T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
4328.1 | | LEXS01::GINGER | Ron Ginger | Fri Dec 15 1995 14:23 | 4 |
| I started reading the previous note and thought Id dropped back 5 year.
Every item stated is 1989 or 1990.
Either you got an old copy, or, as usual, we are being outsold.
|
4328.2 | | TENNIS::ivosrv2.ivo.dec.com::kam | Wm Kam 714/261.4133 (dtn 535) | Fri Dec 15 1995 14:28 | 5 |
| Yes this is dated material. The individual has been at one of our Business
Partners for awhile. I just started working with the individual on a VERY
regular basis recently.
Regards,
|
4328.4 | My 10 | DECWET::BERKUN | A False Sense of Well-Being | Fri Dec 15 1995 19:33 | 48 |
| Hold on, base noter specifically asked not for criticism of hp
brochure, but for 10 items promoting Digital. Get positive!
He's my start:
1. The only major computer company with a solid NT RISC and CISC
strategy.
2. The clear leader in RISC NT market share.
3. The only company with a relationship with Microsoft covering
engineering, service, marketing and sales (etc.)
4. Consistent world record database performance on Alpha across all
operating systems and price catagories.
5. The only vendor who can service every piece of hardware and software
you own, regardless of manufacturer, regardless of location.
6. The only company with products that scale easily from 100 MHz Intel
to the largest mainframes, with guaranteed upgrades available.
7. We may be a hardware company, but for some reason 1/3 of our
employees work in services - isn't service what your company really
wants?
8. Within the next 18 months Digital will have the largest number of
Microsoft Certified Professionals of any company worldwide, including
Microsoft!
9. We deliver more Microsoft training and services than anything other
company in the world (including Microsoft).
10. When NT Clusters ship we will be the only company that can cluster
computers under all our operating systems - guaranteeing you an easy
upgrade path and high reliability.
Obviously I'm in the NT segment, but I'm sure other groups would have
no trouble adding similar statements. (Digital, we make the best VMS
in the industry!, etc.)
Each of the statements above are true (I believe!) and references and
documentation would not be hard to find.
Ken B.
Seattle
|
4328.5 | Just three simple things... | LACV01::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Sat Dec 16 1995 14:01 | 17 |
|
You do not need ten reasons, just three (most golfers can only
remember their last three swings anyway).
ONE - Functionality.
TWO - Service is us.
THREE - Faster is better.
That's it. You add your own twists and turns depending on the
customer, their needs, and your metrics. But you only have to remember
the above three, and you can talk for hours....
the Greyhawk
|
4328.6 | Simplify! | SUBSYS::JAMES | | Sat Dec 16 1995 14:36 | 27 |
| H.P. has figured out the things they stand for and 10 examples
they want the customer to remember.
They don't have ten messages for the customer to remember. They
have multiple instances of three messages:
1. Leader in openness (database, UNIX and networks)
2. Leader in technology (RISC,Openlook)
3. Safe business partner for VAR or End user
They have a complicated business, but have distilled it to simple
messages. The messages are short, self contained and easy to
understand. Of course, the specific ten examples have changed since
1990. I'd bet that the 3 value messages have not changed.
I think the question in the base note IS exactly right. What
is/are Digital's value messages? What are our 10 examples that prove
them?
This is not a typical exercise. We excel at making simple messages
complicated. The hard part of this exercise is to make our
business easy to understand.
Here is another way to look at it. What should our customer say to
a golf buddy about why he bought from Digital? Use language that a
golfer would use.
|
4328.7 | | CSC32::C_BENNETT | | Mon Dec 18 1995 08:26 | 13 |
| Throw the 1989 numbers out the door. In 1995 it seems like
SYSTEMS price versus performance would be a valid argument.
On the RELATIONAL DATABASE side graph the Tps of Oracles products
running on our platforms. Don't we have a jump on the competition
in 64 bit computing? Maybe you want to gather the current number
of APPLICATIONS running on our 64 platforms and graph that. Who's
CPU made the Guiness book of world records as the fastest CPU for the
last few years?
.4 how does Microsoft play in the context of a dicussion of UNIX,
relevent?
|
4328.8 | In search of truth in golf... | OHFS02::WERNER | Still crazy after all these years | Mon Dec 18 1995 08:26 | 20 |
| If the golfer approach were used, it might boil down to these three:
I got the best deal - price/perfomance, price
I got the fastest - performance, database performance, etc.
I got the most reliable - Available Server, Clustering, Services
In golf, as in sales, bluster rules and bigger, faster, cheaper is
better (except in the the golf score of course, where truth, honor and
the American Way rule). In this instance the analogy might better be
about the discussion that takes place on Monday about the golf game
from Sunday. There were great shots and putts leading to the 76 on the
card and long forgotten were the whiffs, mulligans and"just kick it
back in bounds" events which would have ruined the day, had they
counted. Just write down a birdie and get on with it.
-OFWAMI-
|
4328.9 | Who in corp can drive this? | MPOS02::CAMPBELL | Progam Manager | Mon Dec 18 1995 11:46 | 10 |
| Can we get this notes thread to someone in marketing, copying Palmer
et. al. on it, and get a simple message to employees to repeat like a
mantra to everyone they run into? .0 is right on.
Send me the name of the appropriate person in marketing and I'll be
happy to do it. Who there would have impact vis-a-vis this kind of
marketing message?
Pat Campbell
SI Program Manager
|
4328.10 | | NWD002::BAYLEY::Randall_do | | Mon Dec 18 1995 11:59 | 15 |
| re: a few back:
> .4 how does Microsoft play in the context of a dicussion of UNIX,
> relevent?
No. not relevant. Microsoft and Unix don't have much to do with
each other.
That's the point. HPs message is Risc/Unix, only. Ours (if it gets
written) is that if you want Unix, get the best price/performance;
if VMS, the same; if WNT, the same. Choice to the customer, and
integration/interoperability of their choices. All from a Digital
desktop, serviced by the best in the industry. Pretty good message.
Great idea in .0 - Now, who's going to write it up?
|
4328.11 | | GEMGRP::GLOSSOP | Alpha: Voluminously challenged | Mon Dec 18 1995 12:42 | 21 |
| > That's the point. HPs message is Risc/Unix, only. Ours (if it gets
> written) is that if you want Unix, get the best price/performance;
> if VMS, the same; if WNT, the same.
The problem is this *isn't* our message as far as I can tell:
1) We *don't* have the best price/performance for NT. (As came
out in several newsgroup postings, the only way to get an Alpha
that outperforms Intel machines is spend $20K.) The same is
true with Intel/Unix vs. Alpha/Unix (and to a lesser degree
with others). Basically, price/performance is a useless metric
if you can't compete on price (i.e. if you aren't in the same
market...)
2) We aren't shipping "universal platforms" - instead, we're squandering
resources (both in absolute terms and relative to the competition)
artificially building "separate" ones for low-end WNT vs. low-end
Unix/VMS.
FWIW - I believe it *should* be our message, but it isn't (and that's
part of the problem.)
|
4328.12 | Alpha and NT | NETCAD::GENOVA | | Mon Dec 18 1995 16:55 | 60 |
|
rep -1
I agree on us squandering resources on building a low-end <4-5K box,
100Mhz Alpha EV4 that still doesn't compete with a Pentium!
Our market for Alpha should be in the Unix space for new customers.
We can beat HP and Sun in the price/performance or price for that
matter in the 10-25K range with a box that also runs NT and VMS,
as a bonus. We have the only 64 bit platform that can run a 64 bit
OS, let's exploit that!
I just don't understand taking a 166Mhz Alpha chip, and choking it by
running it at 100Mhz and then selling it for a cheaper price than the
166Mhz. How does choking it make it "cheaper" to manufacture, ah, it
doesn't!
We have an NT solution that is just as good or just as bad as every
other vendor's, it's called Intel and it's available on the PCBUOA
side of the house. If we can't compete with them with Intel hardware
on their own terms, then we can't compete with them, and if they can
make money with Intel and we can't, there is something wrong with
our business model. Alpha may have a place with NT for one high end
server, Alcor, or greater that can serve 50-100 Intel NT boxes, but an
Alpha NT box on everyone's desk, I don't think so.
The way we should sell Alphas in the NT space is that we sell Unix and
VMS machines, and if you buy one, you get an NT license for free!
I think it's silly that we are taking up Engineering time,
manufacturing space/time, marketing time, our time, to build
a product that Yes is fast, but, No, is way too expensive and
still is constrained to NT only, Native Alpha NT, doesn't run
Windows 95, doesn't run WFW. And we are losing money by selling
them for 1/2 the price of their "full" speed siblings.
Intel sold DX33s because they didn't bin out at 50Mhz, they sold DX25s
cause they didn't bin out at 33, etc.
A pentium 75 doesn't run at 90, period. Intel didn't take a Pentium
150 and choke it to 75 and sell it for 1/2 price, but we should do that
with Alpha?
I liken taking an 166Mhz Alpha, running it at 100Mhz and then running
NT on it, to buying a Ferrari, striping out the engine and putting it
in a go cart, and selling rides on it for 2cents a ride at the fair.
Sure it goes fast, and customers are buying a ride for next to nothing,
but we lost a $200,000 Ferrari to make it possible.
If you sell a million workstations, and you lose $10 on each one, my
math says you've lost $10 million dollars. But somewhere someone is
happy because we've gained marketshare. You bet.
I try not to get emotionally involved with Alpha, but when I patently
disagree with the direction Alpha and NT are going it's hard not
to get a little heated.
Just my $.02
From a former Alpha Personal System's employee.
/art
|
4328.13 | | GEMGRP::GLOSSOP | Alpha: Voluminously challenged | Mon Dec 18 1995 17:52 | 16 |
| > Alpha may have a place with NT for one high end
> server, Alcor, or greater that can serve 50-100 Intel NT boxes, but an
> Alpha NT box on everyone's desk, I don't think so.
Unix isn't going to gain market share long term, and will probably see
significant erosion in personal systems. Where exactly do you think
we will get enough revenue to sustain Alpha investment to keep it
competitive, particularly relatively to Intel?
> If you sell a million workstations, and you lose $10 on each one, my
> math says you've lost $10 million dollars. But somewhere someone is
> happy because we've gained marketshare. You bet.
If you don't sell enough, ISVs will tell you just how important your
platform is... People *still* seem to think that we can sell hardware
and ignore 3rd party software. This is not 1970.
|
4328.14 | For the compensationality challenged... | LACV01::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Mon Dec 18 1995 18:07 | 18 |
|
And to reinforce that idea (re:-1) on the field sales force, we
compensate them for hardware revenue two ways (product specific
spiff AND budget attainment) over all other product sets.
As a matter of course, third party software is considered
goodness only if they have an existing relationship with Digital
and especially as a hardware reseller.
Naturally, the more you need more reps specializing in each
component of a "system sale" - that way everybody can get in everybody
else's way delighting the customer no end :-(
What is discouraging is that it isn't getting any better out here
and good reps are quiting weekly...
the Greyhawk
|
4328.15 | keep it simple | DECWET::BERKUN | A False Sense of Well-Being | Mon Dec 18 1995 18:21 | 19 |
| Well, I'm sorry to see this note degenerating into operating system
wars. But, it does neatly demonstrate the depth of the problem:
Digital does not have well stated (simple, concise, catchy) benefits and
values to capture the hearts and wallets of our customers and
prospects.
Good thing we have great products.
BTW, I've re-read the base note, I don't see where it said anything
about being UNIX specific. You want to compete with HP, NT is a pretty
good way to do it, since they haven't got a clue.
Finally, as near as I can tell, there is no one person who should be
doing this for the company. Each business unit has its own marketing
group and then there's a separate advertising group. Sounds like part
of the problem...
ken b.
|
4328.16 | | DECWET::WHITE | Surfin' with the Alien | Tue Dec 19 1995 13:30 | 51 |
| UNIX/WINDOWS/NT integration is not talked about very much, yet
Digital Equipment Corporation is in the best position to provide
synergy between these two platforms.
IMO, this is our weakest message. OpenVMS integrated with NT is great
news for our install base...so is 7.0 on Alpha for that matter, that is
if the customer is one of those that had enough vision to migrate to
the Alpha Architecture back when you had to VEST over just about everything,
and their software vendors did a port.
If your a new IS customer or an old one with an initiative to implement
client/server...you go to MS and they'll tell you NT and Win95/WFW...they'll
even push SAP on a two tier architecture...sans UNIX...go to HP and its
UNIX and Win95/WFW...another two tier architectural scheme...go to IBM,
and get ready to get *really* confused...we have an incredible offering
with a three tier client/server capability. As usual, our technical position
is clearly best-in-class.
We are the only vendor in the position to really *push* UNIX/WINDOWS integration
solutions with cradle to grave service and support...we are the only vendor who
can *truly* be aloof from the UNIX/NT wars and sell *both* of their strengths
relative to our offerings...we should highlight our initiatives to make UNIX
easy to manage, easy to install, and just plain easier to consider...there is
a tremendous fear around UNIX relative to the cost of running and supporting it.
We should move to alleviate that fear, and provide Windows based management
tools to help those customers who know they need high performance UNIX but
just don't want to have to join a cult...
*Ironically, Microsoft ITG needs high performance UNIX more than they know*
So for me, it's *only* three reasons:
1. The most comprehensive, scalable, systems architecture based on
industry standard componants and the Intel and Alpha chipsets for an
unprecedented upgrade path and clustering capability, backed by world class
service and support.
2. The most compelling UNIX/WINDOWS integration story with exceptional high
performance UNIX and impressive price/performance NT systems *both* Intel and
Alpha. Not to mention commodity priced desktop PC's built with the same
standards and care that our high-end systems are.
3. The OpenVMS Affinity program which highlights Digital's commitment to
our customers investment protection and Digital's commitment to provide a clear,
supported upgrade path, ensuring that our customers are *always* in the position
to compete and *win* in the global market place.
Jest my $.02
-Stephen
|
4328.17 | | AOSF1::kras | Cyber-Shredder | Tue Dec 19 1995 14:46 | 36 |
| Re: .-2
To say "HP doesn't have a clue" WRT NT is just plain incorrect; look at
the facts:
HP's NT strategy is based on the Intel product family. Currently HP
ships considerably more PC product than we do, including more servers.
I would bet HP actually "sells" more NT licenses than Digital does,
combining both our Intel and Alpha NT sales.
HP is a Microsoft Enterprise solution provider - just like Digital. Hp
can deliver this support world-wide, just like Digital.
We emphasize our "relationship" with Microsoft, HP emphasizes their
"relationship" with Intel.
We are showing our cumulative corporate ignorance looking at a
competitor so simply as to say "they don't have a clue". Clearly it us
lacking a clue.
--------
Re: .0
If we update the data in these HP messages we find HP has actually
become stronger in many of these metrics since '90. Moreover, HP has
grown substantially larger than it was in 1990.
The key to this level of marketing is to identify the differentiators we
can provide that meet a couple of critera: (1) they can be verified
through the use of outside sources (2) they actually present a
meaningful advantage to our customers. These should be the basis of our
corporate messages - product messages need different approaches.
|
4328.18 | Bad Marketing! | MIMS::SANDERS_J | | Tue Dec 19 1995 15:02 | 21 |
| re. 12
"We have the only 64 bit platform that can run a 64 bit OS, let's
exploit that!"
I am not sure that Digital marketing can exploit anything. Look at the
December 18 issue of INFORMATIONWEEK, page 108, "The Push To 64-Bit
Systems." Yes, Digital is mentioned many times in the article, but
so is IBM, HP, SGI, and SUN.
NO WHERE does it mention that Digital is the only one with both the
64-bit chip and OS and NO WHERE is VLM mentioned. No mention of the
new TPC records.
I find it hard to believe that Digital, eight months after the TL
announcement and two years after Digital UNIX on Alpha, has not been
able to get the message or information across to a magazine such as
INFORMATIONWEEK. This is absolutely pathetic marketing.
There is no way you can exploit your products if you can not get your
message across.
|
4328.19 | Yes, but... | CSC32::D_DONOVAN | SummaNulla(The High Point of Nothing) | Tue Dec 19 1995 15:40 | 13 |
| re: .-1
Hi "J",
I would urge you to write the Editors of Information Week to comment on
their article's "ommissions" (or "commissions" depending on how paranoid you
happen to be ;-). If you want the word to get out (outside of this Digital
Notes Conf. that is...) - "Just do it!" Don't wait for a Marketing VP to
do it for you...
Dennis - who as you, have had my criticisms of Digital Marketing but
after seeing how NDD is now handling our "message", am beginning
to change my tune...
|
4328.20 | re: marketing issues | DECWET::WHITE | Surfin' with the Alien | Tue Dec 19 1995 16:23 | 29 |
| Personally, I think our marketing is beginning to turn around...
There are still some things that absolutely infuriate me..like
'Sunday only' television ads...when our competitors do otherwise...
And our advertising budget...which is probably too small for our
revenue, compared to other companies.
On the other hand, I really do feel that there has been some listening
going on...some sharp minds have come up with our ad campaigns...so
I feel much more supportive these days...with some caveats. Our television
commercial, while not aired enough and in the right spots in my opinion,
is very sharp...very polished...and really does turn some heads...it
conveys the confidence of a very successfull company, as oppossed to the
mentality of a company trying not to die...
One thing I wonder if we realize is that there is a battle waging for
mind-share within the industry itself, and IBM SUN HWP and CPQ currently
hold a clear, distinctive, advantage over this company in that space.
When we do play the game, we get recognized...but I feel that we play
this game rather half-heartedly...and we gain mindshare for a while...then
quickly lose it. Some people don't place importance on 'trade-rag' exposure,
but that person isn't me...
Anyway, in general, I believe we have started to change our marketing ways,
and I want to encourage those resposonsible to keep it up...and to grow
the initiative...we need it.
-Stephen
|
4328.21 | Commercial UNIX Leadership | AXPBIZ::WANNOOR | | Tue Dec 19 1995 18:33 | 29 |
|
Combine .16 and some from .10, plus throw in strong
"Digital is financially solid and growing...", then I think
getting someplace. My additions:
Leader in Enterprise-Wide Commercial 64-bit RISC Database
Environments:
--- The only vendor capable to support your VLM and VLDB
whether it is Oracle, Sybase, or Informix
--> throw in top 8400 specs here
--- Leadership tpc-m price-performance
--> throw in all the latest tpc-m accolades here
--- Leader in WNT SQLserver performance and price-performance
--> throw in latest tpc-m numbers here - hey, they are
hot
--- Get testimonials from SAP and other KEY bigname commercial
ISV's AND 3-4 bigtime 8400 customer wins.
FWIW, I relayed and warned the powers-to-be in 1990-1991 on HP's
sales, marketing (direct & indirect), product and technology
strategies and implications to Digital (HPwas then an $18B company)
but they weren't ready to hear the messages :-( Still have my
presentation slides!!! Oh well...
- Ashikin
|
4328.22 | adv f s | MKOTS3::FLATHERS | | Wed Dec 20 1995 10:59 | 8 |
|
also, advance file sytem for our UNIX !!!
much faster re-boot times/recovery
online backups etc.....
|
4328.23 | We are forgetting networking and our connectivity message, and storage. | DECWET::WHITE | Surfin' with the Alien | Wed Dec 20 1995 12:48 | 7 |
| Which takes us back to the original point...a concise distilled
message about why a customer should do business with Digital is
difficult to convey.
Even for us arm-chair marketers.
P^)
|
4328.24 | ahah ! | RDGENG::WILLIAMS_A | | Wed Dec 20 1995 13:25 | 13 |
|
..how about...
We own 100% of the VMS market.
[please don't forget these (long suffering) punters, as we make up our
'10 reasons' list].
Rgds,
AW.
|
4328.25 | | BIGUN::BAKER | Digital IS a software Company | Wed Dec 20 1995 17:03 | 14 |
| r.e .18
"We have the only 64 bit platform that can run a 64 bit OS, let's
exploit that!"
Them have AS/400 on Power with OS/400??
and, just to get picky
Them have CRAY T3E on Alpha with Unicos??
In fact, didnt IBM have the unique distinction of having a 64 bit OS
running on a 32 bit platform?
System 38, first generation AS/400?
|
4328.26 | | NETCAD::SHERMAN | Steve NETCAD::Sherman DTN 226-6992, LKG2-A/R05 pole AA2 | Wed Dec 20 1995 17:28 | 8 |
| I saw an ad for a new Sun workstation in the recent CGW. Something
like an Ultra 1. In the ad, Sun claims 64-bit. It certainly implied
next generation and was obviously competing with the Alpha. Is Sun
waking up to 64-bit or is it more smoke and mirrors. Regardless, the
placement of the ad certainly will convince readers that there's
another 64-bit machine available for rendering besides the Alpha.
Steve
|
4328.27 | Hardware no good without software | BBPBV1::WALLACE | UNIX is digital. Use Digital UNIX. | Wed Dec 20 1995 18:02 | 1 |
| Sun have 64bit chips but are relying on DG for a 64bit OS.
|
4328.28 | 64bits=Battle of mindshare - 32bits too many for Joe Bloggs anyway | MPGS::16.121.224.60::hamnqvist | Video Servers | Wed Dec 20 1995 20:15 | 8 |
| In re: other 64 bit machine
I saw an ad the other day for a motherboard upgrade for some $2,300
dollars to get a MIPS based 64 bit machine AND Windows NT. Ad suggested
you could save a lot of components from your previous PC. That same
PC magazine had zero ads for Alphas.
>Per
|
4328.29 | "The Alpha Story" | USCTR1::PORTER | | Thu Dec 21 1995 10:12 | 25 |
| There is an excellent presentation in development within Mike Gallup's
(VP Systems Marketing, SBU) organization.
It is called "The Alpha Story" and it addresses 5 of the most common
questions we are asked by analysts, our competition and customers:
1. Can Digital afford Alpha?
2. Can Alpha sustain industry leading performance?
3. Is Alpha attracting the applications required to run your business?
4. Will the Windows NT market have a positive impact on Alpha?
5. Does Digital's dual platform strategy make sense for customers?
This presentation has been reviewed with key industry consultants
including C. Gordon Bell (inventor of VAX, now at Microsoft), Andy
Feit (Dataquest), Andrew Allison, Linley Gwennap (editor-in-chief at
Microprocessor Reports), and Owen Brown (CEO of Migration Software).
I've seen a preview copy of the presentation and it is excellent. I
believe it will help answer some of the questions raised in the replies
to the base note and will help the base noter with (at least 5) good
reasons to buy Digital.
The goal is to get this presentation posted to VTX IR in the next
couple of weeks. Please be on the lookout for a Reader's Choice memo
which will provide all the details about how to get copies.
|
4328.30 | Out In Front, But On The Defensive | PCBUOA::FEHSKENS | len - reformed architect | Thu Dec 21 1995 10:21 | 6 |
|
re .29 - note, though, that this is a "defensive" campaign, while
our competitors mount "offensive" campaigns.
len.
|
4328.31 | Both Defensive AND Offensive messages... | USCTR1::PORTER | | Thu Dec 21 1995 10:41 | 26 |
| Understand that this presentation was drafted by request of Bob Palmer
who had received numerous letters from our account managers and
customers who claimed that the Alpha story was not playing well in the
field.
The issue was not Alpha performance- few of our competitors will pick a
fight with us on performance. The issue was survivability. Our
competitors, (namely HP and IBM), some members of the media, and some
analysts have tried to convince our customers and prospective customers
that Alpha cannot survive and we cannot continue to invest in Alpha
because Alpha does not have the volume required to sustain continued
investment.
There are several ways to use this presentation. But the most
important thing to keep in mind regardless of how you use it is to
not make it a defensive message. There are lots of very positive
messages within the presentation.
You don't need to present the entire story. You can choose to use the
question most appropriate to your customers/audiences concern. One
recommended tactic to use is to invite a group of customers to get an
update on Alpha and where we are 3 years after announcement.
Acknowledge that there are a lot of preconceived notions about Alpha
some correct, some incorrect and you are there to set the record
straight.
|
4328.32 | add fuel add performance, buy Alpha! | OTOOA::PINKERTON | Prov 3:5-6 | Thu Dec 28 1995 15:57 | 23 |
| Check this out for a consistent msg:
1 Digital's AlphaGeneration supports 3 of the most Open Operating
Systems Today! WindowsNT, UNIX, and OpenVMS.
2 We have the most scalable (read portable application, investment
protection,) 64 bit systems Today! This means you can develop
applications on an entry level Alpha, and roll out your production
applications on a larger Alpha without expensive software rewrites.
Just more performance!
3 Digital is the world's leader in open client/server solutions from
personal computers to integrated worldwide information systems.
Digital's scalable AlphaServers, and AlphaStations, combined with
the industry's best open storage, networks, software, and
Multivendor Customer Services, together with focused business
partner solutions, helping you compete and win in today's global
marketplace
4 Check out our WEB page www.digital.com for you non believers, re: a WNT
AlphaStation 233/266 MHz, the Alpha XL, Born to run WindowsNT for under
$10K
|
4328.33 | OpenVMS System - Ten Reasons to Buy One EC-F3131-93 | tennis.ivo.dec.com::KAM | Kam WWSE 714/261.4133 DTN/535.4133 IVO | Sat Jan 06 1996 12:49 | 28 |
| Haven't been ignoring this note entry. Just getting back from 5 weeks
in Asia and 2 weeks in Hawaii.
I found a piece of literature in my archive:
OpenVMS Systems - Ten Reasons to Buy One
1. Open Standards Availability
2. Delivering Open Systems Benefits
3. Multivendor client/Server Integration
4. Excellent Data Integrity, High Availability
5. Leadership clustering
6. Over 2,500 Applications on OpenVMS AXP
7. Leadership Performance and Price/Performance
8. Setting the Pace in Business-Critical Client/Server Computing
9. A Favorite Platform for Mainframe Downsizing
10. A Family of Three Alpha AXP Operating Systems
Anyone know who created this? GREAT graphs, charts, illustrations, and
messages. I'd like to get the .PPT file and modify it to be more
current and reflect some of the messages from previous responses.
EC-F3131-93 Rel. # 119/94 04 72 50.0
Anyone interested in working on this. I have spare copies that I can
send to you to take a look at.
Regards,
|
4328.34 | | tennis.ivo.dec.com::KAM | Kam WWSE 714/261.4133 DTN/535.4133 IVO | Sat Jan 06 1996 13:01 | 32 |
| Search query just came back from VTX IR, took awhile as I used the *.
Looks like a pretty good start...nodes not available so i can't get the
file - UGH!
Regards,
OpenVMS Systems -- Ten Reasons to Buy One (Infosheet) Info Sheet
DATE POSTED: 10-MAY-1994 LAST REVIEW: 1-AUG-1995 LENGTH: 0006
Pages
PART NUMBER: EC-F3131-93 AREA OF USE: AP/EUR/U.S
DESCRIPTION OF CONTENT: This Infosheet describes the top ten reasons to
buy OpenVMS Systems...open standards availability, delivering open systems
benefits, multivendor client/server integration, excellent data
integrity/high availability, leadership clustering, over 2,500 applications
on OpenVMS AXP, leadership performance and price/performance, new
innovations, a favorite platform for downsizing, and investment protection.
GENERAL CONTACT GENERAL CONTACT
JACKIE JONES NANCY WITTING
MSBCS::JONES MSBCS::WITTING
FILE NAMES BYTES/BLOCKS DESCRIPTION
LI00VBPF.PDF 518480/ 1013 Adobe Portable Document Format
LI00VBP8.PS 1558122/ 3044 PostScript Document for any Digital Printer
LI00VBSC.TXT 9112/ 18 English Language, ASCII document
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4328.35 | Why Choose Digital for review | tennis.ivo.dec.com::KAM | Kam WWSE 714/261.4133 DTN/535.4133 IVO | Wed Mar 06 1996 18:23 | 31 |
| Just found something to add to my "Why Choose Digital"
Host E-Mailboxes Worldwide
(estimates as of Dec. 1995, in thousands)
Vendor Mailboxes Share
DEC ALL-IN-1/MailWorks 7,000 23.6%
IBM OfficeVisioin 6,000 20.2
Fischer TAO 3,000 10.1
Verimation Memo 2,500 8.4
Uniplex Mail 2,160 7.3
HP OpenMail 2,000 6.7
HP OpenDesk 1,500 5.0
WangVS Office 1,500 5.0
NBS Systems TOSS 650 2.2
Data General CEO 500 1.7
Others 2,900 9.8
------ -----
Total Host 29,710 100.0%
Percent U.S. based 17,825 70.0
CommunicationsWeek February 26, 1996 pg. 9
Your're welcome to review this document and I'm looking for feedback.
If you have something beneficial I'd be interested in looking at it.
Regards,
kam
TENNIS::SYS$PUBLIC:WHY_BUY2.PPT
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4328.36 | That article is a little confusing.... | NEWVAX::MZARUDZKI | in life, all things are possible... | Wed Mar 06 1996 21:54 | 14 |
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Umm...
That mailbox thingy is quite misleading. It represents HOST mailboxes.
Why they lump MailWorks into that mainframe/host catagory is beyond me.
The real story here is LAN mail connectivity, or LAN based mailboxes.
The big three here are Microsoft, Lotus and Novell.
But, did you know we are still a significant holder of X.400 market
share? Something on the order of 30 - 35%. Next closest is *other*.
So, that X.400 thingy plus number of E-Mail boxes can tell a nice
connectivity story.
-Mike Z.
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4328.37 | | tennis.ivo.dec.com::KAM | Kam WWSE 714/261.4133 DTN/535.4133 IVO | Wed Mar 06 1996 22:08 | 32 |
| I agree, but we're just looking for statements indicating DEC is #1.
But since you asked here's the rest of the information:
How E-Mail is Distributed
Worldwide E-Mail Installed Base
(estimates as of Dec. 1995, in thousands)
Type of Mailbox Total Share U.S. Total
Lan 47,300 52.0% 33,125
Host 29,710 33.7 17,825
Public 13,950 15.0 11,150
Total Mailboxes 90,960 100.0 62,100
LAN E-Mailboxes Worldwide
(estimates as of Dec. 1995, in thousands)
Vendor Mailboxes Share
Lotus cc:Mail 9,100 19.2%
Microsoft Mail 9,100 19.2
Novel GroupWise 5,500 11.6
Lotus Notes 4,500 9.5
SoftArc FirstClass 4,000 8.5
Microsoft Exchange Inbox 2,500 5.3
On Technology Da Vinci 2,500 5.3
EE Software QuickMail 2,200 4.7
Banyan Vines Mail 1,500 3.2
On Technology Notework 1,000 2.1
Other 5,400 11.4
Total Worldwide LAN 47,300 100.0
Percent U.S. based 70.0
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4328.38 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Thu Mar 07 1996 09:31 | 13 |
| I'll have to profess ignorance, but I don't understand the last
few replies *AT ALL*. What is a "Host based mailbox"? What's a
"Mailbox"?
(I ask because the numbers all seem astonishingly low. And where
are the Unix systems? And how do we count them? Pine, Elm, etc.?
Or Solaris, AIX, SCO, etc.? And where are the commercial services?
By some counts, AOL might have as many as 3,000,000 accounts * 5
screenames per account. And where are the Macintosh mailers?)
Could someone explain to me, in general, what we're talking about
here?
Atlant
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