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Cheap PPC Linux Machines From IBM

ksheff writes "According to this story, IBM is planning on introducing low-end SMP servers and deskside machines based on the PPC970. The machines would be able to run Linux and AIX. A 4-way machine is expected to cost less than $3500! IBM expects a 20x increase in the number of PPC Linux servers by 2006."

33 of 531 comments (clear)

  1. Like the G5, without OS X by sirmikester · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Unless I'm missing something, this could definately serve as a linux workstation. The power of the new G5 with linux, what could be better?

    Now if I only had a spare $3,500 to spend on it...

    --
    In linux libertas
  2. IBM's Business Plan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
    1. Identify a product which is not being provided, but which there is a demand for.
    2. Sell that product to consumers at a price which is reasonable, but higher than what it costs you to produce each unit.
    3. Profit!
    Hmm, that sounds different from normal somehow. Maybe they're on to something here.
    1. Re:IBM's Business Plan by reaper20 · · Score: 4, Funny

      You forgot:

      2.5 Develop a huge support infrastructure backed by a huge company (Noon ever got fired for buying IBM) and make a crapload more money than step 2.

  3. Nice! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A 4-way machine is expected to cost less than $3500! IBM expects a 20x increase in the number of PPC Linux servers by 2006."

    With those sorts of prices, they're going to get it, too! The cheapest Itanium 2 system money can buy (HP zx2000) costs $3500, more or less, and would run like a dog compared to e.g. a 4-way 1.6GHz PPC970 system.

    Looks like Intel's competition is going to be coming more and more from IBM, not AMD...

    1. Re:Nice! by usotsuki · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Okay, last time IBM redefined the PC, they fscked up royally. But maybe this time they can successfully redefine what it means to be IBM-compatible, with a machine that rivals the Macintosh, aimed at the Linux PC market.

      If these machines can be coaxed into running Darwin, maybe there will be some limited amount of binary compatibility with OS X - and people could run programs on both boxes. Compatibility is a good thing, but who says IBM has to be PC-compatible? Besides, these days the Apples are more IBM than your average PC.

      I say this can only be a Good Thing.

      -uso..

      --
      Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
    2. Re:Nice! by PD · · Score: 4, Informative

      Something interesting: gcc on PPC doesn't generate code as good as Visual Age for C++ on PPC. Hopefully, as these machines become more popular gcc will become better on the PPC.

      I found this article that talks about this

  4. Not suprised by agent+dero · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We just heard on Slashdot that the new 3 billion plant wasn't living up to expectations, so IBM has to capitalize on this oppurtunity.

    This is also a good thing for the mac community because now the G5 will get a lot more "work" done on it, because IBM will have to compete with other 64-bit manufacturers on a broader stage than just the Mac arena.

    --
    Error 407 - No creative sig found
  5. Re:Dual 2Ghz by Dunkalis · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This isn't meant for you running Mac OS X on it. Its meant for you to run Linux on. Besides, I'd guess Mac On Linux will probably run fine. With a bit of hacking, you could probably run OS X, if you really felt like it.

    I really doubt that people wanting to run Mac OS X are the targeted group here. It is, as IBM says it is, for servers and Linux desktops.

    --
    Slashdot is a waste of time. I enjoy wasting time.
  6. Apple by lnoble · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It would be interesting to see how they compare with the PowerMac. With a 4 way system that costs only $500 more then apple's two ways this could provide some good competition for in the scientific/heavy compute PPC niche. Maybe this will show the way for 4 way xservs/highend workstations from apple.

  7. depends on the price point... by splerdu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Unless it's prices significantly lower than Apple's offerings, I wouldn't bet on it as a workstation. MacOSX already offers a great kernel with an even better GUI, and right now I wouldn't put money on Linux against that for a work desktop.

    The server market, on the other hand will definitely get a great boost. Cheap PPC970 and 64-bit = heaven for databases, web, and app servers.

  8. How they fear them! by eddy · · Score: 5, Funny

    I think it's clear from this just how much IBM fears SCO!

    :-P

    --
    Belief is the currency of delusion.
  9. Avoid Intel lockout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If Intel and MS proceed to only allowing signed software this could provide a nice escape path for Linux users

  10. Re:We already know..... by dcstimm · · Score: 3, Insightful

    the PPC970 is a 64 bit cpu...

    How can you compair a Athlon to a G5?

    Yes If you want a cheap dual smp rig then Athlons are fine. But if you want a powerfull workstation, backed by a huge company, THis is a pretty cool idea.

    im sure since IBM is the creator of a G5 they are going to be able to support them better than anything else they sell. Companies are going to see this and they will realize that these machines will be quick and easy for IBM to repair.

    Oh Sure these companies can call Bob's computer warehouse, but we all know how much better IBMs support will be....

    If I worked for a Multimillion dollar company I wouldnt want the computer repair guy going to walmart to pick up spare parts for their new server/workstation.....

  11. Re:Why? by foonf · · Score: 4, Interesting

    OS X/Darwin is entirely optimized for ppc and is developed entirely towards that end. ppc Linux is a port from something else (albeit a good one)

    NextStep was originally written for the 68k, thence ported to SPARC, x86, and PA-RISC. So PPC was the fifth architecture the basic underlying system has been ported to. So if you don't like ports, you had better throw away your Mac and switch to Windows now (oh wait sorry...the NT kernel was actually developed for the i860 first).

    And remember, Linux will be a native, fully supported OS for these machines alongside AIX -- the firmware will be designed to boot Linux, and all the hardware will be fully supported.

    --

    "(Man) tries to live his own life as if he were telling a story. But you have to choose: live or tell." --Sartre
  12. nice sound to it by bersl2 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Does anybody else think that "quad PPC" sounds like some kind of super-weapon?

  13. You are lying. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
    I own a Ibook, I know it only has a g3 900mhz cpu, but Linux FLYS on it, while macosx just rotates its little blue beach ball at me.
    You are lying. Mac OS X has a rainbow-coloured beachball, not a blue one.

    So either you don't own an iBook, haven't used OS X and are just lying about blue beachballs, or you do own an iBook and see the beachball so little you don't even know what it looks like.

    Which is it?
  14. Re:G5 alternative? by OS24Ever · · Score: 4, Insightful

    However, if the IBM Machine is geared towards business server use it's going to have an ATI 8MB hard mounted video card with no AGP slot.

    Why put an ATI Radeon 9800 Pro in a machine that is going to show a login: prompt at best?

    --

    As a rock-in-roll Physicist once said, No matter where you go, there you are.

  15. The problem with your comparison... by ZxCv · · Score: 4, Informative

    ...is that you're comparing a build-it-yourself solution to an OEM solution. The OEM solution means you don't have to spend the time and effort to build the machine, that there is a (hopefully) semi-intelligent person on the other end of an 800 number to provide support, and that if the machine goes berserk, they will be there to fix it under warranty. Two very different situations, IMO.

    ...for a machine that will kick the crap out of this great machine IBM will release...

    Based on everything I've read thus far, it seems to me the PPC970 cheaps are substantially more efficient than their P4 counterparts at the same clock speed. Because of that, I hardly doubt a quad Xeon 2.4 system would "kick the crap out" of a quad PPC970 2.0 system. It seems you're exaggerating a bit--or perhaps you have something to backup your claim?

    And when Opteron comes out...

    Opteron has been out for close to 3 months now. Machines are available from several vendors. Google is your friend.

    --

    Perl - $Just @when->$you ${thought} s/yn/tax/ &couldn\'t %get $worse;
  16. Compilers by Duncan3 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What's really important is if we see IBM release a real compiler for the 970. gcc is a complete joke on PPC.

    --
    - Adam L. Beberg - The Cosm Project - http://www.mithral.com/
    1. Re:Compilers by Phroggy · · Score: 4, Informative

      gcc is a complete joke on PPC.

      Apple uses gcc to compile Mac OS X, and pushes gcc for developers, so they've been doing their own work on gcc. The more compiler hackers that use PPC, the better gcc will become, no? Maybe this new machine will add some motivation.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  17. Re:Poster Correction by Tokerat · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Soong sez:
    A 4U base system will be around $3500. That would then definitely be a two-processor machine.
    Ummm....well then (from the article):
    The ULE models, which will run Linux and IBM's AIX OS, will ship in 2U two-way and 4U four-way configurations. A base configuration of the 4U is expected to cost less than $3,500, sources said. [emphasis mine]
    Yah. RTFA.

    IBM developed the chip, which means they developed a mobo along with it for testing. Apple had to make their own design, and they had to make it look good, and be quiet, home-friendly, and stylish. IBM gets to stamp out big ugly boxes, because really, unless you're talking about a secretary, no one in the office ever says "That is a nice lookin' rack!"

    This leads me to believe the 2U model will be priced even lower. No mention is made, however, about clock speeds, although I'm, sure IBM will make nice fast ones avalible, a $3500 base configuration for the 4U probably means four-way 1GHz. Why would the fastest chips come in the base model?

    All in all, however, these will be nice machines, and if you've ever wanted to escape the x86 world, PPC is a nice place to do it (speaking from experience). They are slightly ahead of Apple's current offerings, however IBM has the advantage there, the 970 being their own.
    And if you want to run Mac OS X, you'll be disapointed.
    --
    CAn'T CompreHend SARcaSm?
  18. This could work by cartman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    IBM already shoulders the enormous design costs of POWER4 for their high-end pSeries unix boxes. The tweaks necessary to make the PPC 970 for Apple have already been done at Apple's behest. It costs IBM very little additional R&D money to make low-end servers based on a chip they already design and manufacture for other reasons.

    This makes PPC the only competitor to x86 in the commodity server space, except Sun, but Sun's product lineup grows more stale and outclassed by the day. Using IBM's compiler the 2GHz PPC970 performs approximately equivalently to a 2.8GHz p4 using icc, which is far beyond the performance offered by the in-order execution (!!) 1.05 GHz UltraSparc iii.

    Having an alternative to x86 in the server space is desirable, because PPC will always have better heat dissipation and power consumption at a given level of performance. These are important considerations especially in the blade server market. In addition these are 64-bit boxes which will allow going beyond the 4GB memory barrier without using the "segmented memory" hack of the 36-bit memory addressed Xeons.

    In short, this could work.

  19. Re:We already know..... by Dahan · · Score: 5, Informative
    1: In order for PCI stuff to work with this platform, you need firmware for PPC. Guess what? The multitude of X86 cheap stuff doesnt work on these platforms. You probably pay 3-6 times what you'd normally pay for NICS and GFX cards. Apple does this all the time.

    No, you only need special firmware on the card if you want the computer's firmware to be able to talk to the card. Modern OSes use the firmware for very little, or they don't use it at all. For example, on a PC, you can disable a hard drive in the BIOS, but Linux will still be able to access it (assuming it's not your boot drive). Linux accesses the drive controller directly; it doesn't use the BIOS.

    So, you'll only need a special NIC if you want to netboot with that NIC. And you'll only need a special graphics card if you want to see the boot process on that card (you can use a serial console if you don't... at least these machies had better support serial console).

    5: What about power consumption issues? Last I've seen the G5's, they gobbled power faster than an overclocked Athlon.

    When did you last see a G5? A 1.8GHz PPC970 uses about 42W, while an Athlon XP 2500+ (1.833GHz) draws around 54W. I don't know how fast an overclocked Athlon would gobble power, but I'll note that the max power consumption of a non-overclocked Athlon 3200+ (2.2GHz) is 77W.

  20. Re:MOL anyone? by pherris · · Score: 3, Informative
    Quad proc OSX in MOL on IBM? Sounds tasty to me!

    About time someone brought that up. From MoL's FAQ:

    Does MOL run on non-Apple hardware?
    It does. MOL runs for instance on the Pegasos board, the Teron board and on AmigaOne hardware. In short, MOL should run on any PowerPC hardware (with the except of 601-based systems). However, the EULA of MacOS prohibits its usage on non-Apple hardware (it is of course perfectly legal to use MOL to boot a second Linux though).
    Job's is going to freak when he figures this out. =)
    --
    "And a voice was screaming: 'Holy Jesus! What are these goddamn animals?'" - HST
  21. Nonsense. by aussersterne · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A computer is a tool, not a home, it's not a fashion statement. OS X gets this right. Trivial time-wasters like themes--while they may keep you from getting bored--really don't have much practical value.

    That's bull. Mac OS X only helps "just getting work done" if you're functionally computer illiterate.

    I'm a creative pro (supposedly Mac's main market) and yet I do all my photo processing (which is extensive) in Linux.

    Why? Becuse it's about 100x faster in Linux due to the degree that I have been able to optimize my workflow:

    1) Focus-follows-mouse, always shunned by non-Unix systems and now even by Unix systems (OS X, GNOME) saves endless point-and-click strokes (find titlebar, click to focus) when you have dozens of image windows open. Each one of these is a savings of several seconds. If you're performing hundreds or thousands of manipulations on a single task in multiple windows, that adds up to hours saved, not just minutes, on focus policy alone.

    2) Fast cut/paste. Here again, the reviled behavior of X (highlight with left button, move to another window that focuses automatically, middle click where you want it to paste) saves incredible amounts of time versus the OS X or Windows behaviors (highlight with left button, hit CTRL-C, click on titlebar of destination window, click where you want to place cursor for paste, hit CTRL-V). The combination of focus-follows-mouse and keystroke-free copy/paste here again saves hours, not just minutes, when performing reptitious tasks.

    3) Floating windows are my call. Once again I can keep GIMP tool windows, layer/channel dialogs, a kcalc, my conferencing window and others on top at my discretion, rather than always having to hunt down and raise some windows (by clicking on a taskbar or a dock) that I know I will need over and over again or being stuck with others on top that I don't want there and that just take up screen real estate. And when I am done with them, I can release them from forceed raise behavior.

    4) Ability to turn of automatic raise when windows receive a click (done by combining focus follows mouse + titlebar-raise-only). I can have one window partially obscuring another and be working (inputting) in the "lower" (partially obscured) window while referring to one or more upper windows that partially obscure it. No need to "raise this one, look, raise that one, work, raise this one, look some more, raise that one, work some more, oh hell, just make a hardcopy, hmm, where shall we set the hardcopy..."

    6) Scriptability/rapid application development. Yes, the dreaded command line shell. Many of my most intense post-production tasks (i.e. laying out posters with their captions, borders, copyright notices, anti-aliasing, interpolating to proper sizes, etc.) are database driven and processed through command line tools like ImageMagick. This allows me to do things like "makeposter 20x16 img_2525.crw" and in a single pass have the image automatically fetched from archive, converted from Canon raw, edited, captioned, matted, etc. according to a list of edits and captions I've saved ahead of time for images in my database, then sent to post-production (i.e. output). Don't tell me that there is a "makeposter" command in Mac OS X that will automatically query my database of images and perform these tasks for me, or that Apple will be willing to write me one.

    [Perhaps AppleScript is capable of this stuff, perhaps not... I don't know AppleScript. But I will happily refuse to buy arguements that as well as my system works for me, I should switch to Mac OS X simply because AppleScript just "gets it right" or is "just more elegant" as scripting languages go. You'll have to give me real benefits, not techno-spiritual ones.]

    7) The X-factor. I take pictures and I write prose. Those are the things I do for a living. I have other things that I do as hobbies (i.e. the /. stuff, volunteering to run some free community network centers/labs

    --
    STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    1. Re:Nonsense. by Moridineas · · Score: 4, Interesting

      That's bull. Mac OS X only helps "just getting work done" if you're functionally computer illiterate.



      Hmm. Consider this. What if each car was entirely different (like Linux boxen can be). Let's say there are NO standards. Gas pedal could be on the left or right. There could be a gas BUTTON on the steering wheel. Breaks could likewise be accessable via a lever. And that's assuming that you keep the same rough configuration (that is, driver sits on the left side [in the US]). Just imagine if every car you ever had to drive was radically different. THat's what Linux is like.

      1) Focus-follows-mouse, always shunned by non-Unix systems and now even by Unix systems (OS X, GNOME) saves endless point-and-click strokes (find titlebar, click to focus)



      Since when do you have to click the title bar of an app to focus to it? And since when has there not been a laucher/dock/etc (first one I used was in OS/2 however I'm sure they were around before that)



      2) Fast cut/paste. Here again, the reviled behavior of X (highlight with left button, move to another window that focuses automatically, middle click where you want it to paste) saves incredible amounts of time versus the OS X or Windows behaviors (highlight with left button, hit CTRL-C, click on titlebar of destination window, click where you want to place cursor for paste, hit CTRL-V). The combination of focus-follows-mouse and keystroke-free copy/paste here again saves hours, not just minutes, when performing reptitious tasks.



      It may save hours for you--but shouldn't the interface be irrelevant unless you're computer illiterature (your words, not mine). Personally, I get terribly frustrated when I'm trying to paste over something and end up accidentally clearing my clipboard buffer in oldschool X. I prefer windows/mac style (I have mice button bound to copy/paste actually--doesn't work NEARLY as well in X because of the issue I just cited).

      6) Scriptability/rapid application development. Yes, the dreaded command line shell. Many of my most intense post-production tasks (i.e. laying out posters with their captions, borders, copyright notices, anti-aliasing, interpolating to proper sizes, etc.) are database driven and processed through command line tools like ImageMagick. etc etc



      I'm not an AppleScript pro by anymeans, but from what I know, AppleScript is the exact functional equivalent of traditional unix style scripting tools. There's a macro recorder for one thing which is a GREAT feature that unixes have no equivalent too. In addition AppleScript can be used to control any applicationsm, to an incredible degree. I've worked in DTP, try searching for Quark AppleSCripts--the things some of them can do are AMAZING, IThink you'd be surprised. I hope that's not too techno-spiritual for you ;)

      Just to be clear--don't get me wrong, I'm very glad you like Linux. But I don't think most people even WANT the kind of control and variability that you need. It's all great for people like you and I, who hang out and slashdot and do this stuff for fun, to talk about the user experience, but from my work experiences, most of the people who use computers don't care about how they work--they just want them to be easy to use and to not break :p I'm sure you've seen a user befuddled when something changes slightly. One graphic designer I was helping recover email for last week couldn't figure out how to get into her netscale email because some of her settings had gotten trashed and the "mail" button (along with Composer, NAvigator on that little floating bar) were at the bottom of the screen instead of floating to the side where they had been..I had to show exactly where to click. To most people, computers are a tool and nothing more. Like I said earlier, can you imagine if all cars interior controls etc were totally designed by the whim of the moment?

    2. Re:Nonsense. by sniggly · · Score: 3, Informative
      You'd have to give up some, Linux/KDE 3.1 on my TI powerbook is much faster than OSX - so when I have email, IM, a webbrowser (konq/safari) etc open the Linux/KDE combo beats the OSX combo. In stuff like screen updates and responsiveness.

      If i want more raw speed I start up in fluxbox or another wm with less overhead than KDE. Like the guy said, he wants to be productive, and Xwindows gives him that productivity out of the box. If he would go your path he would get huge slowdowns (have you ever tried loading an X11 app on top of OSX?)

      It would be very beneficial to Apple to watch KDE even closer and employ more of its methods (they already use konq). The many customizations can be hidden in an advanced configuration manager.

      Have you ever tried to run linux/xwindows on ppc? it's really simple, you can try mandrake 9.2, very nice and speedy distro.

      --
      Of those to whom much is given, much is required.
    3. Re:Nonsense. by cuyler · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'd like to recommend a Mac OS X program for you: CodeTek VirtualDesktop.

      It adds the following to OS X:
      => Virtual Desktops (up to 100)
      => Edge flipping between desktops
      => Hotkeys to switch between desktops (I have it be the same as my Enlightenment settings)
      => The ability to handle individual applications differently that normal settings
      => Focus follows mouse

      That does not address all of your concerns of course, but it does make using OS X a little more like a real Unix system.

      Personally I like the CMD-C, CMD-V to copy and paste. I always have to stop myself under other Unix systems from copying a URL I want to view, going to my browser, selecting the URL and pasting the first URL overtop. You can't do that on more Unix system because it'll copy the URL you are trying to paste over automatically. That was one of my pet-peeves with I work in 100% Linux. For you, it's the reverse.

      As for your points, 1, 3 and 4 are handled by CodeTek Virtual Desktop (I particularly enjoy 3, I have a desktop for each task that I have, browsing, instant messaging, e-mail, etc...).

      For number 6, I use the shell, I use Perl, I use Applescript and I use bash (sometimes I'll use C or C++ too, depending on what I'm doing). I can't think of what I did under Linux scripting-wise that I can't do under Mac OS X.

      For number 7, I actually will load up KDE or TWM on one of my desktops if I want the nice classic feel (this also gives the same feel for your number 2).

      Oh, yeah, I couldn't think of anything to help you with number 5 - I couldn't find it :-)

      I'm not trying to say 'You should use Mac OS X', but I would like to think that people shouldn't discount it because people think that Mac OS X is just simplifying Unix by removing features. I find that all it takes is a little looking around in order to find how to do what you want on OS X. I now work 100% with OS X. My OS X, although is still had the aqua theme (which I can get rid of) it doesn't look at all like a normal OS X workstation.

      For me, I have found that with enough poking around I can get a system to work for me whether its Linux, OS X, Windows or BeOS. I found that Linux was the easiest to configure (outside the norm) - even more than OS X (that was much easier to configure within the norm).

      That's just my $0.02 CDN.

    4. Re:Nonsense. by Arker · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Although I happen to be using OSX as I write this, and I really do like the system (and I'm not computer illiterate by a long shot) I tend to agree with most of what you say. The same things you talk about in X I miss on my Mac. It is quite annoying in many ways.

      But, in my current job, I simply must use SPSS which is only available for Windows or Mac. So that was my choice. Given that choice, Mac is the clear favourite.

      As other posters have pointed out, it does have a quite functional command line, and it does have X available to run inside of Aqua. Sadly the latter is slow as a dog, and you can't just ditch the hideous Aqua WM and run everything inside something decent like WindowMaker yet, but hey, look at the alternative.

      Write me a fully compatible SPSS clone for linux, and I'll wipe OSX and install Gentoo/PPC in a heartbeat. Until then, I'm just glad I don't have to run XP on my beautiful little laptop.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    5. Re:Nonsense. by El · · Score: 3, Insightful
      There could be a gas BUTTON on the steering wheel. Breaks could likewise be accessable via a lever.

      You've just described an adaptive vehicle, as used by handicapped persons. There are thousands of them. Why? Because they work much better than a standard car for their intended customer. Now, tell me again what's wrong with customing your OS?

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

  22. Re:We already know..... by fymidos · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Come on moderator. Explain why I'm wrong instead of slapping me with a mod point

    i would guess that you are punished for talking about things you really don't know.

    You probably pay 3-6 times what you'd normally pay for NICS and GFX cards. Apple does this all the time.

    But you only need one nic and one card, and they will propably come bundled with the machine :>

    2: SMP's nice. So is PPC. But how much will you actually save if you went to this versus a new 1 or 2 Athlon setup?

    If you count the administrative costs i could buy not one but two 4way 970's, costing more than 8k, versus 4 beowulf athlons costing below 2k and still break even in a month. And i would have an identical machine for backup.

    3...I can go to WalMart, or ripoff computer store and buy parts I need now... Not a good idea.

    Go to walmart to buy parts for your server? Now that's a good idea ...

    4: In my statement about Beowulf beating this, What's the cost/performance of 4 Athlon 1.5GHz with 1 gig of ram each (on 100MBps) versus one of these? I bet the name of "server" raises that cost atleast 1000$.

    A 4way intel machine will cost far more though. More than $10K. These machines *will* be a huge success whether intel or not. You cannot address everything with beowulf you know...
    Come on, a 4u 64bit under $5k? This is the dream of every fortran programmer i know, it is the perfect terminal server, the perfect development machine etc. Oh, and no one can come to you with a "why don't we use win2k3 here?" line.

    What about power consumption issues?

    huh? what about them? 970's need less power than most mobile chips. Where did you see that g5 "goble power faster than athlons"??? this is most definetely wrong.

    --
    Washington bullets will simply be known as the "Bulle
  23. Linux usability vs. Mac OS X by AvantLegion · · Score: 5, Interesting
    The problem is that Linux vs. Mac OS X in terms of usability is not just "customizability vs. unchangable standard".

    I am a Linux user first and foremost... but the thing is, no matter HOW much time I put into customizing things, I can not make a Linux desktop as clean and easy to use as a Mac OS X desktop.

    It's not just that having Only One Way To Do Things (tm) makes the easy desktop experience, but it's the fact that the One Way is thoroughly thought-out and streamlined. In Linux, we have tons of disparate pieces to put together in countless concatenations... but in the end, what we unavoidably get is an unstreamlined construct of disparate pieces.

    I understand the appeal of customizing, and I do think Mac OS X could stand to allow a little more customizing without sacrificing the benefits of the OS. Linux will remain dominant on my PC desktop, and it will be dual-booted on my soon-to-be-purchased PowerBook, but the main reason I am getting the PowerBook is for Mac OS X and its ability to stay out of the way. The best OS is the one that interferes with my work the least. Mac OS X does that. Linux, when configured and tweaked to my liking and all that, does a good job by way of being stable and such, but some of those disparate pieces irritate. (Windows, of course, constantly interferes by being unstable and generally a source of irritation).

    Ideally, I'd like to see Linux meet OS X halfway. Choice is good, but not when the choices are 15 different mediocre options. Can't we get 4 really good ones instead?

  24. Base configuration may not come with 4 CPUS by Jess · · Score: 4, Informative
    The article states:
    ...will ship in 2U two-way and 4U four-way configurations. A base configuration of the 4U is expected to cost less than $3,500, sources said.

    But it doesn't actually say that the base configuration comes with 4 cpus at this price. It's very common for IBM and others to offer a lower price configuration with empty cpu sockets for later upgrades.