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Dell CIO Says "Unix is Dead"

An anonymous reader writes "I thought this might spur some good discussion on this board, including jabs at Dell and MS, which I always enjoy reading. Dell's CIO believes that the end of Unix is here, in fact his opening slide in a recent presentation was "Unix is dead." Specifically, he talked about the savings he claims in moving Dell's Oracle databases from Solaris to Red Hat.

13 of 632 comments (clear)

  1. Tell that to the military by JiMbOb_ka · · Score: 3, Interesting

    With HP-UX and Solaris based projects getting ready for launch in the next few years I imagine that Enterprise Unices will have a long life to live.

  2. enjoy by suhit · · Score: 5, Interesting

    John C. Dvorak writes "Unix is Dead! Wanna Fight??".

    Also, here is a funny comeback from http://www.superhero.org "Windows 95 is finally out, and I keep reading in all the consultants' columns that UNIX is dead. I believe them, of course--they're paid well to make such pronouncements--but UNIX seems pretty lively for a corpse. Whenever a hardware vendor brings out the latest hot box, it seems to be running UNIX; the telecom industry still likes UNIX pretty much; and there sure seem to be a lot of UNIX users out there on the Internet. If UNIX is so old, how can it be producing offspring like that little scamp, Linux?
    "Maybe these consultants are confusing dying with age. UNIX is old, a lot older than the other operating systems that have long since passed on. In spite of its twenty-six years, however, UNIX continues to crunch numbers while younger systems can only gum them till they're mushy. What explains this mysterious longevity?

    "I have a theory. UNIX survives because, unlike other operating systems, it lacks doubt and guilt. UNIX does just what you tell it to, as quickly and efficiently as it can, and then it waits for more work. It doesn't worry about whether what you asked it to do was fair, beneficial, or even sensible. It just does it.

    "By contrast, Windows frets about you. It offers you hints and choices and dialog boxes. Help is everywhere (for what it's worth). And if you ask Windows to do anything of consequence, it asks you to confirm your request, and then it tells you what it did. Delete a large number of files, and Windows is exhausted. It's not the work, it's the *stress*. It's no wonder that Windows systems tend to freeze up where a UNIX system would crash.

    "UNIX snorts at Windows-style solicitude. UNIX doesn't ask you to confirm--if you didn't want it to do what you asked, why did you ask it? Similarly, it won't annoy you by reporting the consequences of what you did. Why would you enter a command if you don't first know its consequences?"

    Suhit

  3. Byte agreed.... by veg · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A few years ago, one of the ops at my place of work put a magazine in my (real-word) intray. It was a copy of Byte Magazine with a front-cover headline "Is NT the end of UNIX ?".

    At the time this was a common headline in the popular rags...and then I noticed the date - February 1992 :)

    This crap appears every five years along with "life on Mars" and "possible cure for cancer".

    The words "snake" and "oil" come to mind.

  4. Re:And to banks by begatesau · · Score: 5, Interesting

    No, I don't think so--OpenVMS still sits quietly in the back corner of financial institutions, chugging away at its COBOL based applications with real fault-tolerance quite nicely thank you! Why would a soul use Java on slowaris? http://developers.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/0 2/09/1347215&mode=thread&tid=108 Besides, OpenVMS also has java and netbeans. But then again, why would anyone spend the money to migrate from COBOL to java when everything works just fine and there are great migration products like BridgeWorks available? http://www.openvms.compaq.com/commercial/bridgewor ks You speak as if you had the power to make migration decisions, but low and behold you're probably just some troll developer with a strange opinion.

  5. Re:since 1980.... by uk_greg · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The other issue here is cost.

    Some background on Randy Mott, Dell's CIO. Before joining Dell, he was the CIO at Wal*Mart. Both Dell and Wal*Mart are kings of supply chain and operations management, especially cost reduction. This guy is very good at squeezing cost out of corporate IT infrastructures while delivering first rate solutions to his internal corporate customers. Any hyperbole aside, if Randy Mott speaks, he knows what he's talking about, and he knows what he's doing. It may not be right for every organization, but I guarantee it'll be right for Dell.

  6. It shows by dattaway · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Considering how Dell feels about other operating systems other than Windows, I'd say its in their culture.

  7. Re:Linux is the next MS by Kourino · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Linux spends almost no money in R&D and Sun spends like 2 billion. Stop ripping their shit off and come up with your own stuff or Unix will die.

    Sorry, but ... what the fuck? So free Unix-alikes are "ripping shit off" of Sun, now? I guess the fact that real talent contributes code to Linux doesn't excuse the fact that Linux is based around the "everything is a file" concept. So reading information in public Usenix papers is ripping off of Sun? Please. For example, the anticipatory i/o scheduler seems to be based on information that's been freely published. Not information hidden away under proprietary NDAs. Futexes and the O(1) scheduler are other examples of information that wasn't ripped-off shit. (I could be wrong, but I'm pretty sure about this.)

    If Sun is spending two billion dollars in R&D and the linux people aren't, why hasn't Solaris managed to totally blow Linux out of the water? Oh wait, it does. On big (as in many processors) systems. It doesn't do as well on commodity hardware, but everybody knows Linux just doesn't scale well to 64-node machines these days. (People are working on it, but we're not there yet.) Even in the days of secure, portable, light reimplementations with wide hardware support, propietary Unix still has its niches. Besides, part of the appeal of Sun is a "total-package" deal - kind of like Apple.

    Look, I appreciate that you might actually care about this, but if you don't give examples of what you're talking about you're going to look like you're talking out of your ass. Even on Slashdot. :3

  8. RMS, Debian, and man by Kourino · · Score: 3, Interesting

    E.g. Stallman insists that man pages are obsolete and refuses to support them, which is incredibly wrongheaded.

    Ironically, the last person I heard complain about that was a Debian developer. I seem to recall he also said that Debian policy is against this and in favor of having man pages for everything anyway. There's probably a happy medium ... but I definitely agree (and so does Debian?) that a goal of the extirpation of man pages is silly.

    Personally, I don't care how "pure" my "Unix" is either. It works the same way, and I like that :3

  9. Dell, innovation, WTF? by briancnorton · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What was the last thing that Dell innovated? They get on board of every industry group and use the products of that group, but they NEVER contribute anything. All the other majors drop big coin on R&D, but not Dell. That's why they make so much money. Licensing is cheap compared to research.

    --

    People who think they know everything really piss off those of us that actually do.

  10. Re:And to banks by radish · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I am a senior developer at a major international bank (one of the worlds' biggest). We are building the vast majority of new enterprise systems on Java/Solaris. Most legacy systems are C++/Solaris, 2-tier scripting & database (a surprising number) or COBOL/mainframe (tiny minority). There's virtually no other Unix platforms (there may still be a little SunOS around, and there's a bit of Linux just coming in). Desktops are all Windows, server rooms are virtually all Solaris on Sun hardware. Email is Exchange (*cough*) but hey, nothing I can do about that ;)

    --

    ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

  11. Re:Dell Trolls by thanasakis · · Score: 4, Interesting

    get their Sparc archetecture up to speed

    You may find this article interesting:

    Sun has two surprises in store for users

    Basicaly, what they are trying to do is embed tens of processor cores inside one chip. If they can pull this off sufficiently early, they may completely overwhelm their SMP competition as both IBM and Intel are at the point of embeding only a couple of cores in one die. Plus, their software has excellent SMP characteristics which may prove quite usefull.

  12. Re:since 1980.... by Billly+Gates · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I was just at Dell's website and found this.

    They want to sell packaged solutions with dell hardware of course. Notice the fast track to Linux is there. They have whole classes on Unix to Windows or Linux migration. They are doing quite a good job of marketing themselves as a supperior solution. Its all about profits and taking as much as they can from Sun.

  13. Re:Dell Trolls by router · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Rebuttal:

    1. Ok, well, yeah, but the drives cost more than 1U dual PIII servers.

    2. Yeah, you can, but try upgrading the firmware on an A3500FC on the fly. Would you now trust hitting the disk array with your database at the same time? I wouldn't....

    3. Solaris doesn't have 64 bit memory access. Its like 38 or 48 bit. Check their UltraSparc docs.

    4. Sure, and for things that need "decent" clustering, its one of a few options. Most things, however, don't need "decent" clustering.

    5. No current Sun product supports 128 processors, and if you need a loaded E15k you have very specific needs indeed.

    6. Again, how many UltraSparc II/III processors have failed on you in the past month? If you deal with lots of them, they die depressingly frequently. Especially considering the cost.

    7. Anybody can and does provide support like this. Sun premium support (gold/platinum) is really freaking expensive.

    Sun will continue to have fabrication problems, since they are relying on TI to fab for them. Sun has so many supply vendors that they run into the same problems white box vendors do, but they can hide it better. When push comes to shove, they are selling enormously expensive servers that are justified for about 1% of server duties. And that will shrink as Linux gains the features to compete in those corner cases. At which point, Sun will die. Period.

    andy