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How IBM (and Open Source) Won eBay

DemonBrew wrote to us with a new article in Business2 how IBM beat MSFT, Sun, BEA Systems to win the contract for the new eBay. Cool part is that it's based on Websphere, which has major open source components.

7 of 317 comments (clear)

  1. Suck my porkrind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    oats get you oats

  2. Important Note: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    We still are plagued with Jews! When will someone come out with a jew killin' robot?

  3. This is a subject by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    This is a post.

  4. stepping outside for a bit by tps12 · · Score: -1, Troll
    I'm going to go get some air. If anyone needs me, just leave a message. Should be back within an hour or two. I just have to swing by the grocery store, maybe pick up some brewskies, you know.

    Could really use a good picture of Gandalf looking stoned. It's for my wallpaper, thanks.

    MODERATORS: I am using my +1 bonus here, deliberately, for maximum exposure. Obviously, it would therefore be pointless to moderate it down. Instead, moderate another helpful post up...you'll be doing the whole community a favor.

    --

    Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
  5. Cowards.... by alexborges · · Score: 0, Troll

    Id bet that a

    PHP+APACHE+MYSQL

    Might have proven much cheaper/better than the crappy websphere (ive tested it, used it and hate it).

    --
    NO SIG
  6. Stop the Crack! by cscx · · Score: -1, Troll

    Hello Pro-Linux troll,

    Are you crazy? Since when was MySQL enterprise software? You might as well have suggested that they use MS Access. Personally I wouldn't even use MySQL to hold a database of 25 e-mail addresses; it just might buckle under the load! And you're thinking e-bay? That's a good one. PHP too, wow. Why not just suggest that people type in their own SQL queries while they're at it?

  7. Answer me t his by cscx · · Score: 0, Troll

    So... what was wrong with the IIS implementation in the first place? eBay is fast and works perfectly. And I don't want to hear that "IIS is insecure" bullshit; IIS is insecure in its default configuration, but not after you lock it down properly. I'm pretty sure that eBay has the resources to hire some good IIS admins. As for the backend, eBay wasn't even scripted... their main application was an in-process C++ MFC app. That equals even more speed. Combine that with IIS and you have a compact, scalable, fast web platform. And I bet they base their back database on Oracle, so that's taken care of in the MFC connector as well. Has the current implementation of eBay ever crashed? No.

    WebSphere = shit. I remember the old versions of it; they probably need a gig of RAM just to run at a decent speed!! Shit, I bet server boxes that run WebSphere come with giant primer handles to jumpstart the mofo, it's so bloated. And they're gonna rewrite the whole thing in java servlets now, for "performance"?? Puh-leeze.

    "If it ain't broke, don't fix it!!"