T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1667.1 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | | Fri Nov 08 1991 17:43 | 20 |
|
Re: -1
Where is this customer located? Out here in Silicon Valley *NOBODY* buys
Workstations that don't run UNIX. Yes, we still see a lot of big VMS
machines being sold, but the little machines are all UNIX.
I also see UNIX in the reseller space more often. An end-user will
be more conservative and stick with what he has. Resellers want
to be free of hardware vendor labels. They can sell IBM when in an
IBM house and DEC in DECland.
My advice is don't base your vision of the world on the reality you
see a just one or two customer sites. Seek out the UNIX users in your
geography. You'll see that they are the ones who are pushing the
technology envelope and are not just treating their system like an
appliance.
-Ed
|
1667.2 | | OTOOA::POND | | Fri Nov 08 1991 18:15 | 16 |
| In my experience, there are a few scenarios:
a) VMS customer, buys more VMS stuff. May or may not have UNIX in
some isolated areas, but they tolerate it.
b) New customer, wants UNIX, gets it. Most times we won't even pitch
VMS to new customers unless they have no bias and want a VMS feature.
c) New customer, forced into VMS because of an application that only
runs on VMS.
d) New customer, wants VMS because of prior experience with VMS within
another division, another company, etc.
My $.02
Jim
|
1667.3 | Great OS, But Dropping Market Share | ALAMOS::ADAMS | Visualize Whirled Peas | Fri Nov 08 1991 19:35 | 12 |
| If you have a client who has a variety of platforms (VMS and UNIX), and
requires interconnectivity now... for a low price... and an environment
that is similar on all of the platforms (going beyond MOTIF et al),
UNIX is the way to go.
I love the full featured-ness of VMS, but the world isn't interested in
proprietary systems (when you can move UNIX source over to VMS *via
TCP/IP* and recompile with little to no changes, then we'll have *Open
VMS*).
--- Gavin
|
1667.4 | It ain't that easy | HAAG::HAAG | | Fri Nov 08 1991 20:29 | 27 |
| re .0
I don't even want to begin the discussion about how much business we
have lost in the last 4-5 years because of our "poor" (percieved or
otherwise) committment to UNIX and TCP/IP. I too see customer everyday.
And yes many buy VMS - but mostly those that already have it. We have
NEVER NEVER NEVER convinced someone to buy VMS when they even thought
UNIX was a good idea, open, portable, whatever. Whenever we tried, we
lost - and lost BIG TIME.
BTW, in the last 16 years I have had to become intimate with:
NCR - VRX
NCR - IRX
IBM - DOS/VSE
IBM - VM/SP
IBM - MVS/XA
DEC - VMS
DEC - ULTRIX
I am just a "network slug". I am just about as sick of the O/s wars and
predjucies as you can get. If you want to survive - DO NOT limit
yourself to just VMS. Plan to move forward by getting training in other
areas. It's hard work, but necessary in this day and age.
Gene.
|
1667.5 | I don't think so!!!! | EJOVAX::JFARLEY | | Sat Nov 09 1991 11:04 | 12 |
| IMHO UN*x is a four letter word, it will always be a four letter.
My customers are part of a world wide national account, they love VMS
and tolerate UN*x. VMS is their OS of choice, I have had customers try
to develop packages for their use with VMS they can use a canned
program but with that other OS they can use it if they sit down a write
a package for it. I see out in the field what is right for the
customers to readily use and be productive in the shortest amount of
time. Try typing in under UN*x and asking for help and see what you get
back!!!!!!!
my other 2 cents worth
John
|
1667.6 | Food for thought | MSDOA::MCCLOUD | BIG fish eat little fish | Sat Nov 09 1991 22:46 | 16 |
| I have a customer with 3 5820,s serving disk to approx 200
sparcstations. They are now considering trading them in for
6600,s running VMS. But in the workstation arena they will stay
with unix not sun but UNIX Decstations maybe.
This site had over 150 vaxstations last year. Most of the
vaxstations will be gone buy 1993. We were able to get the maintance
on the sun,s and save the income lost from the vaxstations. actually
the income increased due to the volume of suns.
I think the reasons for the ULTRIX to VMS on the file servers
is to put them in a position to implement alpha and RELIABILITY!!.
VMS is a much more stable operating system. The whole operation
is down when the fileservers are down but a single workstation
is not so critical.
They are very intersted in OSF-1 and they are also preparing
to implement it when it is ready. Who knows what it will look like
but since we are a big part of OSF it should help.
|
1667.7 | Why are they getting rid of SUN? | FASDER::AHERB | Al is the *first* name | Sun Nov 10 1991 09:43 | 4 |
| > 6600,s running VMS. But in the workstation arena they will stay
> with unix not sun but UNIX Decstations maybe.
Can you state the customer's reason for moving AWAY from SUN?
|
1667.8 | | LEDS::PRIBORSKY | I'd rather be rafting | Sun Nov 10 1991 11:50 | 31 |
| It's amusing how history repeats itself.
VMS is a wonderful operating system. It's kind of like horses.
When Henry Ford started selling cars, noone wanted them. Too noisy.
Too hard to use. Driving - gee you go too fast.
UNIX is like a Model T. Noone likes it, but pretty soon everyone will
have one.
If all you know is VMS, pretty soon you'll be like one of those old
horse farmers.
As someone who has been in this business for over 20 years, I've seen
lots of things change. In the 70's noone wanted to let go of their
keypunch machines. Terminals, ugh! Who would want one of those ugly
boxes? They're too damn expensive.
Minicomputer? What's that?
If you don't like UNIX, then don't learn it. But, don't paint yourself
into a corner by knowing ONLY VMS or VAX (and Alpha, too). Pick up a
PC (ick) or my preference: a Macintosh (along with A/UX - Apple's
Unix) and get conversant in another system environment (operating
system, hardware, architecture) or you won't be have a marketable
skill in years to come.
My daddy taught me this a long time ago: Know how to do two things
well, one with your hands. In addition to this industry (which I never
intended to be a career) I could make a fair living being a finish
carpenter.
|
1667.9 | vendor of choice = best price/performance | MSDOA::MCCLOUD | BIG fish eat little fish | Sun Nov 10 1991 12:31 | 7 |
| rep .7
The idea is to purchase from the vendor with the best price/performance
at the time. The statement was intended to imply that WE now have that
advantage not that the choice will not be SUN. Of course these are not
the only factors for the choice of vendors but they do carry the most
weight.
|
1667.10 | Artisan Endeavors | ALAMOS::ADAMS | Visualize Whirled Peas | Mon Nov 11 1991 11:41 | 5 |
| re: .8
For me it's buggywhips :-)
--- Gavin
|
1667.11 | | MU::PORTER | if it ain't broken, break it | Mon Nov 11 1991 11:47 | 3 |
| I think it's funny to see sales'n'customer support types get
all religious about operating systems. I thought it was
only us hacker nerds that got all emotional about such things.
|
1667.12 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | | Tue Nov 12 1991 12:15 | 22 |
|
I'm really shocked by the number of people who are still slagging UNIX.
Look, Ken Olsen said, and I quote:
"Those of you who want job security, learn UNIX"
What other reason do you need? Its *STUPID* to fight the tide.
And another thing.
UNIX, by the strictest definition of the word, will no longer exist
in the not too distant future. OSF/1 is *NOT* UNIX! It is based
on a new microkernel technology (which VMS is not I might add!)
Microsoft's NT is also based on microkernel technology.
Now, given this information, what would you do?
-Ed_who's_sick_of_pompous_VMS_types_and_is_no_OS_bigot_himself
|
1667.13 | agree, with re-interpretation | PULPO::BELDIN_R | Pull us together, not apart | Tue Nov 12 1991 12:54 | 17 |
| re .12
> "Those of you who want job security, learn UNIX"
But you must admit, he didn't say "job security in Digital". :-)
Seriously, I would interpret Ken's statement in that vein, UNIX will
exist for a long time and will generate employment for many more
people than VMS for both happy and unhappy reasons.
"Happy" because VMS is more reliable and needs fewer support people per
whatever. "Unhappy" because there are a lot of people besides us
selling it.
fwiw,
Dick
|
1667.14 | Oxymoron of the week | TOOK::DMCLURE | Did Da Vinci move into management? | Tue Nov 12 1991 13:08 | 9 |
| re: .13,
> But you must admit, he didn't say "job security in Digital". :-)
That's because we all know there is no such thing.
-davo
p.s. Or, if there is, then it is a well-kept secret!
|
1667.15 | | TPSYS::SOBECKY | Still searchin' for the savant.. | Wed Nov 13 1991 12:03 | 4 |
|
Can somebody, in a nutshell, tell me what the attraction is with
UNIX? Twenty five words or less. I mean, who can love an O/S with
terms like grep and awk?
|
1667.16 | one thing | NOVA::MOY | Michael G. Moy, Rdb/VMS Engineering | Wed Nov 13 1991 12:34 | 4 |
| I prefer VMS but would like to have pipes. In VMS, you have to send
something to a file and then manipulate the file.
michael
|
1667.17 | | FMNIST::olson | Doug Olson, ISVG West, Mtn View CA | Wed Nov 13 1991 13:47 | 11 |
| > Can somebody, in a nutshell, tell me what the attraction is with
> UNIX? Twenty five words or less. I mean, who can love an O/S with
> terms like grep and awk?
it was licensable and relatively easy to port; so when hot new hardware
technology hit the streets and needed an OS, UNIX got picked. You wanted
speed in the mid-80s to now, you went RISC. RISC runs UNIX.
The first sentence is only 24 words ;-).
DougO
|
1667.18 | | BTOVT::SOBECKY_J | Still searching for the savant... | Wed Nov 13 1991 15:10 | 6 |
|
>RISC runs UNIX.
RISC (Alpha) also runs VMS.
John
|
1667.19 | | FMNIST::olson | Doug Olson, ISVG West, Mtn View CA | Wed Nov 13 1991 17:51 | 11 |
| Hey, if your .15 was an honest question, you'll have noticed that my
.17 was an honest answer, including the key market-oriented phrase,
"in the mid-80s to now". I'm pleased as punch that Alpha will finally
bring the speed of RISC to VMS, sometime in late 1992 (for our customers),
(and also that OSF/1 will be there on Alpha) but that fact doesn't change
the answer for the timeframe I gave. Did you really want an answer to
why UNIX became so popular, or are you just potshotting in the OS wars?
If you are, hey, have fun, I won't waste any more time discussing the
real answers to legitimate business quiestions with potshotters.
DougO
|
1667.20 | The Portability Myth | RIPPLE::FARLEE_KE | Insufficient Virtual...um...er... | Wed Nov 13 1991 18:29 | 9 |
| There's also the "myth of portability". Many customers out here believe
that they can take any application developed under any UNIX system, and
run it on any (cheap) UNIX box, unchanged. I say "myth" because in my
observation most all complex applications take advantage of the unique
extensions implemented by the particular UNIX system they were developed on.
Thus, even a UNIX-UNIX port involves some effort. If UNIX were truely
universally standard, this would not be an issue, but it is not so.
Kevin
|
1667.21 | Properly written code makes it more portable | ALAMOS::ADAMS | Visualize Whirled Peas | Wed Nov 13 1991 20:30 | 15 |
| re: .-1
Any reputable software vendor selling in the UNIX market will have
versions for the major UNIX varients (ULTRIX, SunOS, HP-UX, AIX, AUX,
etc., etc.). I agree that VMS is the absolute *best* for copy-and-run
code from one version to another (and platform to platform), and love
to get digs into my collegues that support UNIX. "See this code
running on this new VAX 4000, it's the same code that ran on the 11/780
6 years ago."
Of course, they come back with the response of "Who cares? My n-UNIX
platforms all run FrameMaker, SAS, Mathematica, etc." That's when I
have to shoot them... :-)
--- Gavin
|
1667.22 | | FASDER::AHERB | Al is the *first* name | Wed Nov 13 1991 21:25 | 12 |
| When I was a customer, I pushed UNIX although there was only one
(PWB-Programmers Wrkbench). Since then, we've got more versions of UNIX
than Proprietary O/S's. Back then though, it was SO much easier for a
programmer (or near-programmer) to write an application with shells
**SO** much easier than it was with say RSX, UNIX was a good deal.
Besides, there were all thouse universities getting UNIX for nex to
nothing compared to "real" O/S's, look at all the students that got
trained with little knowledge of VMS entering the job market.
I claim that COTS will overtake UNIX in importance for the 90s. After
all, it is the application the customer wants portable (not the O/S),
isn't it?
|
1667.23 | Where the UNIX boxes are | RIPPLE::PETTIGREW_MI | | Thu Nov 14 1991 01:47 | 32 |
| Customers have failed and failed and failed to develop large-scale
applications. Most such activites have used "proprietary" Operating
Systems. Sucesses have been rare in MVS, CMS, DOS/VS, GCOS, SCOPE,
KRONOS and every other mainframe OS you can think of. But sucessful
applications have had huge paybacks.
Meanwhile, these same customers have been frequently sucessful in
developing small and medium-scaled applications. VMS has certainly
been there - Expensive, Fast, and Good. UNIX has also been there -
Cheap, Faster, and "Good Enough". The latter offering will always
beat the former.
Operating Systems are getting the credit for frequent successful
development efforts, when in fact the size of the application (small-
to medium) is more significant. Small projects succeed more often
than large projects.
Small projects require inexpensive platforms. VMS is cheaper than
MVS/CICS (faster and better too!). UNIX is cheaper than VMS, and
faster too! And customers will definitely prefer an operating
system that runs on more than one vendor's hardware. Too many
customers have been gouged by sole-source vendors before the days
of "plug-compatable" and clone markets developed.
UNIX boxes will continue to multiply wherever medium-scale
applications, or "black box" components of larger systems,
must be developed.
Customers that have the sense to break up large efforts into multiple
small projects, will be more sucessfull. They will buy into UNIX
unless something cheaper comes along.
|
1667.24 | News flash to the ivory tower | HERCUL::MOSER | So what's a few BUPs between friends? | Thu Nov 14 1991 07:41 | 11 |
| > <<< Note 1667.11 by MU::PORTER "if it ain't broken, break it" >>>
>
>I think it's funny to see sales'n'customer support types get
>all religious about operating systems. I thought it was
>only us hacker nerds that got all emotional about such things.
You'ld be suprised how many of us "'sales'n'customer support types" are also
"hacker nerds"...
/mike -- Who will kill the next engineering bastard who comes back with
"whaddaya mean you're gonna fix/change/build/whatever that in the field"
|
1667.25 | Relax.. | TPSYS::SOBECKY | Still searchin' for the savant.. | Thu Nov 14 1991 09:58 | 13 |
| re .19
Nope, I'm not "potshotting in the OS wars". My question was serious.
I haven't had much exposure to UNIX, but the little time I have spent
on it, it didn't seem to be too user friendly. That was the gist of
my question: why embrace an OS that doesn't seem to be user friendly?
Aren't the end users the ones that get stuck with trying to interpret
acronyms (that don't make sense, in many cases) for verbs?
You are correct..your answer makes perfect sense for the timeframe
(mid 80's -> now).
John
|
1667.26 | | CSSE32::LESLIE | It's been a week, after all | Thu Nov 14 1991 10:21 | 2 |
| UNIX is easy to use, cheap to manage and recovers from most problems
(via a reboot) quickly.
|
1667.27 | doesn't seem to be enough though | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Thu Nov 14 1991 10:24 | 6 |
| > UNIX is easy to use, cheap to manage and recovers from most problems
> (via a reboot) quickly.
Sounds like P/OS. :-)
Alfred
|
1667.28 | | CSSE32::LESLIE | It's been a week, after all | Thu Nov 14 1991 10:25 | 1 |
| UNIX never says "returning you to main menu (get a coffee)"
|
1667.29 | | CNTROL::DGAUTHIER | | Thu Nov 14 1991 10:44 | 43 |
| It all seems to be a move toward "standards" doesn't it? There can
only be one "sandard" and UNIX edged out, although, I'd have to agree
with an earlier reply that identified the major myth about the UNIX
"standard", that being that there are so dammed many flavors of UNIX
that it isn't a standard at all! At least DEC admits it replacing the
"N" with "LTR" when it named it's proprietary version.
Sometimes conforming to standards isn't all it's cracked up to be. I
do a lot with relational databases and had recently switched gears over
to SQL ("S"tandard Query Language). This step toward the standard was
also a step backward in technology and ease of use, BUT, I'm coding in
a "standard"! Sometimes I question whether I did the right thing or
not. When I have to code 4 external SQL procedures to do what a single
RDML call did, the answer I come up with is ofter times "NO".
Internal DEC manufacturing and engineering groups (like the one I work
in) have soooo much invested in VMS dependent code and training that a
quick transfer to U*IX is unrealistic. Eyes roll in their sockets of
software groups when even a long term migration is proposed. In hard
economic times, I'm not sure DEC or any other VMS house can justify
recoding/retraining to live in the U*IX environment just to say that
they did it, or, to enjoy some marginal performance improvements. I
mean replacing an 8000 series with a 9000 would probably be cheaper and
give you superior performance in the long run.
Yes, I'll learn UNIX... eventually, probably the ULTRIX version because
Ken's right, that's what's coming. Although UNIX, like dinosaurs, ice
boxes and trench warfare, will fade into antiquity when a new "standard"
emerges... leaving two standards which means neither one's a
standard... if you catch my drift. Maybe the new emerging standard
will be full featured VMS on ALPHA, although a great marketing ploy
would be to call it "UVMIX" !
I'm not hugging any trees here. It's just that sometimes I step back
and remember that a computer is only a tool to help me do my job so
that the stockholders (me amoung them) can make money. If the tool I'm
working with runs fine, and I'm used to it, and replacing it will cost
a lot, well, I have to ask myself "why?", especially when the potential
replacement hasn't proven itself to be that much better if better at
all.
Dave
|
1667.30 | Double "Standards" | CNTROL::DGAUTHIER | | Thu Nov 14 1991 10:48 | 10 |
| I remember once having a discussion with a fellow engineer about the
pro's and cons of using 4GL vs 3GL. I was told that even though 4GL
requires a lot more horsepower, all the bigshot computer critics you
read in the technical journals lean toward 4GL because of reduce coding
time, flexibility and ease of use. The same argument was given to support
the use of object oriented code.
So tell me again why VMS was chosen over UNIX?
Dave
|
1667.31 | | LEECHS::hilton | How's it going royal ugly dudes? | Thu Nov 14 1991 10:54 | 10 |
| > why VMS was chosen over UNIX?
Customers want an 'open system'
Due to many factors UNIX is seen as open, VMS is not (AT THE MOMENT).
UNIX is fast and cheap.
Actually using Motif or something similar, I shouldn't/don't care what
the OS is.
|
1667.32 | A portability parable. | SCAM::GRADY | tim grady | Thu Nov 14 1991 11:52 | 21 |
| Have you ever been to Walt Disney World's EPCOT Center? They're a
customer, you know, and I was over there on Tuesday talking to their
Tech Support people. If you've been there, you've probably seen the
touch screen directory service kiosk's all over the place. You can get
information about the park, hotels, and restaurants.
The touch screens are controlled by VAX 11/750's, running UNIX (BSD
4.1). The reason they have FIVE 11/750's and haven't upgraded to a
smaller, cheaper box, is that they are totally locked into BSD 4.1 by
the application, and the interfaces to those touch screens. They don't
even have TCP/IP. I guess the vendor who wrote the application should
have done a better job of writing portable code, huh.
Guess who developed, wrote and installed them?
Bell Labs.
So much for portability.
tim
|
1667.33 | And what if I don't want coffee? | ULTRA::HERBISON | B.J. | Thu Nov 14 1991 12:33 | 11 |
| Re: .28
> UNIX never says "returning you to main menu (get a coffee)"
I assume this was a joke, but I don't get it. I've never seen
that message from either VMS or UNIX, but I have seen overloaded
systems and poorly written applications with both VMS and UNIX.
Nobody can claim that their system will both do what users
demand and provide fast response no matter what the load.
B.J.
|
1667.34 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Truth, Justice, and Flames | Thu Nov 14 1991 12:43 | 9 |
| The joke is based on a message that was included in the "Professional
Operating System" or POS.
"Returning to main menu" is what the message said and the operation to
return to the main menu took 30 seconds to a minute on minimum, but
supported, configurations of the Professional 300 Series.
This annecdote is burned in the brain of people who were around here in
the 1982-1984 timeframe.
|
1667.35 | Not open but profit | CHFS32::DGOOD | | Thu Nov 14 1991 14:13 | 25 |
| I'm the one that started this note and it seems to have gone off
on a tangent. I simply asked where are the boxes?
I've seen the statement "customers want open systems". I'll tell
you what customers want - PROFITS! My largest customer here on
the east coast (life didn't begin in California) is Westinghouse.
They make turbine blades for generators and submarines. They have
25 Vaxstations, 6410-6420 cluster, 6310 standalone, 11750, and
7 Pdp11's. They just ordered 12 new Vaxstation 4000's and plan
to add a 6510 to the cluster. The Pdp's are driving floor equipment
along with some microvax's I forgot to mention. They are running
DNC software with RDB database. It all works together and they
are making bundles of money - happy customer!
In our area (western North Carolina) there are over 600 VAX machines.
We have 3 UNIX boxes - 5810 and some 5500's.
I,m not knocking UNIX, so you developers don't get so bent out of
shape about it. It just seems that the ones that feel strongly
about open systems are those that are pushing it. What's wrong
with proprietary if it does the job? We have a customer running
a plant on a Pdp1105 with paper tape. They will not get rid of
it because it is doing the job.
|
1667.36 | If all you see are our customers, you aren't seeing the whole picture | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Thu Nov 14 1991 15:06 | 6 |
| re: .0, .35
You don't see the boxes because the people who are buying the boxes are
potential customers that we didn't turn into customers.
Bob
|
1667.37 | Simple. | DCC::HAGARTY | Essen, Trinken und Shaggen... | Fri Nov 15 1991 05:36 | 5 |
| Ahhh Gi'day...�
UNIX got popular becasue it was the only way you could get a 20 man
startup to push out hot box out the door without writing an operating
system, and it was better than RT-11.
|
1667.38 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | | Fri Nov 15 1991 13:26 | 8 |
|
Yeah, -1 has a lot of merit to it. I worked for some of those 20 man
startups. Unfortunately, a bunch of big, bloated companies with less
than passionate affinity for UNIX put us out of business. How did
they do it? Not by selling their propreitary systems!
-Ed
|
1667.39 | The boxes are in commercial apps at small companies | MR4DEC::GREEN | | Sun Nov 17 1991 21:24 | 27 |
|
to answer the base note:
the unix boxes are at small companies who don't even know what
unix is. They buy a complete solution, based on the application,
and the os doesn't mean a thing, as long as it works. So
resellers sell unix: it's cheaper. Why don't you see them?
Because DEC doesn't know how to sell to small companies.
Westinghouse and the other Fortune 1000 companies appreciate VMS,
but they aren't buying computers hand-over-fist
like they used to. They growth in the computer industry is
small businesses. And they are buying PCs. And they either
network them together (Novell) or they running multiuser
minicomputer-like environments with UNIX.
If you really want to know where the boxes are: Read UNIX Today.
They frequently list the RFPs put out by not-so-small companies
like JC Penny, TACO Bell, K-Mart, Sherwin-Williams, to name a few.
These companies and others are buying UNIX boxes for commercial
applications.
Commercial applications is the key thing here: the
technical/engineering/manufacturing industries have been
computerized for some time: the small companies that are
just becoming computerized are where the growth is. And all
they want is a cheap os that works. That's UNIX for most of them.
|
1667.40 | | ROYALT::KOVNER | Everything you know is wrong! | Mon Nov 18 1991 15:41 | 38 |
| Re: .32
Bell Labs writing non-portable Unix code.
It figures. I'm just surprised they wrote it for BSD. I guess System V wasn't
out yet when they did.
Remember, Bell Labs developed Unix for the PDP-11; Berkeley then added virtual
memory support. Bell then rewrote Unix, taking OUT many of the Berkeley features.
Some code is quite portable, but to be portable across both SysV and BSD-derived
systems can take a lot of work. One excellent example is the X window system.
This is quite easy to port to any Unix system, and to many other operating
systems.
VMS has some great features - but most applications don't use them. Error
handling, for example, is very good - but when was the last time you installed
your own error handler? At least this doesn't get in your way if you don't need
it, the way RMS does, when all you want is a stream-lf file.
Also, on the same hardware, Ultrix is much faster. I got much better login
(DECwindows session) performance, as well as general response time improvements
on my VS3100. (Now, I have a DS3100, and it really flies!)
Then, if you want your application to run on non-DEC hardware, you can't take
advantages of all its features. But, if you need its features, its great.
VMS has tremendous advantages in fault-tolerance and reliability, with clustering,
volume shadowing, etc. This is particularly valuable for transaction processing
and other business applications. But, for my usual task of software development,
Unix (Ultrix) is better, although, I admit, it takes a while to learn.
However, unlike an earlier reply, I find that my VMS gets rusty much faster
than my Unix.
This has gone on much more than 25 words, so I'll stop here.
|
1667.41 | Not Surprising | WHO301::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Mon Nov 18 1991 16:42 | 7 |
| Actually the Bell Labs guys are fairly notorious for treating operating system
and compiler bugs as features. I understand that one of the problems with
the VAX System V code is that a few of the more grotesque bugs were cleaned up
and, as a result, several Bell Labs-written applications fail to run, even
thought VAX Sytem V is SVID-compliant.
-dave
|
1667.42 | prior to System V | UNXA::BEUTE | We apologize for the inconvenience. | Tue Nov 19 1991 13:15 | 3 |
| If memory serves, those 11/750s were put into service running BSD prior to
1983, before AT&T could sell System V. For some time, only BSD licenses could
be sold outside the educational community.
|
1667.43 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | | Tue Nov 19 1991 18:10 | 9 |
|
re: -1
Baloney! Plexus and Onyx had been selling Ver. 7 and SysIII to
commercial customers for years before 1983!
-Ed_the_ancient_unix_curmudgeon
|
1667.44 | | MU::PORTER | bah, humbug | Tue Nov 19 1991 22:47 | 4 |
| re .-1
Yes, but I think there was legally a difference between
the phone company selling Unix, and anyone else selling Unix.
|
1667.45 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | | Wed Nov 20 1991 12:32 | 23 |
|
re .-1
Perhaps, but they *DID* sell Unix to Onyx and Plexus.
On another note, I'm thinking of starting a list of "dead" Unix vendors.
Here's a start. Can anyone add to it?
Onyx
Plexus
Pixel
Wicat
Callan
CCI
SBE
Zilog
Alpha Micro
Some might not be "dead" yet, but they certainly are near death.
-Ed_the_ancient_unix_curmudgeon
|
1667.46 | | RANGER::MINOW | The best lack all conviction, while the worst | Wed Nov 20 1991 14:05 | 6 |
| AT&T sold Unix licenses to commercial sites since around 1978 (we had
one in R&D in 1978-1979) for, as I recall, $10,000. University licenses
were on the order of $100 during the same period. These were for PDP-11
licenses.
Martin.
|
1667.47 | ...takes a licking, ... | SCAM::GRADY | tim grady | Wed Nov 20 1991 15:08 | 6 |
| If I recall, Disney bought the 11/750's for Epcot around 1982, FWIW...
...and they're still running.
tim
|
1667.48 | comatose, if not dead | SALSA::MOELLER | I am two with Nature | Wed Nov 20 1991 17:34 | 3 |
| Fortune Systems. 32:16
karl
|
1667.49 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | | Thu Nov 21 1991 11:58 | 7 |
|
Here's another:
Victory Computer Systems
-Ed
|