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Amazon: Linux Saved Us Millions

Ian_Bailey writes: "ZDNet news presents another chapter in the Windows vs. Linux debate. Amazon.com claims that by switching to Linux, they were able to "cut technology expenses by about 25 percent, from $71 million to $54 million."" Lots of little bits in there. Nothing really new, but it's still nice.

7 of 389 comments (clear)

  1. Linux was only part of the savings by the_rev_matt · · Score: 2, Informative

    Note that they state it was a combination of the move to linux and lowered telco/comm costs. A minor, but important, point.

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  2. Linux winning over Win2k on the money angle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative
    Microsoft must position the MSFT stock as a growth stock. This means revenue growth of 10% per year. As revenues grow and the market beomces saturated, this beomces increasingly difficult to do and requires more draconian licensing and steeper fees.

    It was predicatable that sooner or later, without opening new and potentially large markets, Microsoft would have to gouge existing customers.

    The only thing that can bring Win2k and other enterprise software costs back in check would be a huge influx of revenues from XBox, MSN, and .Net services, three of the key new revenue initiatives at Microsoft.

  3. Re:A classic example of speaking out of one's arse by Carnage4Life · · Score: 4, Informative
    http://windowsupdate.microsoft.com/

    It knows what I have installed, what is *needed*, and other things I may *want*.

    1. WindowsUpdate is a GUI tool that needs MSIE. Tell me how I upgrade a whole network of machines without doing it by hand on each one if I use Windows Update? Answer: I can't.

    2. WindowsUpdate doesn't carry IIS patches which makes it practically useless for the major security issue surrounding Windows. which is IIS.
      To successfully keep on top of IIS patches you have to use hfNetChk which is,

      WAIT FOR IT,

      a command line tool.
  4. Intel have also saved money by jdh28 · · Score: 2, Informative

    In an article in The Register, Intel's director of IT talks about making savings by deploying Linux across their enterprise, although the amount (~$200K) doesn't sound particularly massive in the scheme of things.

    He says the savings "have come from price/performance advantages, reduced software licensing and maintenance costs".

    john

  5. Re:quote of the day. by mjh · · Score: 3, Informative
    With Linux, customers "end up being in the operating systems business," managing software updates and security patches while making sure the multitude of software packages don't conflict with each other," Miller said. "That's the job of a software vendor like Microsoft."

    Yeah, and it works great in debian:
    echo deb http://security.debian.org/ potato/updates main contrib non-free >> /etc/apt/sources.list
    apt-get update && apt-get upgrade

    Let's see: dependancy management, security updates. What exactly was it that Linux doesn't do?

    --
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  6. Re:quote of the day. by JennyWL · · Score: 2, Informative

    With Linux, customers "end up being in the operating systems business," managing software updates and security patches while making sure the multitude of software packages don't conflict with each other," Miller said.

    Whereas with Microsoft, customers end up being in the system support business, managing software updates and security patches (after yet another vulnerability has been revealed by yet another widespread exploit) while hoping that someone else has made sure the multitude of software packages don't conflict with each other. What was his point again?

  7. They Replaced Solaris *NOT* Windows by xp · · Score: 2, Informative
    Does anybody actually read the articles. They did not replace Windows with Linux: they replaced their Solaris boxes with Linux.

    Cmdr Taco's post announces this as "another chapter in the Windows vs. Linux debate", which betrays a bias against Microsoft and an inability to read articles past head-lines.

    The real conclusion to draw from the story is that Sun will die very soon, because Linux offers the same thing for zero cost. This will in fact make it even easier for Microsoft to take over the world.

    So in a sick ironically twisted plot turn Linux helps Microsoft by taking out its main rival Sun.

    Asim