position against IBM today, because
of our interactive, distributed, networked systems. We have a strong
future, because of enhancements to our distributed systems,
workstations, and new high end machines.
But let's not kid ourselves -- IBM can do the job for the customer.
|
673.37 | IBM does things IBM's way better than we do | DR::BLINN | Mind if we call you Bruce? | Thu Dec 15 1988 17:00 | 8 |
| Russell, you are mistaken on several of your points. However, I
will concede to you that IBM systems do things IBM's way MUCH
better than our systems do, and IBM has managed over many years to
build up a loyal customer base who only understand the IBM way of
doing things, and aren't interested in changing, even if change
would be economical. Many people are afraid of change.
Tom
|
673.38 | No mystery | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney | Thu Dec 15 1988 17:30 | 4 |
| Reply .35 introduced some partisan politics into this topic. There was
no mystery, the government decided that there was insufficient evidence
to proceed with the case. The first charges in this case were filed
during the Johnson administration by the way.
|
673.39 | Target Customers, Not IBM | WORSEL::DOTY | Russell Doty, ESG | Thu Dec 15 1988 17:49 | 27 |
| Re: .37
Tom, I'd like to know which points (to .36) your disagree with.
I don't particularly like the IBM way. I believe that Digital is
THE only company to effectively compete with IBM because we have
a fundementally different approach than IBM -- one that works well
in many cases.
The point I wanted to make is that IBM systems do work, and are
able to meet customers needs -- in some cases better than Digital.
Times are changing. Digital is beginning to address the mainframe
market (new Transaction Processing efforts, high end systems, more
effective distributed systems, etc.). IBM is addressing the
departmental, VAX-class market with the AS400.
Our real challange is to meet our customers needs. If we do this
better than IBM, we will win. If we decide to compete against the
3090 (in other words, focus on IBM rather than our customers needs),
we will not be as successful.
Final thought: change isn't necessarily good (nor is it necessarily
evil). A customer that decides to continue with an IBM solution
may have many reasons -- including a proactive decision to invest
resources and Attention Units in other areas -- such as manufacturing,
new product development, corporate acquisitions, or other areas.
|
673.40 | I agree with your conclusion.. | DR::BLINN | He who laughs, lasts | Fri Dec 16 1988 09:45 | 20 |
| Russell, you stated that IBM is better than Digital at many
things, such as wide-area networking. Actually, Digital is *much*
better than IBM at wide-area networking; the EASYnet is a case in
point. HOWEVER, if you buy into IBM's definition of how you
should do wide-area networking (SNA), then Digital is lousy,
because we don't do SNA wide-area networking. Some customers are
so ingrained in the IBM approach to using computers to solve
business problems that they simply won't consider using Digital's
systems, but that doesn't mean we can't solve their problems --
they just won't let us help, because they want us to do it IBM's
way.
We're in violent agreement on the conclusion -- IBM does things
IBM's way better than Digital can do things IBM's way, but
Digital does things Digital's way MUCH, MUCH better than IBM
can do them. The real determinant of success will be how well
we can satisfy our customers' business needs, not whether we
can beat IBM at their own game while playing by their rules.
Tom
|
673.41 | | SAACT0::GRADY_T | tim grady | Sun Dec 18 1988 23:42 | 19 |
| Tom,
I tend to agree with you, especially on your last point.
Unfortunately, my recent observations out here in the field shows
IBM beating us badly in the 'meeting customer needs' department.
I've been away from this conversation for a bit, so to go back in
time a little: some earlier comments struck me as a bit smug, and
seemed to sound like we take our own hype too seriously. IBM beats
us regularly, in marketing, in customer support, and in raw,
unadulterated throughput.
It's naive to think the competition is actually inferior, in the
face of evidence to the contrary, and presumptuous to blame the
customer for being too stupid to see our true light. I just hope
our competition is dumb enough to take that attitude about us.
And yes, I have heard of VAXclusters.
|
673.42 | WAN Terminals are SNA's design center | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Don't crush that dwarf. | Mon Dec 19 1988 17:25 | 12 |
| IBM does wide-area TERMINAL networking way better than we do.
SNA was designed to attach block-mode terminals to centralized hosts.
It does that well. DNA does many other things well, but we don't
particularly like the idea of centrlized hosts and distributed
terminals, and we don't use their style of terminal (forms-filling),
but for centralized OLTP, SNA is very efficient. Async terminals
like ours don't do well on WANs. (Our best response, of course,
is distributed processing; DECintact puts the terminal handling
on a local machine and talks to the central data base using DECnet
at its best. But even that's a new product for us: We have to
sell our superior alternative to people satisfied with IBM.)
|
673.43 | ANF did it better, and did it first | DR::BLINN | Don't panic! | Wed Dec 28 1988 12:33 | 46 |
| IBM doesn't even do wide-area terminal networking better than
we do, unless you accept their model of computing (which is,
for the most part, OLTP) as the right one, and then they only
do it better if you believe that the right way to implement
an OLTP system is with block-mode terminals, relatively dumb
controllers, and huge central systems.
DECintact's ability to off-load terminal handling onto remote
front-end systems is nothing new; we've been able to do the
same thing with ACMS/TDMS for quite some time. Having Digital
support for the "Intact" style of implementing OLTP systems
is something new, and since some of our very large customers
depend on the "Intact" implementation, it's good for us and
good for them that we now have a Digital-supported product
for them to use, but it doesn't introduce new capabilities.
And VTX with the VALU application interface can do a very good
and very efficient job of connecting remote terminals to central
applications in a way that makes the terminals function much
like IBM's block mode terminals (as do DECintact or ACMS/TDMS).
I would hesitate to claim that we don't particularly like the
idea of centralized hosts and distributed terminals; many of
our administrative systems still work that way. It has been
only in the last few years that we've started to provide some
truly distributed applications, and we still don't have many
of them. At least part of our success in implementing such
systems came from our historical implementation of ANF-10 and
ANF-11 networking (on TOPS-10 and PDP-11 systems), back in
what to many is the dark ages (pre-historical times for those
who don't remember that far back). ANF did a VERY efficient
and flexible job of connecting remote terminals to large central
hosts, and also did a reasonable job of supporting remote batch
submission and remote printing. What it didn't do particularly
well was task-to-task (peer) communications, something that
DECnet does very well, while compromising on terminal connections.
SNA has a design center that's similar to that of ANF, and
has many of the same drawbacks for implementing distributed
applications.
However, since so many of our customers use their systems in
ways that are served just fine by the SNA-style of networking
and the OLTP block-mode style of interaction, it's not much
of a surprise that IBM can sell so many systems, since they
are VERY GOOD at many things.
Tom
|
673.44 | | MISFIT::DEEP | Sometimes squeaky wheels get replaced! | Wed Dec 28 1988 15:47 | 9 |
| re: < Note 673.43 by DR::BLINN "Don't panic!" >
> DECintact's ability to off-load terminal handling onto remote
> front-end systems is nothing new;
True... IBM 3x74's have been doing it for years. I disagree that they are
"dumb controllers."
Bob
|
673.45 | Why should IBM customers switch to DIGITAL? | GLORY::RAO | R. V. Rao | Thu Jan 05 1989 15:02 | 46 |
|
re several.
There seems to be a pervasive opinion about IBM mainframe customers
as dumb or inert or fearful about change. While this may be true
in some cases (e.g., Brophy of Travelers), most other customers
go about their decision on a cost-benefit basis. Some of the points
they consider are:
Benefits (of switching to Digital):
- lower personnel cost
- lower system (HW+SW) cost (debatable depending on how you define it)
- lower development cost
- intangibles like flexibility, distributivity etc.
Costs of switching to Digital are (they do exist!):
- SW conversion/rewrite cost
(can be substantially larger than HW investment!)
- re-training cost (can be large esp. if 1,000s of users have
to be re-trained in using the application)
- risk (new HW/SW, new vendor, untried approach etc.)
Above are just some examples. When the total benefits (in terms
of $) significantly exceed the total costs, will the management
go for the switch. In most cases involving NEW applications, Digital
can come ahead in these calculations (assuming that our sales and
sales support people understand cost-justification and supply the
necessary data to the customer!) whereas for existing applications
(which take up 80% of DP budget anyway), it not easy to cost justify
a switch to Digital.
If you look at cases where we took marketshare away from IBM, most
of those involved new applications. Very few conversions from
existing mainframe applications. To get a real crack at these
citadels, one must hope that the existing applications will
become obsolete fast (we can help by moving technology far ahead
so that competitors of these customers get armed with better tools
thus forcing the switch from target customers) or that our systems
(HW+SW) cost so little compared to IBM or give such high added value
that the cost of switching is recovered easily (real tough job!).
RV
|
673.46 | Have we beaten this to death? | DR::BLINN | Wherever you go, there you are | Thu Jan 05 1989 16:07 | 6 |
| Perhaps further discussion of the marketing aspects of this
topic, especially vis-a-vis IBM customers switching to DEC,
should take place either in ASIMOV::MARKETING or KACIE::IBM.
Tom
co-moderator
|