T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1619.1 | Patience is the word | BUZON::BELDIN_R | Pull us together, not apart | Tue Oct 01 1991 18:17 | 6 |
| I would think that slowing production would be warranted. Anything
else sounds like rather foolish extremism. I can't imagine anyone
expecting to penetrate a market where the customer has to shell out six
digits in the short time we've been at it.
Dick B.
|
1619.2 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | | Tue Oct 01 1991 18:30 | 6 |
|
It would help to have a mainframe that supported more than 256 users
running ULTRIX.
-Ed
|
1619.3 | Next? | PH4VAX::POINDEXTER | Southern,Living | Tue Oct 01 1991 19:00 | 1 |
| So what is the life cycle of any product? CR
|
1619.4 | it's an Edsel | SWAM1::MEUSE_DA | | Tue Oct 01 1991 19:15 | 4 |
|
.........it has to reach childhood first.
|
1619.5 | S.I.D.S. | CSCOA1::PARISE_M | A kinder, gentler conflagration. | Wed Oct 02 1991 09:08 | 8 |
| Re: Note 1619.1<< "I can't imagine anyone expecting to penetrate a
market where the customer has to shell out six digits in the short
time we've been at it."
Well, your company just bet the farm on it!
Looks like sudden infant death symdrome to me.
|
1619.6 | What's a Mainframe? | WHOS01::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Wed Oct 02 1991 13:02 | 9 |
| From the outset, it's been my belief that the 9000 venture was
predicated on a totally incorrect asumption: that there is a
"mainframe market" defined by machine speed and I.O throughput. The
only significant mainframe market that I'm aware of also requires the
ability to run MVS (i.e., IBM 360/370 architecture). There's really no
way you're going to penetrate THAT market with a VAX.
-dave
|
1619.7 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Wed Oct 02 1991 13:15 | 12 |
| re a couple...I fear the price is more in the 7 digit range. But
on expected life cycle....well, I really expected more than a year.
I've seen this inability to tolerate a sales cycle of longer than
17 minutes bring us to our knees before. Apparently, we will never
learn.
Read in the paper where IBM sold 11(!!!) of their new mainframes to
Sears in one fell swoop. Betcha the groundwork started on that sale
three years ago.....and such a commission. I remember reading several
years ago where Cray salesmen were making 250-300K a year and the cycle
almost always exceeded two years. Maybe a heavily commissioned sales
force for mainframes would have helped.
|
1619.8 | huh oh. | SWAM1::MEUSE_DA | | Wed Oct 02 1991 13:27 | 6 |
| ...oh no Mr.Bill, here comes the commissioned sale force vs the
salaried sales force thing again.
...time to hide.
|
1619.9 | Match reward with requirements | HAAG::HAAG | | Wed Oct 02 1991 18:03 | 20 |
| re: .7
Cray research is just a copule of miles down the road from our offices
here in Bloomington, MN. I visited there a couple of weeks ago to meet
with a couple of ex-DECies who now work there. Neither are salepersons
but they did express great relief at getting "out from under the
fanatical sell one TODAY" attitude. Also, selling machines that are
hugely expensive and take time and investment (ie. risk) that our
current metric structures will not support. I don't blame sales people
for not wanting to take the time to sell them. They could go out the
door in the process of trying.
Gene.
PS. Perhaps the 9000 people should fund their own sales people and hang
a metric structure on them more compatible with the sales cycle of
their product.
Just an idea.
|
1619.10 | | NICSRV::BRUNNER | Moonbase Alpha | Wed Oct 02 1991 19:30 | 15 |
| > PS. Perhaps the 9000 people should fund their own sales people and hang
> a metric structure on them more compatible with the sales cycle of
> their product.
What 9000 people? I'm down here in MRO (where ISB used to be) and most of
the people I know in MRO1, those that are left, won't even admit to having
any association with the 9000. And if you are in VSS, I believe it is
career-limiting to mention the 9000 except in obituaries.
It wouldn't be so bad if we weren't trying to kill the 9000 ourselves from
the inside. By explicit design, by vague memos from Vice Presidents, and
even by competition from as yet unannounced and unavailable products, We,
Digital, have killed the VAX 9000 ourselves and denied any future to it.
"Digital has it now, but, we would prefer if you wait until tomorrow..."
|
1619.11 | 2 sides to any story | PHDVAX::RICCIO | It's still Rock'n Roll to me! | Wed Oct 02 1991 20:03 | 18 |
|
People perform based on how they are measured. If you are given a
goal of "X" million, you work to bring in "X" million. If you get 50%
of your salary as a base and A LOT more if you exceed those goals, you
will exceed those goals.
The people I've worked with that have come from other "vendors", the
ones that have the "C" word as an insentive, tell both the good and bad
sides of the story. One thing they have all said is they never looked
at it as extra $$, it was the new boat, the new deck for the house, the
new car for the S.O., etc. An interesting way of looking at life.
An then on the down side, when you're making 6 figures for a few
years yo get use to that life style. When things don't go so well, it's
real tough, just ask any WANG rep.
Phil...
|
1619.12 | 6 figure income and still need to work ? | STAR::ABBASI | | Wed Oct 02 1991 22:36 | 10 |
| ref .-1
may be this a side comment, but if one makes 6 figure income for few
years and they still need to work after that, something is wrong
somewhere !
if my yearly income in the 6 figure i'll work for two weeks (ok may be
three) and retire .
..back to VAX9000 talk..
|
1619.13 | Wait, Alpha-Beta is coming soon!!!!!! | EJOVAX::JFARLEY | | Wed Oct 02 1991 22:50 | 8 |
| Wait till we take the wraps off of the Vax 6000-1200 then Big Blue will
be shaking in there pin striped suits. Cruising at a 280 vups rating
with 500 users running combo Operating Systems of Ultrix, Vms and MVS
simultaneously PLUS it is fault tolerant, Has memory of 10 Terabytes
and 220 giga bytes of onboard storage. BOY will Big Blue's eyes bulge
out then. The new slogan will be " Digital Can Have It Anyway It Wants
To". Boy just wait we'll show them a thing or two, who do they think
they are messing with anyway.
|
1619.14 | | CSC32::S_HALL | Wollomanakabeesai ! | Thu Oct 03 1991 10:44 | 25 |
| > <<< Note 1619.13 by EJOVAX::JFARLEY >>>
> -< Wait, Alpha-Beta is coming soon!!!!!! >-
Wow! Great to hear about futures !
What will happen with this (dream) machine is the following:
1) A corporate climber product manager will force it out
the door with multiple firmware/microcode bugs.
2) It will only run 5 hours before crashing and will stomp
the customers' system disks.
3) A hue and cry will go up.
4) Product manager leaves, finds new project ( VAX 99,000,000 ).
5) Millions are spent on field upgrades, microcode fixes,
ECOs, etc.
6) Product running smoothly in two years, at which time
the average home PC will be 33% faster, and cost $999.95
at BizMart, and only three customers still own 'em.
Steve H
|
1619.15 | Not Fair - But What Is? | HAAG::HAAG | | Thu Oct 03 1991 11:13 | 4 |
| RE: .10
Kindof depressing. I know a lot of people poured their heart out in
various projects - only to be viewed as losers. Very unfair for them.
|
1619.16 | The 9000 "Virus" | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Thu Oct 03 1991 12:42 | 9 |
| Yeh, my son-in-law "poured his heart out" on the VAX 9000 for three
years. He was the designer of the Multi-Chip Unit. After 17 years
and because he was "tainted" with the 9000 virus he was unable to
get another job in DEC. His last day was Sep 27. He was contacted
by a head-hunter immediately and is now Director of Engineering for
a connectors firm in Richmond.
Letting him go is the singularly most stupid thing I've ever seen
Digital do. We do not deserve to succeed.
|
1619.17 | | BAGELS::CARROLL | | Thu Oct 03 1991 12:59 | 11 |
| re 16.
I agree. This company is not trying to be technicallky successful.
Management doesn't know how. The only way this company will survive is
to get rid of ALL the senior management. The problems with this
company is very apparent by the number of replies to note 1616.
Touchie-feely is all management knows.
re .13 If you think we can build a machine that will run MVS AND be
able to maintain it, I know where there is a bridge for sale you may
want:)
|
1619.18 | not at DEC... | TRLIAN::GORDON | | Thu Oct 03 1991 13:03 | 8 |
| re: .13
there is not(IMHO) enough patience or vision to bring something
this good to the marketplace....MBA's and accounts look at short
term profit "only..."
of course the company that pulls it off (OSF maybe?) will have a
path beaten to their door for at least 10 years....
|
1619.19 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | | Thu Oct 03 1991 15:14 | 7 |
|
Re: last few
Anyone know how Amdahl is doing these days?
-Ed
|
1619.20 | We're not a MAINFRAME vendor | JMPSRV::MICKOL | Greetings from Rochester, NY | Fri Oct 04 1991 00:20 | 25 |
| All I know is that at the corporate computer center for the $18B company I
support there are nothing but Amdahl mainframes. IBM hardware is in the
minority (even our installed base of VAXes beats them out).
One of the serious problems we have is that we have no idea of how to be a
"mainframe-class" vendor. Amdahl has 4-5 people onsite constantly (to the
customer they appear free of charge, but I'm sure its bundled in the
hardware/maintenance costs).
On the other hand, we're nickel-and-diming the customer for $8K/year to keep
our Customer Service Engineer onsite (we're trying to charge $48K/year for the
resident above and beyond the ~$40K/month the customer spends on normal
contracts). We're probably not doing anyting different than Amdahl (and are
probably less costly), but the way we do it gives the customer the impression
that they have to pay for every little thing.
The VAX installation is a cluster made up of a 9410, 6440 and 8820. The
workload we moved from another 6440 (where the response time and cpu
utilization was reasonable) to the 9410 (where the cpu is redlined). One of
the best things we've done is provide the SIP where we can bring in
performance experts and other consultants to assist the customer, without
charging them for it as a separate line item!. Its a good start,
but we're a far cry from our competition (and it ain't BIG BLUE!).
Jim
|
1619.21 | Seems pretty cut and dry to me | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Fri Oct 04 1991 12:19 | 9 |
| - We're not a mainframe vendor
- We're not a PC vendor
- We're not competitive in the workstation/server business (customers
leaving us in droves for Sun, HP, etc.)
- We're not a software company
- We ARE a minicomputer company; a market which will soon cease to
exist
Gee, I wonder why we're not making any money.
|
1619.22 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | | Fri Oct 04 1991 13:54 | 11 |
|
Correction, we are a VMS minicomputer company. There is a HUGE
market for UNIX minis (just look at Pyramid & Sequent etc)
I really get the feeling we are ignoring this market to protect
VAX sales.
JMHO.
-Ed
|
1619.23 | Don't give up yet!!!! | WLDWST::JOHNSON_D | | Mon Oct 07 1991 03:31 | 8 |
| Hi All! From beautiful Cupertino, Ca.
Currently working on HDSC's for the VAX 9000. It's a great Mainframe.
Trust me! I know. Ask DATAMATION. Sales will pick up. Have a little
faith in our people...
Darren
|
1619.24 | Yeh,but, there's the matter of software... | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Mon Oct 07 1991 17:04 | 9 |
| What are you smokin' out there in la-la-land {:^). Seriously, there
are only two orders for Q2, and reportedly 60! cancellations. Besides,
the engineering organization has ceased to exist.
....hey, I just had an idea.....maybe the 700 sales and sales support
people getting laid off today, could be reorg'd into a special sales
force just for 9000's. Yeh, we could call it ....let's see.... I've
got it!!! The TARGET SALES FORCE!!! Oh, its been done already?? Oh
well.
|
1619.25 | | SMOOT::ROTH | Jethro Bodine was a cereal killer | Mon Oct 07 1991 17:25 | 5 |
| I thought the 9000 became a dinosaur because two of our latest
65xx-whatever systems running as a pair did as well as the 9000... with
obvious cost difference.
Lee
|
1619.26 | death of system | BTOVT::GREGORYJ | Welcome to the Grand Illusion... | Tue Oct 08 1991 11:41 | 26 |
| re .23
Yes, what are you smoking??? Please don't judge the 9000 by it's HDSC
-- especially when the HDSC has a pretty good track record! The system
itself abounds with interconnectivety problems; too many cables!
For the record, I work at the Burlington Vermont manufacturing facility
which manufactures the 9000.
It's first death knell was when it was released too late in a slowing
economy. It's second when I start hearing things like it needs better
software!
Let's just say it would have made a great mainframe, but now it makes a
better boat anchor.
Last year at this time we shipped approx. 60 systems to customers, as
for right now, we have shipped 9 systems, next quarter looks a bleak
with (as far as I know) 7 new orders (if that) and the rest refurbs.
And believe me, I have a lot of faith in our people, let's hope all of
us can help out and turn the company around!
Jim.
|
1619.27 | | CSC32::S_MAUFE | gotta get a new personal name | Tue Oct 08 1991 13:24 | 5 |
|
Do the moderators feel comfortable with these ship numbers in a public
domain. I'd hate to see 1619.* reprinted in WSJ tomorrow 8-(
simon
|
1619.28 | small potatoes | SAURUS::AICHER | | Tue Oct 08 1991 13:48 | 16 |
| re -1 ship numbers
That ain't nuthin. Check out the NODEMO::MARKETING conference.
I don't know the rules for cross-posting. It's Note 1665.
Apparently Electronic News has a wonderful article
listing all of DEC's new products
out to '94 including all their "super secret" code names.
Better yet, if you can get the magazine, it is ...
>Electronic News, September 2, 1991, Data Topics, p.11
Mark
|
1619.29 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Wed Oct 16 1991 21:26 | 5 |
| RE: .24
You're a fine one to talk about la-la land.
--PSW
|