T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1766.1 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | Not The Mama! | Thu Feb 13 1992 13:29 | 5 |
|
I'm thoroughly depressed.....
First Eichhorn, now this!
|
1766.2 | What's happening? | DENVER::DAVISGB | Jag Mechanic | Wed Feb 19 1992 11:20 | 16 |
|
Are we hemorrhaging Unix/OSF talent?
<<< ASIMOV::$1$DUA4:[NOTES$LIBRARY]MARKETING.NOTE;5 >>>
-< Marketing - Digital Internal Use Only >-
================================================================================
Note 1762.0 Joe Menard moves on No replies
MRKTNG::SILVERBERG "Mark Silverberg DTN 264-2269 TTB" 6 lines 18-FEB-1992 14:48
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Joe Menard, Director Of UNIX Marketing at Digital, left today to take
the VP of Marketing position at USL in New Jersey. As of now, no
replacement has been named.
Mark
|
1766.3 | | ASICS::LESLIE | Cry havoc, let slip the dogs of war | Wed Feb 19 1992 12:25 | 1 |
| Clearly, yes.
|
1766.4 | We Need More!! | FORTSC::CHABAN | Not The Mama! | Wed Feb 19 1992 12:32 | 12 |
|
Looks like old Kurt *REALLY* slagged us in UNIX Today!
The cover story is about the closing of Palo Alto.
Not a good issue if you are a DECcie!
We need a marketing response to these QUICK!!!
-Ed_in_Silicon_Valley
|
1766.5 | | TLE::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Wed Feb 19 1992 18:50 | 3 |
| Are these cases of hemorraging talent or of a long-overdue housecleaning?
--PSW
|
1766.6 | Will they take talent with them? | MAY21::PSMITH | Peter H. Smith,MLO5-5/E71,223-4663,ESB | Thu Feb 20 1992 12:30 | 3 |
| Equally important, can these guys pull talent along with them (i.e. whether
they're talented or not, can they recognize and entice Digital talent now
that they've moved on).
|
1766.7 | they will pull some | TOOK::SCHUCHARD | i got virtual connections... | Thu Feb 20 1992 14:13 | 6 |
|
rumor has it that HP will shortly be announcing new blazing fast
risc processors. I think Kurt can certainly lure some folk. I think
we face some real competition in the OSF/DCE workstation battle, and
a tough road for Alpha to hoe to boot. Certainly nothing to feel
complacent about.
|
1766.8 | They already announced the Thunderbird Precision risc chip this week | FRITOS::TALCOTT | | Thu Feb 20 1992 15:31 | 0 |
1766.9 | We forced their hand | CADSYS::HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Fri Feb 21 1992 08:37 | 19 |
| HP sort of had to announce their new chip several weeks before they
were originally planning to, due to the announcement of the EVAX
(Alpha) at the technical conference yesterday, and at that theirs is
slower, less capable, and uses a larger feature size than the EV-4
does. That is, it is not quite state-of-the-art, and the EV-4 chip is.
HP's hand got forced - which is just fine!
A lot of us here in HLO are really proud and happy to see the thing
finally get announced, after all the work that has been put in on it
here (and on the predecssor EV-3 chip for that matter). It makes all
the hard work and long hours worthwhile. Here in the CAD group, I was
not, obviously, directly involved in either the design or the
manufacture - we write the software that is used to design DEC's CMOS
chips (I'm actually in the architecture group, which means I do things
like command languages, object-oriented interfaces, Motif interfaces,
etc., not device physics). Now let's just hope that DEC can figure
out how to sell RISC machines.
/Charlotte
|
1766.10 | Understand, market, sell! | NEWVAX::MZARUDZKI | I am my own VAX | Fri Feb 21 1992 10:31 | 9 |
|
re-.1
Sell?? The word is MARKET, then Sell, customers will not buy what they
are not familiar with. MARKET, advertise etc. etc. more MARKETing then
Sell. And oh, let us hope we have qualified people selling.
Understanding the customers business is the KEY!
-Mike Z.
|
1766.11 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Feb 21 1992 11:30 | 4 |
| Despite the poor economy (which DEC uses as an excuse for poor perfomance),
Hewlett Packard announced a big earnings jump this week. Wall Street liked
it, and the stock took off. Their new chip may not be as good as ALPHA,
but they're doing something right.
|
1766.12 | | ASICS::LESLIE | Andy Leslie | Fri Feb 21 1992 11:33 | 6 |
| If anyone would care to transcribe the 'UNIX TODAY' article, or even
give a precis, I'd be real grateful.
Thanks
/a
|
1766.13 | The Article... | DENVER::DAVISGB | This note is legal tender | Fri Feb 21 1992 12:53 | 32 |
| Unix Today! Feb. 12, 1992 Top of Page 54
DEC UNIX EXEC MOVES TO HP
Chelmsford, MA. - Former Digital Equipment Corporation vice president
Kurt Friedrich, who was active in Digital's integration of OSF/1 into
its Unix Operating System, joined Hewlett-Packard last week to oversee
that company's OSF/1 operations.
Friedrich was named general manager of HP's Open Systems Software
Division, overseeing staff in Fort Collins, Colo.; Cupertino, Calif.;
and Chelmsford. He started work at HP last Monday, after working his
last day at DEC Feb. 7.
Friedrich will be responsible for integrating HP/UX, which is HP's
Unix Operating system, with OSF/1. He reports to William P. Roelandts,
HP vice president and general manager of the Network Systems Group.
He said he joined HP because of its greater commitment than DEC to
open systems.
"I think they have a cleaner, clearer strategy, and they're really
executing it," Friedrich said in a phone interview last week. "You can
talk to anyone in the company and ask what is HP doing, and they'll
tell you and they're executing them."
HP has already made the transition from CISC to RISC chips, said
Friedrich, and HP also plans to make OSF/1 central to all operating
system development.
DEC is still focused on the VAX chip and is just now beginning the
transition to RISC-based Alpha. DEC has announced no OSF/1 plans
beyond integrating it into its Unix strategy.
Friedrich said that DEC's multi-pronged strategies often left
employees unclear of corporate direction and how their work fit into
it.
- Mitch Wagner
|
1766.14 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Happy, Happy, Joy, Joy... | Fri Feb 21 1992 14:35 | 12 |
| re .11
HP is showing profits, IBM is buying up Wang, Apple keeps on growing.
Sun still has the lion's share of the desktop. And what is DEC doing.
Still worrying about the downturn...
Watch my lips folks. It is the $10B+ corporations that are going to
shape how fast and how easy it is to come out of this recession! But
not if they keep hiding from reality...
sigh...
|
1766.15 | FWIW | SMOOT::ROTH | Networks of the Rich and Famous | Fri Feb 21 1992 22:01 | 5 |
| Re: MIPS war
Saw other night on TV news blurb about Hitachi and their 1,000 MIPs
chipset.
|
1766.16 | | TLE::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Tue Feb 25 1992 18:40 | 7 |
| RE: .14
SUN does not have the lion's share of the desktop. IBM PCs and clones do.
Compared to the number of desktops running PCs, the entire workstation market
is lost in the statistical noise.
--PSW
|
1766.17 | | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Wed Feb 26 1992 12:15 | 16 |
| re: hemorrhaging Unix/OSF talent
This concept intrigues me a bit given the circumstances. While our Ultrix/OSF
platform certainly made some significant moves under Kurt's management, in
all fairness he was associated with the product set for a relatively short
period of time (under 2 years, if I'm not mistaken) before his departure, having
spent the vast majority of his time with DEC on VMS.
I'm not faulting the man, as a matter of fact there was a lot about him
that I admire, but I'd hardly consider him as having been one of the
driving forces of our U*ix/OSF strategy. I do think he was good engineering
manager in general, regardless of the product.
What am I missing?
-Jack
|
1766.18 | Unix Market in 1991 ... | MRKTNG::MOLINE | | Thu Feb 27 1992 16:33 | 59 |
| Here is a recent article on 1991 Unix market shares. As you see, the
greatest growth in the past year has been in the IBM camp.
From: RDVAX::MACHEFSKY "EXTERNAL RESEARCH PROGRAM, WEST COAST
415-723-4339 25-Feb-1992 1126" 25-FEB-1992 11:32:25.72
To: @SUN
CC:
Subj: Unix market shares
[Thanks to Frank Kettenstock for this note.]
UNIX Market Leaders (Preliminary Factory Revenue Estimates)
Source: Dataquest, January 1992
Vendor 1990 Share 1991 Share
Sun 13.2% 13.8%
Hewlett-Packard 12.3% 11.8%
IBM 6.1% 11.2%
DEC 6.2% 7.0%
Others 62.2% 56.2%
o Digital slipped from 3rd place to 4th place in terms of market share.
o The DEC, Sun, and HP share of the market remained almost constant
from 1991 to 1991.
o IBM gained significant market share at the expense of the smaller
vendors (the Others).
o The share of the leading vendors (Sun, HP, IBM, and DEC) increased
from 37.8% to 43.8%. This may signify that the fragmentation of the
UNIX market may, in the future, converge toward a few main vendors with
the lion's share of the market.
UNIX Market Segments (Preliminary Factory Revenue Estimates)
Source: Dataquest, January 1992
Segment 1990 Share 1991 Share
Supercomputer 5.4% 5.8%
Mainframe 1.8% 2.9%
Midrange 52.1% 46.0%
Workstation 38.5% 43.1%
Personal Computer 2.2% 2.2%
o The midrange segment experienced decline, while the workstation
segment showed improvement. This is mainly as a result of corporate
downsizing.
o UNIX has a major share in the supercomputer, technical workstation,
midrange, and small business markets. Market growth is predicted to
come from the mainframe and the office desktop. Therefore, satisfying
these two segments should be considered when determining where added
value investments for UNIX should be made.
|
1766.19 | OSF on X86...YEAH! | DENVER::DAVISGB | This note is legal tender | Wed Mar 04 1992 18:29 | 7 |
| All the more reason why *WE* (meaning Digital, not Santa Cruz) should
be developing an OSF/1 operating system offering for the Intel-based
marketplace. At the moment, SVR4 is the only competitor in this space.
Let's expand our UNIX presence!
More of my $.02
|
1766.20 | | ACOSTA::MIANO | John - NY Retail Banking Resource Cntr | Sat Mar 07 1992 13:34 | 10 |
| RE: <<< Note 1766.19 by DENVER::DAVISGB "This note is legal tender" >>>
> All the more reason why *WE* (meaning Digital, not Santa Cruz) should
> be developing an OSF/1 operating system offering for the Intel-based
> marketplace. At the moment, SVR4 is the only competitor in this space.
Unfortunately our track record in developing Unix systems software
stinks...Ultrix is the laughing stock of the industry...therefore we
are better off having someone who knows what the are doing develop the
thing.
|
1766.21 | some of my thought on the subject of duplicating OS's | STAR::ABBASI | | Sat Mar 07 1992 14:14 | 22 |
| >stinks...Ultrix is the laughing stock of the industry...therefore we
>are better off having someone who knows what the are doing develop the
>thing.
if this is true, and me dont know that, it might be because it is
very hard to duplicate to the letter a bad operating system.
but we are good at writing operating systems , we have like 10 or so
of them, and VMS every one agree is a good operating system.
i think DEC is much better in producing original designs and products,
(example VMS , RSX , among others), i mean we might not be good at
trying to duplicate someone else softwares , which looks like the
case with ultrix. again, i dont know anything about ultrix, iam just
assuming you know more and taking you word at it.
we have a lot of very original programmers at DEC who can
write better than anyone in industry and iam sure others will share my
feelings on this too.
thank you,
/naser
|
1766.22 | A rebuttal... | EJOVAX::JFARLEY | | Sat Mar 07 1992 14:44 | 16 |
| -1. I take exception to the remark about "DEC" write good operating
systems. The latest dibocal around VMS 5.5 has got once dedicated
customers ready to pull the plug on DEC IN GENERAL. They absolutely are
livid , brand new spanking 66xx systems turned off because of VMS 5.5.
To put it simply "IT DON'T WORK" and there is no work around. How many
times have I installed VMS upgrades and the first thing that has to be
done is install the mandatory update or if you call Software Support
they tell you either; we can load a patch or go back to the earlier
version and reload XXX. drivers to as a work around. The biggest
one that I like is; "send me a crash dump on tape and we'll get back to
you in a couple of weeks". Mean while what is Mr. Customer supposed to
be doing???? PLaying with his Bit Bucket waiting for a patch?????
The impact of the VMS 5.5 has reached the ivory tower and when it is
over I believe some heads are going to roll...........
regards
John
|
1766.23 | | ACOSTA::MIANO | John - NY Retail Banking Resource Cntr | Sat Mar 07 1992 22:30 | 34 |
| RE: .21
I was not commenting on the quality of Digital work in general. In
fact, not even the quality of Ultrix work. The problem is that
historically Unix has taken a back seat to VMS over the years and it is
apparent that Ultrix has suffered. In most any independent comparison
of operating system features (i.e. those that Digital has not paid for)
that has been published Ultrix is ranked at if not at the bottom. The
problem is not so much how well things have been done but what things
have been done.
Since we are behind in this area it makes sense to use outside
experience, such as that of SCO to catch up. There's a lot more to it
than quality of engineering. In a smaller company like SCO the
engineering management is probably closer to the rest of the
corporation.
In addition, having SCO do the the work might bring a certain amount of
credibility. Digital has been portrayed as the 'Closed systems' villan
for the past few years. While this is not anywhere near true we
sometimes do a lot to encourage that sort of thinking. For example,
while the industry definition of "Open Systems" is more or less Unix,
Digital says "You want Open Systems. We have Open Systems: Open VMS".
So while we do have the skills within Digital to do the job, SCO is
probably in a better position to put them all together in the required
time frames than our great elephant Digital is. Many ways we are
playing catch up.
I also agree that Unix stinks. However, if that's what people what to
buy then Digital need to be able to provide the least smelly Unix
around.
John
|
1766.24 | a rebutle to the rebutle to my reply | STAR::ABBASI | | Mon Mar 09 1992 02:54 | 52 |
| ref .22
i dont know detailes about VMS 5.5, and i dont want to talk about
that . but i want to talk in general about a bigger picture.
i think we need to take a bigger picture of things here, these kinds
of problems are symptoms of a larger problems, it applies to many
large software projects, (example: VMS is about 5 millions lines), as
software gets bigger and more complex, and as long as human programmers
use the same software methodologies and tools we've been using for years,
these problems will keep happenings.
look around, it is said that AT&T's crash of their network sometime ago
was traced back to a missing "else" to handle an obscure case in their
routing algorithm, did not DBase version 4.0 had a bug that caused loss
of data, the bug found after the software just released? i knew of
one large software in one GM plant that ran the overall
scheduling of vehicles inside the plant crash one day after running for
3 years with no problems because a certain rare operation was entered that
was never before encountered causing the whole plant to shut down for
the rest of the days with many thousands of $$ lost. (GM plants average
$1,000 per minute cost of running for labor). did not say that NASA
lost one of their unmanned spaces crafts many years ago because of space in
the wrong space in a FORTRAN program? and many many other cases we can
come up . (there are articles written about famouse and expensive bugs
in large production software).
as software gets large and more complex, the possibility of subtle bugs
to creep up is higher. even though we are very smart we still sometimes
makes mistakes, as long as people write code, mistakes will happen, we
could only increase our confidence that the program is healthy by more
testing, but we could never be sure it is %100 healthy. (proof of
program correction by mathemtically based process is still loong way
away ,last time i looked).
there is a BIG difference between writing a 10,000 lines program and
500,000 lines program, what tools and languages and setups and
managements that works for the small program will invariably failes
for the big program. i.e. programming in the small is not the same
as programming in the large.
IMHO, if i want to improve reliabilty of large software , i'll suggest
start thinking about using ADA.
so my bottom line is that, these problems are spread across the board, and
not specific to one company only.
buy,
thank you very much,
/nasser
ps. these opinions expressed here are my alone and the result of no
kind of foriegn influence.
and why is this notes file so sloooow to access and use???
|
1766.25 | Yes, and...? | DENVER::DAVISGB | I'd rather be driving my Jag | Mon Mar 09 1992 13:49 | 21 |
| Re : Note 1766.23 ACOSTA::MIANO
>So while we do have the skills within Digital to do the job, SCO is
>probably in a better position to put them all together in the required
>time frames than our great elephant Digital is. Many ways we are
>playing catch up.
So here we are, coming up on a year after the ACE announcement, at
which time it was said that SCO was going to be the delivery mechanism
for OSF/1 on X86. Real timely...
They haven't even put a stake in the ground as to when this product
will appear...and lately they've been waffling on "if".
> However, if that's what people what to
>buy then Digital need to be able to provide the least smelly Unix
>around.
Exactly my point. *Digital* ought to engineer and sell this
product, on DEC as well as non-dec platforms...
|
1766.26 | | EEMELI::PEURA | | Tue Mar 10 1992 15:08 | 13 |
| re: .20
>Unfortunately our track record in developing Unix systems software
>stinks...Ultrix is the laughing stock of the industry...therefore we
>are better off having someone who knows what the are doing develop the
>thing.
This is unfair and untrue. While there are lots of shortcomings in
ULTRIX we are ranked far better than for example IBM AIX.
I would not quote SCO quality any higher than ULTRIX.
pekka
|
1766.27 | not in high-availability.... | SWAM2::KELLER_FR | | Wed Mar 11 1992 02:41 | 8 |
| Depends on who's doing the ranking. My customers rank IBM's
high-availability version of AIX (HA/6000) -MUCH- higher than Digital's
"Watchdog" for ULTRIX. And with all our energy and attention being
focused on the future ALPHA systems and OSF/1, I don't expect we'll see
any real DEC competition to HA/6000 for quite some time. Meanwhile Stratus
and Tandem in addition to IBM are recognizing the customers high
interest in high-availability UNIX and we're just not competitive.
|
1766.28 | USS is history | MRKTNG::SILVERBERG | Mark Silverberg DTN 264-2269 TTB1-5/B3 | Wed Apr 15 1992 07:14 | 9 |
| Bill Storey, the former head of UNIX Systems Software (ULTRIX & OSF/1),
Marketing, recently left for the DEC NT program office in Littleton.
UNIX-based Software & Systems (USS), as we knew it, is disbanded & the
remnants will be scattered about the new organization. It wil be
interesting to see how this equates to reinforcing the message that
Digital is committed to UNIX.
Mark
|
1766.29 | | THEBAY::CHABANED | Choose Your Dilusion | Thu Jul 22 1993 22:41 | 8 |
|
Mercury News said Kurt has taken a job at -get this- Tandem!
Wierd.
-Ed
|