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Latest Ballmergram Bashes Linux TCO

Phoe6 writes "Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer has used the software giant's latest executive email to stoke up Microsoft's fight against the rise of Linux. The 2,600 word missive was titled 'Customer focus: comparing Windows with Linux and UNIX'. In it, Ballmer repeated the key themes of Microsoft's controversial Get The Facts campaign. Zdnet has its report here." Linuxworld also has a story.

680 comments

  1. read the words by mrpuffypants · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yankee's study concluded that, in large enterprises, a significant Linux deployment or total switch from Windows to Linux would be three to four times more expensive - and take three times as long to deploy - as an upgrade from one version of Windows to a newer release. And nine out of 10 enterprise customers said that such a change wouldn't provide any tangible business gains.

    Whoda thunk that it'd be more expensive to entirely change your infrastructure from Windows to Linux than it would be to simply upgrade to a new version of Windows????? Wow! We should install Windows everywhere!

    Who here also thinks it'd be just as expensive to convert from Linux to Windows?

    1. Re:read the words by Sensible+Clod · · Score: 5, Funny

      Who here also thinks it'd be just as expensive to convert from Linux to Windows?

      (Entire planet moves a fraction of an inch further away from the sun as millions of /.ers' hands shoot up, then returns as they come back down.)

      --

      The difference between spam and poop is that you don't have to dig through septic tanks looking for real food. -- Me
    2. Re:read the words by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I read that as something completely unintentional I'm sure:

      upgrade from one version of Windows to a newer release and nine out of 10 enterprise customers said that such a change wouldn't provide any tangible business gains.

      Balmey wouldn't have meant it that way, would he?

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    3. Re:read the words by Jugalator · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Who here also thinks it'd be just as expensive to convert from Linux to Windows?

      Yeah, but that's beyond most companies concern since they don't upgrade that way, and therefore probably not seen as worth bringing up. Compare to analyzing a marriage between Elaine and LeChuck isn't even discussed, since that shouldn't be able to happen. :-)

      ...

      Oh drat! You already posted and can't mod!

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    4. Re:read the words by SenatorOrrinHatch · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Am I the only one who sees a strong parallel between a billionaire CEO like Ballmer telling his employess he "wanted truly independent, factual information" and say the President telling his intelligence analysts that he wants to know about, say WMDs in Iraq or ties to terrorists? I'm only 26, but I'm pretty certain that if a "senior Microsoft team led by General Manager Martin Taylor" had come back to Ballmer and said, "Sorry boss, but we just can't beat free when it comes to TCO between two functionally identical products" then our man Mr. Taylor would be out of a very very well paying job, and the assignment would be given to the next peon in line and the procedure iterated until the boss has the "facts" that he wants to hear. Then again, I believe this is the kind of thing they teach in MBA programs, so I suppose any executive worth their $200,000/annum would get the message the first time.

      --
      The Christian in me says it's wrong, but the corrections officer in me says, 'I love to make a grown man piss himself.'
    5. Re:read the words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      So what do you want to be when you grow up?

    6. Re:read the words by sonicattack · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is similar to a circular argument I've heard used before:

      The Windows platform is a superior solution, because it integrates better (with a previously existing Windows-installation, that is.)

      Better to not start down that road, and only in very, very special circumstances install Microsoft software at all.

      We're talking about a company that from the beginning lied and deceived to get where they wanted. Explicitly coding software to break when used together with a competitor's software, to gain an advantage?

      A Leopard Never Changes Its Spots. At least not this leopard. And by going for open standards and software designed to accomplish a job, not to lock in the customer, we may kill this leopard one day. :)

    7. Re:read the words by pete-classic · · Score: 2, Funny

      Aww, comeon. LeChuck's just misunderstood. You try walking around with your beard on fire and see if you don't get a little grumpy.

      -Peter

    8. Re:read the words by Tanktalus · · Score: 1

      So does that mean moving from mainframe to windows would be expensive, too, like one of his other points?

      Oops, I suppose that announces that I actually RTFA'd. That'll get me either a "flamebait" or an "overrated" for sure...

    9. Re:read the words by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Whoda thunk that it'd be more expensive to entirely change your infrastructure from Windows to Linux than it would be to simply upgrade to a new version of Windows????? Wow! We should install Windows everywhere!

      More important: who in their right mind would do a wholesale change in their infrastructure? That's just asking for a disaster, I don't care what you're deploying.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    10. Re:read the words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd like to say that I agree, and that it never happens, but right now, at my company, we're switching from 100% Solaris on the backend to Windows Server 2003.

      Also, we're converting out public facing servers to Windows from Redhat. please stab us in the face.

    11. Re:read the words by Phixxr · · Score: 1
      Holy crap! Mad props on the impromptu MI reference :)

      -phixxr

      --
      ungggghhhh
    12. Re:read the words by 4of12 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      total switch from Windows to Linux would be three to four times more expensive - and take three times as long to deploy - as an upgrade from one version of Windows to a newer release.

      The words sound plausible from what I know, and I'm a Linux user. It would be more expensive to move to Linux from Windows than to move to a new version of Windows.

      But where Ballmer's credibility falls down is in the mortgaged cost of continuing on the Windows path for years and years vs the lesser cost of Linux. Enough years on the Microsoft upgrade treadmill should convince anybody that they ought to:

      • look at alternatives
      • test out alternatives in their environment
      • consider long term costs
      • try to think about all the costs and benefits

      Yes, even Linux users should do all of those things. My assessment is that people migrating to Linux have done their hard homework early rather than rely upon the sales droids reassuring them that they're in a big boat with lots of other clients, getting lots of buzzword-compliant advantages.

      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
    13. Re:read the words by john82 · · Score: 2, Informative

      total switch from Windows to Linux would be three to four times more expensive - and take three times as long to deploy - as an upgrade from one version of Windows to a newer release.

      I see many of you nodding your heads that this is true, but is it really? How many of you run Linux on something that wouldn't run WinXP? Sure, MS claims that XP will run on anything marginally better than a Sinclair ZX81. Experience says otherwise.

      BUT, you can run a decent Linux installation with less. So if I don't have to upgrade my CPU, memory and potentially other components in the name of upgrading to XP or 2003, just how valid is that claim that a switch over to Linux and open source software will be 3 to 4 times as expensive. Who says that it will ALWAYS be more expensive?

    14. Re:read the words by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      Rich.

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    15. Re:read the words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Entire planet moves a fraction of an inch further away from the sun as millions of /.ers' hands shoot up... It's night time on my side of the planet, you insensitive US-centric clod! Your nickname is hereby revoked.

    16. Re:read the words by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Balmey wouldn't have meant it that way, would he?

      Maybe he went to the Michael Moore School of Making Misleading Statements.

    17. Re:read the words by kkovach · · Score: 1

      So, you're saying an apple is not an orange?

      - Kevin

      --
      The less confident you are, the more serious you have to act.
    18. Re:read the words by SoTuA · · Score: 1
      There was this russian economist(*), that was commissioned by Stalin to make a study and prove capitalism was bound to die.

      So the guy makes his study, and his conclusions are that the economy moves in cycles, up/down/up/down... but he didn't "prove" that capitalism was bound to dissappear like Stalin said.

      This economist died in Siberia. Enforced vacation there after not reaching Stalin's desired results.

      (*) don't remember the name and can't be arsed to look it up. Besides, this is /., you expected good information, with credited sources? HA!

    19. Re:read the words by Phleg · · Score: 1

      Hardware costs, while not negligible, are still not a major component of the costs of upgrading. Far more expensive are retraining, data conversion, replacing incompatible software, etc.

      With:

      Windows 2000 Server => Windows 2003 Server Retraining ~ 0 Data Conversion ~ 0 Software Replacement ~ 0 Windows 2000 Server => Red Hat Enterprise Linux Retraining ~ Massive Data Conversion ~ Probably Enormous Software Replacement ~ Indeterminate

      Can you figure out which one is cheaper?

      --
      No comment.
    20. Re:read the words by EvilNTUser · · Score: 1

      "Yeah, but that's beyond most companies concern since they don't upgrade that way"

      My college just switched from Digital Unix to Windows Server.

      I sent them a letter very politely asking what the fuck they were smoking, but never got a response. I wondered about it until I found out that I hadn't received some very important emails. Yup, they'd managed to break redirects during the upgrade.

      It's now been three months and things still aren't working properly. Morons. Sooner or later they'll find this attached to their door with a knife.

      --
      My Sig: SEGV
    21. Re:read the words by Slime-dogg · · Score: 1

      I actually want to know which one of you raises your hand to something that you read on the internet.

      Stay there now. There's someone on the way to shoot you.

      --
      You need to restart your computer. Hold down the Power button for several seconds or press the Restart button.
    22. Re:read the words by chainsaw1 · · Score: 1

      Sensible != Sensitive.

      Plus, if we had a truly international audience, wouldn't all the hand motions from opposite sides of the planet cancel?

      --
      - Sig
    23. Re:read the words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Whoda thunk that it'd be more expensive to entirely change your infrastructure from Windows to Linux than it would be to simply upgrade to a new version of Windows????? ..... Who here also thinks it'd be just as expensive to convert from Linux to Windows?

      And nine out of 10 enterprise customers said that such a change wouldn't provide any tangible business gains.

      That last sentence is the one that's most relevant. Sure, it would be just as expensive (or more) to convert from Linux to Windows. But most companies are currently using Windows. Therefore, the only comparison that's relevant to the majority of companies is the comparison of cost between upgrading their existing (Windows) infrastructure, versus switching it to the alternative (Linux).

      Given that last statement about 9 out of 10 customers not thinking there would be any tangible business gain to incurring that larger expense, the statement makes a strong point.

    24. Re:read the words by Silvertre · · Score: 1

      They point out that it's costly to migrate from windows to linux, yet they leave out the fact that once you're using linux upgrades are basically free. Funny how they never compare the cost of upgrading linux vs the cost of upgrading windows.

    25. Re:read the words by Tired+and+Emotional · · Score: 1
      The interesting thing is that it costs 1/3 to 1/4 of the cost to upgrade between versions of Windows that it costs to completely convert to Linux.

      Which means that after 3 or 4 releases of Windows you break even by cutting across to Linux!

      Of course you still will want to upgrade your Linux every so often, and that will incur a cost, but, unlike Windows, where upgrading one machine often means upgrading every machine, you don't have to upgrade every machine at once when using Linux.

      I was puzzled by his numbers on vulnerabilities. He said that "Windows had fixed 120 vulnerabilities in a 12 month period" which implies an arrival rate of 10 a month but later on he gives a much lower arrival rate.

      Perhaps the answer is there was a huge backlog.

      I also doubt that his comparitive vulnerability reporting rates have any validity. I doubt he included MS vulnerabilities found internally, whereas the Linux numbers will include all vulnerabilities, and the application base over which the Linux numbers are reported is almost certainly significantly larger.

      --
      Squirrel!
    26. Re:read the words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but they might produce a nice earthquake.

    27. Re:read the words by The+Spoonman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You put it in, but you glossed over the absolute most important sentence in that paragraph:

      And nine out of 10 enterprise customers said that such a change wouldn't provide any tangible business gains.

      That's the most important point by far. Sure, a company could spend millions of extra dollars and tons of extra time converting to Linux, but for what gain? We've been hearing for years how Linux provides exactly the same or similar capabilities as Windows-based counterparts. So, where's the gain? If it's 3-4 times more expensive to do the conversion, then that also means we can upgrade to the newest version of Windows 3 or 4 times and STILL not spend as much as it would cost to covert to Linux. Even with a liberal 2-3 product upgrade cycle for Windows, that means it would still take 6-12 years for an ROI. Most businesses don't plan that far in advance for ROI.

      You've already conceded the point that it would be more expensive to convert an infrastructure from Windows to Linux, so then explain the gain? An ROI in 12 years? Yeah, take that to your CFO and see how quickly he jumps on it.

      --
      Which is more painful? Going to work or gouging your eye out with a spoon? Find out!
      http://www.workorspoon.com
    28. Re:read the words by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      Well, /. has a mostly US audience, and it's daytime over here when the story came out, so... wouldn't we have moved a fraction of an inch closer to the sun, rather than away from it?

    29. Re:read the words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True. MBAs are taught how to lick/kiss ass more than anything. Any "research" they do only gives info higher ups want to hear. Too bad we can't clean our gene pool of these fools.

    30. Re:read the words by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "Whoda thunk that it'd be more expensive to entirely change your infrastructure from Windows to Linux than it would be to simply upgrade to a new version of Windows?????"

      Well, given that Linux is 'free'....

      I guess the thought that there's a point to be made here is a little elusive.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    31. Re:read the words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...a slight, but largely irrelevant shift in its orbital trajectory...."

    32. Re:read the words by Stepping+Razor · · Score: 3, Funny

      If all the septics* raised there hands towards the sun wouldn't that push the earth away from it for a moment?

      (septic tank = yank, a charming bit of rhyming slang)

    33. Re:read the words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      please stab us in the face

      IP please...

    34. Re:read the words by Phisbut · · Score: 1
      I was puzzled by his numbers on vulnerabilities. He said that "Windows had fixed 120 vulnerabilities in a 12 month period" which implies an arrival rate of 10 a month but later on he gives a much lower arrival rate.

      I just thought it was funny that he provided a link to Secunia for Red Hat but not for Windows Server 2003. He probably didn't want to show that, even though Red Hat seems to have more vulnerabilities, 0% of them are unpatched and 23% had a criticality rating of "Highly critical" and above, while Windows Server 2003 had less vulnerabilities, but 13% are still unpatched and 52% of them have a criticality rating of "Highly critical" and above.

      Nah... he probably didn't want us to know that...

      --
      After 3 days without programming, life becomes meaningless
      - The Tao of Programming
    35. Re:read the words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, Because going from an NT 4 domain to an AD domain is SO painless.

      Not to mention MS is getting much better at breaking applications. I have applications in-house that ran on Solaris 2.5.1 that are running without mod on Solaris 9. Every time we release a new windows version (heck, sometimes just a service pack) a ton of programs have to be touched.

    36. Re:read the words by LO0G · · Score: 1

      How well does Redhat integrate with Debian?

      Can you use the same management tools work for both distros?

      How about replicating config changes - does the same script work for both distros?

    37. Re:read the words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      raised there hands [...]
      a charming bit of rhyming slang

      I would suggest learning the language you actually speak before you start mangling it with rhyming tricks from the wrong century.

    38. Re:read the words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > BUT, you can run a decent Linux installation with less

      What's a "decent" Linux installation? FVWM? Netscape 4? haha. KDE + Mozilla + OpenOffice = Way more bloat that Windows/Office XP.

      Not that it matters on any machine buit in the last 3 years, but please spare us with the "old hardware" angle -- it is obsolete propaganda that simply does not apply to the modern Linux desktop.

    39. Re:read the words by AhBeeDoi · · Score: 1

      Well, I would forego installing Windows and just go for the upgrade, since it's so much cheaper. I'm sure MS would accomodate in order to keep Linux at bay.

    40. Re:read the words by Lobo93 · · Score: 1

      Well, that poor economist should have looked up from his numbers and graphs and just visualized the problem: "How will capitalism die?". Simple. Overpopulation.

      "You can't have capitalism without expanding markets, and you can't have expanding markets without population growth." - Sam Smith

      Anyone fancy a Malthusian future?

      Aw, shucks... *blows dust off of a black flag*

      --
      "The only clear view is from atop the mountain of our dead selves." - Peter Carroll
    41. Re:read the words by upsidedown_duck · · Score: 1

      ...I'm pretty certain that if a "senior Microsoft team led by General Manager Martin Taylor" had come back to Ballmer and said, "Sorry boss, but we just can't beat free when it comes to TCO between two functionally identical products" then our man Mr. Taylor would be out of a very very well paying job, and the assignment would be given to the next peon in line and the procedure iterated until the boss has the "facts" that he wants to hear.

      This is pretty much how Rumsfeld's war plan was developed, according to a recent documentary about the Iraq war. One general said "500,000 troops with post-invasion troubles", Rummy said "next", and another general said "50,000 with no troubles". The rest is history.

      --
      -- "Makes Little Debbie look like a pile of puke!" - Moe Szyslak
    42. Re:read the words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the IBM 600e that I have running SuSE 9.1 is bloat-ware? And you say Windows/Office XP is better? I envie your skills in self delusion.

      Please, at least get a clue. I DID try the XP line on it. 4 minutes to boot into the same o/s as an upgraded 2000. Suse, Slackware, Mandrake, and BSD have, for developement reasons, been installed, run faster, & for the record ACTUALLY WORK!?!?

      Yet, I DO think windows is great for job security. For Tech Support, that is.

      Enjoy the fruits of your labor, I known I will.

    43. Re:read the words by LardBrattish · · Score: 1

      Exactly - the correct comparison for Yankee to have done is to compare how much it would cost to go from 2000 - 2003/XP compared with how much it would cost to upgrade from, say, Suse 8.0 - Suse 9.0

      Of course we all know that this comparison would not produce the "desired" result so it wouldn't be published by Microsoft. Otherwise even the most clueless PHB would be able to do the maths:-

      One painful transition followed by virtually free upgrades forever (plus longer lifespans for hardware and cheaper overall support costs because Unix Admins do more work & less firefighting) vs expensive upgrades every 4 years or so and regular pain every time the worm du jour rips through the organisation.

      duh...

      --
      What are you listening to? (http://megamanic.blogetery.com/)
    44. Re:read the words by sonicattack · · Score: 1

      Can you use the same management tools work for both distros?

      Yes. Both Emacs AND Vi works on both distros. :)

      I might be wrong in guessing what you refer to with "management tools", but if you're talking configuration systems such as Webmin, then, yes, you can.

      How about replicating config changes - does the same script work for both distros?

      Depends on what kind of config changes you're referring to, and what you mean by "script". Of course, systems that already have been designed with replication in mind, like DNS and LDAP, and databases that support replication would work out-of-the-box, independent of what operating system the different machines ran.

      Give me an example of what "config changes" you mean, and I'll tell you (if I know, that is) if they can be replicated between different distros.

      Another good reason for successful integration between different Linux distros / other Open Source systems is that the whole concept never was about deliberately locking people in with proprietery, sometimes cunningly changed protocols and APIs, solely for profit reasons.

    45. Re:read the words by indigeek · · Score: 1

      Entire planet moves a fraction of an inch further away from the sun as millions of /.ers' hands shoot up
      No, no, the Americans on the sun-side of earth would be cancelled out by the Chinese on the other side of the planet. The net effect would be to slow down the rotation of the planet and cause a slightly longer day.

    46. Re:read the words by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      And nine out of 10 enterprise customers said that such a change wouldn't provide any tangible business gains.

      That's the most important point by far. Sure, a company could spend millions of extra dollars and tons of extra time converting to Linux, but for what gain?

      Well, that's the thing.. he said 9 out of 10 customers... Obviously they're already of the opinion that Windows is better, or they'd be running something else. That could be interpreted as "They're pulling the wool over their customers' eyes," or just as easily, "They have a 90% satisfaction rate," or "Windows users don't know what they're missing," etc. etc. Statistics can be skewed to represent anything.

    47. Re:read the words by The+Spoonman · · Score: 1

      Well, that's the thing.. he said 9 out of 10 customers...

      Obviously they're customers or they wouldn't be concerned about cost of switching away from Windows to anything else. The points though:

      a) who says MS or their consultants said, "if it would cost you this much to switch from Windows to Linux would you still do it"? Most companies already do that kind of evaluation regularly.

      b) even if it only cost a dollar more to switch away, why would anyone do it for no tangible benefit? Actually, let me clarify...no GUARANTEED tangible benefit. We've been hearing for years that Linux is "better", but there's no "proof" of that. It's all opinion. In these economic times, every dollar counts.

      --
      Which is more painful? Going to work or gouging your eye out with a spoon? Find out!
      http://www.workorspoon.com
    48. Re:read the words by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      I wasn't advocating one position or the other, merely stating that

      a) asking current customers if they thought they should be running linux (or however you want to word it) isn't indicative of anything, for or against,

      and

      b) there are many ways to interpret the answers

      But seriously, what company in their right mind would say "Shit, we were wrong. You guys go ahead and switch, you're getting screwed by sticking with our product." I'm just as skeptical when a pro-linux organization comes out with it's study saying linux has a lower TCO. Everyone's got ulterior motives.

    49. Re:read the words by LO0G · · Score: 1

      I run an enterprise with 500 servers.

      Half of them are running Debian, half of them are running RedHat.

      I want to roll out a configuration change and I want it to apply to all 500 servers.

      VI and EMACS don't cut it as admin tools, I'm not going to make the change by hand on all 500 servers.

      How do I make a single change to the TCP configuration for all 500 servers.

      That's what Ballmer's talking about. The monoculture allows Microsoft to provide tools for enterprise management that allow an administrator to make a configuration change on a single workstation and have that configuration change automatically apply to all machines in the enterprise.

      If you've got a mixed distro environment, can you do that?

    50. Re:read the words by sonicattack · · Score: 1

      VI and EMACS don't cut it as admin tools, I'm not going to make the change by hand on all 500 servers.

      That was mostly meant as a joke; I wouldn't count a text editor as a "management tool", even though there probably are some available for Emacs, and Emacs most certainly would be insulted by being called a mere "text editor". :)

      How do I make a single change to the TCP configuration for all 500 servers.

      If there are no webmin plugin for running such a command on a set of servers simultaneously, or a daemon for this kind of stuff, I'd use SSH key authentication combined with a shell script loop, something similar to this: (not syntax checked):

      for i in `cat /tmp/serverlist` ; do ssh $i 'echo 3 >/proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_syn_retries' ; done

      Now, for such an occasion, I agree that there could be nicer ways to accomplish this, and there probably is. I just haven't the time right now to look for it. :)

      Good point, though.

    51. Re:read the words by 4of12 · · Score: 1

      How many of you run Linux on something that wouldn't run WinXP?

      I see Linux being deployed schizophrenically.

      That is, my Linux machine is typically loaded with to the gills with advanced hardware, U320 RAID controllers, etc. (I must admit I google through for Linux hardware compatibility before specifying the machine (hint to vendors)).

      And, yet, still, at the very same time, I expect I can move that old P-II doorstop machine into a piddly webserver or print server running Linux that ought to stay up until Armageddon.

      That breadth of applicability on their OS is what Windows admins have come not to expect from Microsoft.

      "Whizbang new software needs whizbang new hardware."
      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
    52. Re:read the words by ThJ · · Score: 1

      This is a bit of a stupid question, and it doesn't really belong in this discussion, but is there any way to send a private message to a Slashdot user?

    53. Re:read the words by Lobo93 · · Score: 1

      Beklager, det ser ikke ut som om det er mulig; har sjekket FAQ'en, men ser kun en mulighet til å poste under den enkeltes journal.

      Og ja, jeg er norsk jeg også. ;) Kristiansand, vel å merke...

      --
      "The only clear view is from atop the mountain of our dead selves." - Peter Carroll
    54. Re:read the words by ThJ · · Score: 1

      Okei. Skulle du ha lyst å ta en prat, kan du jeg jo kontaktes på Gmail-kontoen min (vises headeren min).

    55. Re:read the words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Yankee's study concluded that, in large enterprises, a significant Linux deployment or total switch from Windows to Linux would be three to four times more expensive - and take three times as long to deploy - as an upgrade from one version of Windows to a newer release. And nine out of 10 enterprise customers said that such a change wouldn't provide any tangible business gains."

      Why don't they just say, "We have you locked in and it's going to cost you if you want out."

    56. Re:read the words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The economist in question was Nikolai Dmitrijewitsch Kondratieff (1892 - 1938). The cycle was dubbed the Kondratieff Wave.

      Took me about five tries but found it using these search words:

      economist Stalin capitalism "moves in cycles"

    57. Re:read the words by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      well the lag on the internet might be enough to cause one side of the world to raise ythir hands slightly ahead of the other side. This might result in hand going down ojn one side as they are going up one the other and make it all the same direction.

      Then again, thats asuming this is even possible

    58. Re:read the words by WinterpegCanuck · · Score: 1

      Slashdotters are only awake durring the dark hours.

  2. Ballmer wants to hear from you by scupper · · Score: 4, Informative

    Excerpt from last paragraph of Ballmer memo:

    If the evidence at our www.microsoft.com/getthefacts Web site doesn't sufficiently convey the benefits and value of the Microsoft platform, we want to hear from you so we can work even harder to get that information to you.

    I can't wait to read the the response to his invitation.

    1. Re:Ballmer wants to hear from you by itsnotthenetwork · · Score: 1

      So, he is saying that if you didn't "get" it, he wants to try to sell you harder...

    2. Re:Ballmer wants to hear from you by scupper · · Score: 1

      He's probably wanted to say:

      "So I can get it through your thick skull."

      or

      "So I can drown you in self-serving case studies of companies we gave licensing deals."

    3. Re:Ballmer wants to hear from you by R.Caley · · Score: 3, Funny
      I can't wait to read the the response to his invitation.

      Since no one sane replies to a MAKE MONEY FAST email, which is what his message is, the only entertainment to be gained from the replies will be of the rather sick kind people get from watching cripples fall dosn stairs.

      Mind you, I'm pretty sick myself when it comes to humour...

      --
      _O_
      .|<
      The named which can be named is not the true named
    4. Re:Ballmer wants to hear from you by igny · · Score: 1
      so we can work even harder to get that information to you.

      There are many ways to "work harder"

      • "we will make an offer you can't refuse"
      • "we will repeat this until you learn"
      • "spanking will teach you discipline and loyalty"
      --
      In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. - Yogi Berra
    5. Re:Ballmer wants to hear from you by antiMStroll · · Score: 1

      Balmer can ask Jason Matusow, Director of MS's Shared Source Initiative, or read Doc Searle's coverage in the November Linux Journal. Jason was the OSCon were Phil Moore, Executive Director of the Unix Engineering team of Morgan Stanley, predicted that by 2007 latest 90% of his companiy's core infrastructure, "where the money is", will be Unix. The desktops, which "are a pain in the ass" he leaves to Microsoft. It's a 'Fortune 40' company.

    6. Re:Ballmer wants to hear from you by serutan · · Score: 1

      I can't wait to read the response to his invitation.

      You mean the response to, "If you still hate Windows call us so we can keep working on you?"

      It goes something like this:

      ...

      ...crickets chirping

      ...

      ...tumbleweed blows by

  3. The good news is... by Sensible+Clod · · Score: 1

    he hasn't figured out that people are starting to see through that 'get the facts' crap.

    The bad news is, some people still do believe it...

    *sigh*

    --

    The difference between spam and poop is that you don't have to dig through septic tanks looking for real food. -- Me
    1. Re:The good news is... by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Good to see that Micros~1 is running out of ideas to fight Linux, and must resort to recycling their same old collection of lies, damn lies, and statistics.

      BTW, why is it none of these "TCO" studies consider the effects or cleanup costs of Windows trojans, worms, viruses, or spyware? I wouldn't trust any study which doesn't include those figures into the equation for a "total" cost of ownership.

    2. Re:The good news is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Just the cleanup costs? How about the cost of damage that those can do ?

    3. Re:The good news is... by Dman33 · · Score: 1

      ...the effects or cleanup costs of Windows trojans, worms, viruses, or spyware?

      Okay, but remember, they will then come up with the argument that the only reason that these things are not on Linux is because the people that write the trojans, worms, viruses, and spyware target the largest audience. Thus, if Linux were to gain the majority of the desktop market, these would be just as common therefore not a factor in comparing TCO as it would be a wash.

      Not that I believe that, but that is the argument.

    4. Re:The good news is... by DMadCat · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Okay, but remember, they will then come up with the argument that the only reason that these things are not on Linux is because the people that write the trojans, worms, viruses, and spyware target the largest audience.

      Nope. If you read the letter you might notice they came up with an even better one.

      Ballmer - And as Yankee Group noted in its Linux, UNIX and Windows TCO Comparison study, "Linux-specific worms and viruses are every bit as pernicious as their UNIX and Windows counterparts - and in many cases they are much more stealthy."

      So you see, Linux has all the same problems as Windows. They're just hidden better! Fear the unknown!

    5. Re:The good news is... by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

      I think you're forgetting the recent stunning announcement from Micros~1 that the viruses &c are not their fault, it's the users that keep downloading shit from the Internet... You stop your pesky users from downloading all that nasty stuff, and obviously there won't be any cleanup costs...

    6. Re:The good news is... by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

      Yes, obviously it's the users fault when they visit the wrong web site and it does a drive-by install of malware, or they open an email message addressed from a coworker but which is actually a Mydoom variant.. what we need to do is restrict *all* access to the system. Shut off all Windows boxes, unplug them, and lock them in a vault. Then Windows will be secure from those darn users. ;)

    7. Re:The good news is... by Dman33 · · Score: 1

      Ha! I did not catch that part! RTFA Failure...
      Yes, they are there but you just would never know it. NICE FUD!

    8. Re:The good news is... by Spad · · Score: 1

      So much more stealthy in fact that they avoid infecting machines in case they get caught - it's the only explanation.

    9. Re:The good news is... by Flashpot · · Score: 1

      Who needs TCO studies? Show me ROI!

      --
      That which does not kill her only prolongs my agony.
    10. Re:The good news is... by fitten · · Score: 1

      Well... if you have someone who knows what they are doing root your system, you may not know it for months. We had a machine that had been rooted for who knows how long and the only reason we knew it (we watch network traffic and such) was that the guy who rooted it got careless after a long time and did something that we noticed.

      Similarly, my home machine got rooted when it was serving as the firewall to my home network. I noticed that it was running at 100% CPU when it shouldn't have been doing anything.

      Because Linux and Unix do well isolating users from other users and such and is pretty stable, it's actually pretty easy for someone to do something that goes unnoticed for a long time.

      With Windows, at least, we get some warning signs pretty fast - machine starts crashing, becomes sluggish, etc. Not that I'm saying that this is a good thing other than it helps detect when things are abnormally wrong.

    11. Re:The good news is... by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

      But then they would be comparing speculation (what might happen to Linux) to reality (the current situation with Windows). Not that little things like that have ever stopped them before, of course.

    12. Re:The good news is... by PhraudulentOne · · Score: 1

      Or the fact that they always say it costs more to train the staff because they didn't already have inner working knowledge of *nix. Well they didn't have inner working knowledge of Windows until they bought multiple copies at home for their PC's and their schools bought multiple copies for them to learn on at school, and they putted around on them for years etc etc. All those costs factor into initial training and therefore TCO. Also, they say that the "big" linux companies are now charging for support - Microsoft has always done this as well. Microsoft does not do free support. They have their knowledge base if you want to take time to wade through their site, and there are online docs for just about everything linux has/does as well.

      It seems to me that the only arguments that MS ever uses are these:

      1) If your going to migrate from an all windows corporation - meaning your ALREADY using windows - then yes, its going to cost more to go to linux. BUT! That's only for the initial cost - just like it costs a fuck of a lot to go from NO networks/workstations to buying a shitload of MS software/licenses. After a couple of years of using Opensource solutions and having great interoperability and not having to renew all your licensing and upgrading the newest MS Office, not having to deal with virii/trojan cleanups, not having spyware throughout the entire system, not having every user run as Admin and screw up eachothers machines... THEN the TCO of linux starts to shine.

      2) It costs more to train the linux guys (people). That's because your going to get some poeple who can tweak your systems for optimal performance, troubleshoot very well, and LEARN ABOUT PROTOCOLS AND INNER WORKINGS OF THE PCs and NETWORKS. Not just which menu has which option to click on and when that option doesn't work, go to Add/Remove programs and reinstall because you can't debug for shit. Or go get a ghost image and redo the machine. Linux people tend to be far more "involved" (for lack of a better word) with computers than their MS counterpart. MS people are a dime a dozen because pretty much anyone can be trained how to install Exchange with the default settings, or how to double click the setup for IIS. But when it comes down to running a tight network (as in stable as well as secure), your highly trained MS guys with experience that know how to do the job right (I mean they must be gods if they can put up with windows and do it for a living ;) ) are going to cost the same as your linux guys, I'm sure.

      --
      You create your own reality - Leave mine to me.
    13. Re:The good news is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh give me a break.

      If you can't keep a Windows network secure then there's no way the same admin staff is going to keep a Linux system secure. That's just not how things work.

      If you believe that Linux is easier to keep secure than Windows, I've got a bridge to sell you.

    14. Re:The good news is... by timmyf2371 · · Score: 1

      Apologies if I've picked you up wrongly, but I do detect a trace of sarcasm in your post which I feel I should respond to.

      I've been using Windows since 1996 when we got our first proper PC and in that time I have had one Virus - a Virus I wrote (didn't release anywhere) and tested on my own system.

      I keep my anti-virus scanner up to date, run a firewall, and most of all I actually have common sense. Now, that's not to say Virii haven't *tried* to get themselves onto my system, but due to the common sense and security measures I'd taken not one has penetrated my defences.

      Now, let's compare something like the Love Bug virus to the recent trojan aimed at Fedora/Redhat users...

      The Love Bug relied upon users opening the virus based on the text of the email, whereas the trojan aimed at Linux users relied on the user's sense of security conciousness.

      If we're saying that Virii on Windows is the fault of the operating system, by these standards we must also conclude that virii on Linux is the fault of the operating system also.

      --

      Backup not found: (A)bort (R)etry (P)anic
    15. Re:The good news is... by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

      Are you comparing the Fedora trojan*, to Windows viruses like MyDoom which require nothing more than opening an email in Outlook?!

      FYI, I'm a Windows user since 1992, Linux user since 2000, and can say with some certainty that Windows is far less secure. For one, I don't *need* virus scanners and/or firewalls to protect my box from the nasty 'ol internet. I shut down services which are not needed, and keep the ones that are facing the 'net updated. Of course, a good dose of common sense helps when administering any system. But when you have one system engineered with security in mind, and another where security was an afterthought, one is going to be a harder target than the other. It's as simple as that.

      * Which relied on tricking the user into downloading a tarball (which is not even Fedora's update method), compiling it, and installing it as root. Also, I haven't heard of anyone actually getting their system unintentionally infected with it.

    16. Re:The good news is... by haruchai · · Score: 1

      Ah, I get it now. Windows' famed instability ( although much improved since Y2K) was a design decision to alert the user to the prescence of intrusions.

      Thanks for pointing that out.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
  4. So... by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    They've stopped calling them "Halloween" documents? But October 31st is so close!

  5. Best part of the article by hsmith · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Security
    About three years ago, we made software security a top priority


    please... but i think they are starting to see Linux as a viable threat, thus the verbal out crys lately trying to defend themselves

    1. Re:Best part of the article by julesh · · Score: 5, Funny

      Security
      About three years ago, we made software security a top priority


      s/three years ago/ten years too late/

    2. Re:Best part of the article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      So, when is the Linux kernel going to natively support a *real* system for access control? You know, one that doesn't limit a user to 16 groups? Or one that allows nested group membership?

      Windows may have more virii, but that is because it is more popular. And it is more popular because it has more capabilities, even in security.

      You can mod this comment down, but until the Linux community realizes that things like the horrible ACL system in the kernel needs an overhaul, the market will still choose Windows.

    3. Re:Best part of the article by l3v1 · · Score: 1

      Windows may have more virii, but that is because it is more popular.

      OMG, this argument will never go away, will it. It's when you keeep teaching a parrot to say "nancy" and after two years it still just says "dumba$$".
      4$$h013 4$$h013 4$$h013 4$$h013 4$$h013

      --
      I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
    4. Re:Best part of the article by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That "Windows may have more virii because it is more popular" myth is bunk.

      If you check netcraft, you'll see that currently Apache is more popular a webserver than IIS. So, shouldn't Apache have more vulnerabilites issues that IIS?

      However, I do agree with you on the group issue. However, I wonder if this is something that might be addressed with SElinux.

      --
      Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
    5. Re:Best part of the article by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1
      Yeah, that's why extremely complex to test errors like the ASP.NET Canonicalization issue slipped through.

      You build a HTTP server and don't test things like what happens if someone puts the wrong slash in?

    6. Re:Best part of the article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So, when is the Linux kernel going to natively support a *real* system for access control? You know, one that doesn't limit a user to 16 groups? Or one that allows nested group membership?

      None of that stuff counts if nobody uses it. The vast majority of the Windows machines are left with their default permissive security settings.

      One reason for this is that their security model is so complex. Your average administrator doesn't understand all of the implications of playing with those settings. The settings are too complex to show in a simple summary like ls -l, so they tend to be kept hidden away in property pages. Out of sight, out of mind.

    7. Re:Best part of the article by Thud457 · · Score: 1
      I like how us techies always thought that the GOODTIMES virus hoax was a funny joke because it wasnt' technically feasible to get a virus from an email.

      Then Microsoft went and enabled such idiocy.

      --

      the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    8. Re:Best part of the article by truthsearch · · Score: 1

      Reported by The Age (emphasis added):

      Professor William Caelli, head of the school of software engineering and data communications at the Queensland University of Technology... told last week's Australian Institute of Professional Intelligence Officers conference that he was "horrified" at the thought that intelligence-related systems might be developed on unprotected off-the-shelf platforms.

      "Under no conditions should anyone in their sane mind run intelligence analytical systems on a Microsoft platform," he says.... "I'm talking about the problem of putting highly security-relevant systems on a totally insecure base," Caelli says.

      He believes there is no commercial motivation for the information technology industry to develop truly secure systems. "The problem is, essentially, the (information technology) industry itself abrogated its responsibility relating to security some 20 years ago. Today's servers and client systems are less secure than (the) mainframes I used in the 1970s."

    9. Re:Best part of the article by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      Isn't the ACL issue more of a filesystem issue than a kernel issue? (okay, the filesystem support is in the kernel, but not at a very deeply embedded level - that's why it's easy to plug in filesystems as modules). Yeah, it's a problem, but it's a problem that isn't all that hard to fix. Thus I suspect that the reason it's not fixed yet is that the demand just isn't very strong for it.

      And since when does it have to "natively" support ACLs? In a layered design approach, putting something at too low of a level is just as bad as putting it too high. Consider: Unix is very good at running databases, even though it doesn't have any record-based filesystems natively supported. To hear the old VMS and IBM mainframe fans, record-based filesystems are neccessary to optimize data performance, and yet here's unix, where every file is just a dumb array of bytes, doing very well at serving databases. The reason is that you don't lose any signifigant performance by putting the record-izing of your secondary storage up at the shared library level instead of the OS level. Now, ACLs might be a good idea to support, but that support does not need to be native - it can be in a fairly high-level module, like the filesystem.


      You can mod this comment down, but until the Linux community realizes that things like the horrible ACL system in the kernel needs an overhaul, the market will still choose Windows.

      I don't mod people down just for being wrong, provided it seems like they genuinely believe their own claims. The market, as a whole, doesn't give a damn about ACL's. The Windows market consists primarily of home users, and that's why its numbers are so big. The reason for it's popularity in businesses is simply that using the same thing people are already familiar with at home is immensely appealing to a company.

      I saw Windows beating out UNIX for key operations in companies even in the days of Windows 3.1, where you had to use a third-party tool just to even have the slightest brain-damaged TCP/IP capability in Windows at all, and there was no permissions at all, be they ACLs or Unix's "ugo flags", or anything else, becuase the filesystem was FAT. All of this while UNIX had a working X-windows system, already remotable, with multiple desktop paging ability, full internet connectivity, multi-user, yadda, yadda, yadda. I don't believe for a moment that Windows was winning on features, since it was starting to win even when it was just DOS with a gui on top. It was winning because it was in use in people's homes, and businesses wanted to harness that familiarity in their offices.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    10. Re:Best part of the article by Kernkraft400 · · Score: 1

      Do we have to repeat this every time?

      Myth Windows only gets attacked most because it's such a big target, and if Linux use (or indeed OS X use) grew then so would the number of attacks.
      FactWhen it comes to web servers, the biggest target is Apache, the Internet's server of choice. Attacks on Apache are nevertheless far fewer in number, and cause less damage. And in some case Apache-related attacks have the most serious effect on Windows machines. Attacks are of course aimed at Windows because of the numbers of users, but its design makes it a much easier target, and much easier for an attack to wreak havoc. Windows' widespread (and often unnecessary) use of features such as RPC meanwhile adds vulnerabilities that really need not be there. Linux's design is not vulnerable in the same ways, and no matter how successful it eventually becomes it simply cannot experience attacks to similar levels, inflicting similar levels of damage, to Windows.

      http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/10/22/linux_v_wi ndows_security/

    11. Re:Best part of the article by RedBear · · Score: 1

      That "Windows may have more virii because it is more popular" myth is bunk.

      If you check netcraft, you'll see that currently Apache is more popular a webserver than IIS. So, shouldn't Apache have more vulnerabilites issues that IIS?


      I'm all about supporting and open source and stuff, but could we please find at least one example for this argument other than Apache/Netcraft? Because that's basically the ONLY example I've seen for the last year or so. Surely there are a couple of other open source projects that are in wide use in comparison to their Microsoft counterparts, with a similar non-problem with viruses. Using a single project out of the tens of thousands of open source applications is not a statistically significant argument. Just because Apache is more secure than IIS does not prove that Linux is more secure than Windows and so on and so forth. We need to bolster this argument with more examples. Right now ALL we are proving is that Apache is more secure than IIS.

    12. Re:Best part of the article by FrYGuY101 · · Score: 1
      If you check netcraft, you'll see that currently Apache is more popular a webserver than IIS. So, shouldn't Apache have more vulnerabilites issues that IIS?
      Apache 2's entries in Secunia are 181 strong.

      IIS's (All versions) entries in Secunia only number 30.

      So, gee, yes. I suppose that since Apache is a more popular Webserver, it would have more vulnerabilities. And, indeed, that's the case.
      --
      "If we let things terrify us, life will not be worth living."

      - Seneca
    13. Re:Best part of the article by ATMAvatar · · Score: 1

      Of course, a quick glance also shows Apache at 29 virii strong, while IIS boasts 744.

      In the end, Apache stands at 210 vulerabilities, and IIS stands at 774.

      --
      "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
    14. Re:Best part of the article by fatphil · · Score: 1

      Amen.

      I remember:
      a) being the slap-happy "don't send around these without verifying" employee (drinking mates with the sysadmin, I was almost encouraged to do this, as it took the responsibility off him) to all the lamers in the company.
      b) Talking to the techies about quite how such things could be done. This was before HTML mails, and before JavaScript was well known. But we could see it coming, as a _feature_, not just as a bug.

      Best of all - they enabled exploits that didn't even require you to read the mail to become infected - so no "don't open" warnings would even be any use!

      FP.

      --
      Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
  6. Groklaw by julesh · · Score: 3, Informative

    Also worth reading the groklaw article on this, which is available here.

  7. So does the FDIC by TykeClone · · Score: 5, Informative
    --
    A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    1. Re:So does the FDIC by ajs · · Score: 3, Interesting
      That's a GREAT article, and I think someone should submit a story to Slashdot with just that story.

      Real-world risk management is absolutely key with any OS or software suite, and that essay from the FDIC is spot-on. I might disagree with a few points, but overall it's quite accurate.

      I also enjoy their summary which starts:
      "The use of FOSS by financial institutions does not pose risks that are fundamentally different from those presented by the use of proprietary or self-developed software.However, FOSS adoption and usage necessitates some distinctive risk management practices with which institutions must be familiar."
      Yep, that's exaclty what Ballmer is trying to convince you isn't so... so who do we trust on risk assessment, federal bank insurers or Microsoft? Heh.
    2. Re:So does the FDIC by TykeClone · · Score: 1

      I did - rejected.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    3. Re:So does the FDIC by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      The only red flag I see is the comment on warranties. There are NO closed source programs that provide a meaningful warranty anyway. They won't give you any money if your data disappears, even if they knew about the bug and could have fixed the bug a year ago.

    4. Re:So does the FDIC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course. It's not a puff piece for Open Source. Slashdot is not the place to discuss difficult issues that the Open Source community needs to address. Instead, it's a place where open source advocates can unleash uneducated diatribes about the geneological connection between Bill Gates and Satan.

      Tough and honest discussions, like the ones that undoubtedly go on in the halls of Microsoft, are NOT to be had.

      (yes, I'm posting anonymously because we both know my karma would get pushed into the 14th century for speaking like this)

    5. Re:So does the FDIC by TykeClone · · Score: 1

      Doesn't matter what it says - it only matters what the examiner reads into it.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    6. Re:So does the FDIC by antiMStroll · · Score: 1

      And forking, but the entire Linux community just underwent the biggest fork since I first started playing with Red Hat 5.1, from XFree to Xorg, and basically no one noticed.

    7. Re:So does the FDIC by burnin1965 · · Score: 1
      ...institutions have the opportunity to modify the software to better align IT capabilities with business strategies.Software modification presents risks similar to self-developed code...
      Umm, duh. And likewise for code that is developed by a proprietary vendor. You had better do your research and integration testing rather than believing the vendor knows what they are doing or you could end up with a system that fails and creates a disaster, i.e. hundreds of planes flying in close proximity with no ground control assisting.

      The institution should carefully consider its technical and legal ability to modify and maintain the code, and ensure that controls are in place to protect against copyright and patent infringement.
      Its a sad state of affairs when you have to question whether its legally acceptable to change the code that you use to run your business, but the flip side is that you should probably check the history of your vendor to see if they have been in any lawsuits because they have violated patents or copyrights. It seems I've read a few articles over the years where many of our favorite vendors have been accused of this same issue.

      FOSS is often written to open standards and is generally more interoperable than proprietary software. However, the interoperability of FOSS programs may not be formally certified.
      So the certification is more important than the actual interoperability of the software? I don't think I need to comment on the stupidity of this statement, it speaks for itself.

      In the worst-case scenario, development of forked FOSS may be halted, or the technical direction may become so altered...
      And likewise for proprietary code, the difference being that you do have an opportunity with the FOSS code to keep your business running on what works. With a proprietary vendor the fork means your stuck on the old system indefinitely or you pay up and move to their new platform, sounds like a familiar scenario.

      ...the indirect costs of FOSS may be higher than those associated with proprietary software if existing staff requires more training than would otherwise be necessary with a proprietary product.
      I suppose this is possible, but perhaps there is some underlying issue in the IT support group such as a lack of a fundamental understanding of how the technology they are supporting works. Knowing how to click OK OK OK Next OK Reboot is not enough even to support a proprietary infrastructure.

      ...change management costs may be higher in a FOSS environment if the institution implements products lacking third-party vendor support...
      Third party vendor support is nice to have, however, anyone who has ever used it knows that its not cheap. Just think about it, your paying the third party vendor so they can pay their staff and meet their profit margin goals. But in some cases its the best route.

      Institutions using FOSS can end up with "dead-end software" if the development community abandons a product.
      Umm, no, using proprietary solutions will put you at risk of being stuck with "dead-end software". Since you have the source code in a FOSS solution you have a choice to continue development.

      Institutions should identify and consider the legal risks associated with the use of FOSS prior to deployment or development.Key legal risks include licensing, infringement, indemnification, and warranties.
      And likewise with proprietary solutions. With FOSS becoming more popular and competing aggressively with proprietary solutions we will see the same legal shenanigans that have plagued the proprietary solutions for years.

      Wow, what a rant. :P

      burnin
    8. Re:So does the FDIC by TykeClone · · Score: 1
      I sort of read the document as "choose the best tool for the job" and "research what you deploy"

      I just don't look forward to the little IT examiner coming in and asking if my use of PostgreSQL in a non-critical database app is more risky because it could be a dead end solution.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    9. Re:So does the FDIC by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      "Forking is of particular concern in the FOSS development process.A fork occurs when the development community splits over the path of development of a given application.In the worst-case scenario, development of forked FOSS may be halted, or the technical direction may become so altered that it no longer meets the institution's needs.

      Institutions should mitigate this risk by ensuring that adequate support is available for the current FOSS software either in-house, through vendors, or other outside sources."

      What is not mentioned is that the forking problem exists in closed source as well. You're just limited to the one prong of the fork the vendor is willing to let exist.

      Also mentioned only indirectly, (and due to the phrasing, I can't really blame them), institutions need to find a way to pay for free software (so that their fork stays supported).

    10. Re:So does the FDIC by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1
      This is an excellent document. It should go a long way towards easing concerns of IT managers considering FOSS architecture. The summery:

      The use of FOSS by financial institutions does not pose risks that are fundamentally different from those presented by the use of proprietary or self-developed software.However, FOSS adoption and usage necessitates some distinctive risk management practices with which institutions must be familiar.

      The interesting thing is that the risks outlined are essentially existing risks handled with a slightly different understanding for FOSS. For example, they outline forking as a risk:

      Forking is of particular concern in the FOSS development process.A fork occurs when the development community splits over the path of development of a given application.In the worst-case scenario, development of forked FOSS may be halted, or the technical direction may become so altered that it no longer meets the institution's needs.

      Institutions should mitigate this risk by ensuring that adequate support is available for the current FOSS software either in-house, through vendors, or other outside sources.

      This should be familiar territory for anybody who's had their vendor End Of Life a product. The same general strategy applies to both proprietary software as FOSS. The only difference is that FOSS may offer more choices (there may be enough interest in the original fork to continue or if it is that important, you can fund continuation of the project yourself).

      It might also be worth noting that some of these "unique" practices have to do with the ability to modify source code. That is certainly unique to most organizations used to working with proprietary software. However, organizations that do their own in-house development will have to face the same issues of copyright, patent infringement, etc. Of course, the issue of copyright and patent infringement has also come to light numerous times in the proprietary software world too. Perhapse nobody is imune to this after all.

      Back on topic... TCO. From the document:

      Institutions evaluating the total cost of FOSS ownership should include both direct and indirect costs.Direct costs generally include hardware, software licensing, and annual maintenance.One of the features attracting institutions to FOSS is its complimentary or low cost for licensing and maintenance.However, the indirect costs of FOSS may be higher than those associated with proprietary software if existing staff requires more training than would otherwise be necessary with a proprietary product.In addition, change management costs may be higher in a FOSS environment if the institution implements products lacking third-party vendor support.The institution generally will bear more responsibility and spend more resources identifying, selecting, analyzing, and installing upgrades and patches.Depending on the FOSS selected, other indirect costs may appear, such as code reviews, documentation, and contingency planning.

      And again, there's nothing really surprising here. The key is that FOSS is not a magic bullet - you still have to work to deploy it. But anybody dealing with IT will find that much the same work will be done no matter where the code comes from.

      It is interesting to note that nowhere does the FDIC say that FOSS will have a higher TCO. They outline a series of concerns that MAY drive TCO higher than the licensing might imply. But if an organization is carefully with their deployment strategy, they may find themselves able to deploy FOSS without driving up TCO and maintain that initial savings. Heck, they may even find that the available tools and strategies to handle some of these issues (change management, patch analysis / management, etc.) will help them manage TCO very well.
    11. Re:So does the FDIC by ajs · · Score: 1

      What is not mentioned is that the forking problem exists in closed source as well.

      Re-read the summary line that I posted in the grandparent. They DO mention that much of the same issues exist in proprietary software. There are unique issues with regards to FOSS, but this is not one of them, and since the FDIC has been doing risk management studies of proprietary software for longer than I've been in this business, I'd be shocked if they don't realize that.

    12. Re:So does the FDIC by gadget+junkie · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ""The use of FOSS by financial institutions does not pose risks that are fundamentally different from those presented by the use of proprietary or self-developed software.However, FOSS adoption and usage necessitates some distinctive risk management practices with which institutions must be familiar." Yep, that's exaclty what Ballmer is trying to convince you isn't so... so who do we trust on risk assessment, federal bank insurers or Microsoft? Heh."

      Ballmer's strategy has some much more ominous undertones.
      I think that most of the /.tting crowd agrees that the days of useful computing coming out of Redmond are past. Given the number of people employed and the spending capability, i would expect Excel to make my coffe in the morning, let alone providing me with a decent financial calculus add-in.

      The point is that there is a measure of "vicious circle" at work here. Think about this:

      .the end users, the masses, have as of now no need for new apps, becausee what they basically do is word processing, data entry, and some rudimentary form of calculus(try asking around what the VLOOKUP() function does in excel);

      .To protect the franchise, MS must "gobble" all possible new apps, see media player, browser, etc;

      .once gobbled, this "features must be integrated INTO the operating system itself: you can't simply produce a standalone program, because most of those are cheap or free and work also on competing operating systems, some of which work better on the basic intel-compatible architecture;

      .once you do that, trying to keep stability and backward - compatibility is a PITA, and you're using most of your brainpower keeping it all from going to the dogs.

      .your developers know that they are doing a lousy job, and their effort adjusts accordingly;

      .Rinse.lather.repeat.

      Since MS know s that programming is not the way out of its predicament, it hires semicommercial people like Ballmer,and given the choice between a Sierra Hotel Chief technology officer and a super lobbyist, it prefers the second.
      Apart from that, the 800 lb gorilla has developed an experience in legal matters that few firms have, and, lo and behold, that's what MS is now: a conglomerate that is

      a)a closed end technology investment fund that consistently shuns money making as a goal;
      b)a producer of wishy washy software that most people would be happy to get rid off;
      c)the biggest and baddest lobby-media-litigation fund.

      --
      "If a boss demands loyalty, give him integrity. But if he demands integrity, give him loyalty." (John Boyd, 1927-1997)
  8. Im certainly no Linux Expert... by Prince+Vegeta+SSJ4 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    but...

    the number of security vulnerabilities is lower on Windows

    WTF??!?!?! how can infinity be lower than anything? Seriously though, lower vulnerabilities? Where the hell did that come from. From what I understand, linux is more secure, unless you purposely open it up or ignore the installs which tell you not to run as /root

    1. Re:Im certainly no Linux Expert... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux has a lot more software packages, and that means a lot more room for exploits. They're basically comparing a Windows box with every last service installed and running to a Linux box with every single piece of open source software installed and running, and in that case, Linux would win in the number of security vulnerabilities simply by volume.

    2. Re:Im certainly no Linux Expert... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's easy. Just take one Linux kernel issue, and chalk it up as one vulnerability each for RedHat, Debian, Mandrake, Knoppix, Gentoo, EvilEntity, Mikes Uberleet Distro of Doom, etc. etc. etc., then add all those vulnerabilities together. Then throw in vulnerabilities for every bit of optional software that Windows users would have to obtain separately from third parties (again, count an instance of software on each distro as a separate vulnerability). Finally, multiply by 100 because we know that for every bug we see, there are a hundred that we don't.

      There are lies, there are damned lies, and there are security analyses.

    3. Re:Im certainly no Linux Expert... by mopslik · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Seriously though, lower vulnerabilities? Where the hell did that come from.

      I've seen a number of studies that run something like this:

      Windows

      • Contents of Windows CD: Windows OS
      • Number of vulnerabilities: N
      • Total: N

      Linux

      • Contents of $DISTRO CD: $DISTRO and a million apps
      • Vulnerabilities: X in $DISTRO, Y in App1, Z in App2...
      • Total: M > N

      Not sure if this is the case here, but I suspect so.

    4. Re:Im certainly no Linux Expert... by skratchpad · · Score: 2, Informative

      When comparing the number vulnerability for vulnerability, a Windows Operating System, especially 2003, probably does have a lower number of known vulnerabilities.

      OSS tends toward releasing every niggling vulnerability to the public whereas vendors often try to keep the lid on even the most serious of problems.

      Stating that Windows has fewer vulnerabilities is just a sneaky way of not answering any real questions. It's sort of like suggesting that getting hit by 1000 raindrops is worse than getting hit by an entire ocean by stating that "1000 units of water falling is worse than 1 unit of water". Sure, they're both units, but they're different units, and you're not specifying what's what or what's bigger.

      That said, the only way you can get a good idea of whether or not moving to Linux or FreeBSD or Windows or Solaris or anything else is a good idea for your operation is if you evaluate your specific needs, capabilities, and resources. For example, if you're going to mainly be serving a website and managing the backend, you need to evaluate the database and http server offerings available, and the underlying platforms they run on plus how those offerings run on those specific platforms.

      There's too much crud flying back and forth between OSS and proprietary vendors to see clearly, which is sad. I think that the vendors - both OSS and proprietary - would be much better served working on their offerings and working with their customers rather than slinging disingenious, misleading statistics at each other and making their own customer's jobs harder.

    5. Re:Im certainly no Linux Expert... by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 1

      Considering Ballmer and the rest of his executive team probably consider public source code to be a massive source of vulnerability, then such a statement can make perfect sense. All Ballmer has to do is get into a room with the average Forbes-reading CIO, and point out that Linux is being maintained by a bunch of anarchic tattooed hippie terrorists ... and his mindset will click into the CIO's worldview much like serotonin does to a neuroreceptor. If a corporation doesn't control Linux, then by definition it is a BIG RISK.

      That's all bullshit, of course, but Corporate America eats more mythology before breakfast that you'll eat all week.

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    6. Re:Im certainly no Linux Expert... by misleb · · Score: 1
      WTF??!?!?! how can infinity be lower than anything? Seriously though, lower vulnerabilities? Where the hell did that come from. From what I understand, linux is more secure, unless you purposely open it up or ignore the installs which tell you not to run as /root



      Perhaps that figure is derived from the fact that a typical Linux distribution comes with a LOT of software packages... even if you don't install most of them. For instance, I am on the Debian security mailing list and I get alerts every other day about some fixed potential vulnerability in a package. 80% of the time it is a package I have never even heard of, much less have installed. If you take this into consideration, it may be technically true that "Linux" has more security vulnerabilities when compared to Windows with no applications or extra services installed.



      -matthew

      --
      "THERE IS NO JUSTICE, THERE IS ONLY ME." -Death
    7. Re:Im certainly no Linux Expert... by Kismet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      With the way some defects are published, you often see the same Linux defect published multiple times because it exists in multiple Linux distributions. I've seen "statistics" that claim enormous defect counts that include defects across all Linux distros, where defects are not only aggregated from a whole bunch of irrelevant software, but also counted multiple times.

      This gives Microsoft a huge margin in which to twist their statistics.

    8. Re:Im certainly no Linux Expert... by 10scjed · · Score: 1

      well, 'linux' is really only the kernel whereas windows is the whole os and crappy software suite. lets just compare kernel vulns versus windows.

      --
      --10scjed IANAL,AFAIK
    9. Re:Im certainly no Linux Expert... by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Not to mention that these studies usually do not weigh the severity of the vulnerability. I.E. Windows tends to have more Administrator-level vulns than Linux has root-level vulns, but they conveniently ignore that fact since it doesn't lead to the results they desire..

    10. Re:Im certainly no Linux Expert... by legirons · · Score: 1

      I've seen a number of studies that run something like this:
      Windows: N vulnerabilities in OS
      Linux: M vulnerabilities in OS + applications


      Don't forget the other distros. If you find a bug in redhat that you can add to your list, fine, but remember there might also be a similar bug in Mandrake or Debian, and if you're doing an independant study, you can add those as individual bugs.

      For best effect, we advise that you compare something like a 10-year-old version of Linux to a 2-year-old version of Windows (preferably calculating costs over a 20-year span) -- it's only fair, as the Linux box hasn't rebooted in 10 years so they can't have updated it.

      Oh, and if it's been denied, it doesn't exist. If the vendor hasn't issued an email warning of the bug, then there's no need to add it to the count.

      Make sure you calculate time-to-fix correctly. The industry-standard method is [time vendor admits bug] to [time the first half-assed patch was released]. It's especially important if you're averaging the time-to-fix, as some insecure and sloppy companies take ages to fix their trivial or unexploitable problems, which can reduce their average.

      Remember, it's all about money, and you can measure quality by how much was spent on a product. This is especially useful with Free Software developers who all work for free. So if someone spends a week writing software for an open-source program, the product hasn't increased in value (because they're all jobless hippies), whereas if someone spends a week writing a proprietary program, its value increases by $12000.

      If all else fails, remember that Free Software might be less secure, because people can see the source code. All those Windows viruses are a myth, and didn't cause any damage. Besides, the people who cleaned-up weren't working for Microsoft, so their time is worthless.

    11. Re:Im certainly no Linux Expert... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I've seen "statistics" that claim enormous defect counts that include defects across all Linux distros, where defects are not only aggregated from a whole bunch of irrelevant software, but also counted multiple times."

      You forgot the rest of your paragraph. Here it is:

      "But I cannot name any of these sources or prove anything I am saying so please just ignore me."

      Done and done.

  9. Shouting louder... by scsirob · · Score: 1

    ... does not make it right.

    --
    To Terminate, or not to Terminate, that's the question - SCSIROB
    1. Re:Shouting louder... by rampant+mac · · Score: 1
      "Shouting louder ... does not make it right."

      Apparently, Steve seems to think so. I can't wait for the next Windows Conference:

      Total Cost of Ownership, Total Cost of Ownership, Total Cost of Ownership, Total Cost of Ownership!

      I'm sure its got a beat only Steve can dance to.

      --
      I like big butts and I cannot lie.
    2. Re:Shouting louder... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that's what i try telling the liberals, too. doesn't work ;)

    3. Re:Shouting louder... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whad'ya expect? It *does* work for the conservitives.

  10. You know.... by JoeLinux · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Ballmer always reminds me of the kind of guy that would bash his head against the boulder repeatedly thinking: "One of these days, it'll give!!!"

    Like an over-enthusiastic cheerleader for the Chicago Browns, I fully expect him to wake up one day and realize that he is cheering on a group whose ambition far exceeds their ability to remember the lessons of the past, and expect their past glory to carry them on.

    1. Re:You know.... by lowe0 · · Score: 1

      The Browns play for Cleveland. Chicago's team is the Bears.

    2. Re:You know.... by XBruticusX · · Score: 2, Informative

      Chicago Browns? That IS bad. I think you mean Chicago Bears or Cleveland Browns, both of which fans' are fueled by the lukewarm fires of past glories hesitant to return.

    3. Re:You know.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Like an over-enthusiastic cheerleader for the Chicago Browns

      Da Bears?

      Bulls, Blackhawks, Cubs, Sox?

      Cleveland Browns?

    4. Re:You know.... by gregarican · · Score: 1

      If I was a cheerleader for the Chicago Browns I would wake up one day and realize some things as well...wait, who the hell are the Chicago Browns??

    5. Re:You know.... by JoeLinux · · Score: 1

      oops...I meant Cleveland Browns... Shows you how much of a sports fan I am...At least I know that the Dodgers have what it takes to get the Stanley Cup this year, right?

    6. Re:You know.... by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Like an over-enthusiastic cheerleader for the Chicago Browns, I fully expect him to wake up one day and realize that he is cheering on a group whose ambition far exceeds their ability to remember the lessons of the past, and expect their past glory to carry them on.

      And then he realizes all those years of cheerleading have gotten him nothing. Oh, except for that VAST WEALTH. Geeze, people, you're trying to make him to sound pathetic. So he lies, it's not like he's doing it for personal reasons, it's his JOB. And he makes more than anyone who's reading this doing that job.

    7. Re:You know.... by rixster · · Score: 1

      Oh, except for that VAST WEALTH

      ... Exactly. Pay me $x M per year (where x > 1) and I'll happily bash my head against a rock 8 hours a day for a year or two. Hell. Might even put some overtime in too...

      --
      Two wrongs may not make a right, but three ....
    8. Re:You know.... by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 1

      Actually, I suspect he'll wake up one day, to find that President Jeb Bush has signed into law the 2010 Secure Software Act, which effectively outlaws running Linux in America and its territories (primarily, Ameriraq, Ameriran and Syriamerica). So "past glory" will become a moot point.

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    9. Re:You know.... by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Wrong! The Rhode Island Red Sox won the Stanley Cup last night.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  11. Get the Facts Ballmer: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    We're tired of hearing your useless FUD.

    1. Price of Windows $299
    2. Price of Linux $0 to whatever distributor you wish to pay
    3. Having the Freedom to use the software you want to how you want to and being a part of a world wide Free(dom) software community: Priceless!

    w0uhf

    1. Re:Get the Facts Ballmer: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for the funny mod, but I'm actually serious.

      w0uhf

    2. Re:Get the Facts Ballmer: by lowe0 · · Score: 1

      Apparently you don't know what the T stands for in TCO.

      License cost is just a part of it.

    3. Re:Get the Facts Ballmer: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Total Cost of Ownership:

      Microsoft: You wan't support give me your credit card number.

      Free Software Community: You can either pay a company for support or there is also the Community which you are a part of that has many people willing to help. I find this a much better deal. Have you ever call MS for support? I have.
      I admit that sometimes it's frustrating when your having trouble with a piece of software, but the willingness of the community (on line forums, email, local user groups, etc) is fantastic.
      You have a choice; you can pay a company like Red Hat, Suse, Canonical, Mandrake or any of the other fine comanies for support or you can go ask the community.
      I work in computer support for Windows, Macs and use those and GNU/Linux myself. I understand TCO. It's still much easier to get help for free software from the community that it is to get useful help from some propietary software company you are paying support for.

      w0uhf

    4. Re:Get the Facts Ballmer: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe the price of Linux is now $699, but only if you act fast.

      - Darl

    5. Re:Get the Facts Ballmer: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Maybe if your a homeowner ..but most companies will buy the support package that comes with a OS too, and this is much higher in yearly subscriptions than for windows:

      http://www.redhat.com/apps/commerce/

      Now take a look at this (of course only for companies for which it applies)

      http://members.microsoft.com/partner/competency/ is vcomp/empower/default.aspx?camp=HPGEPN_L1

      ----------

      Not trying to bash on linux ..but it definately aint cheaper in all circumstance. It really depends on who you are, what you do with it, and what kind of skilled peaople you have working for you..

    6. Re:Get the Facts Ballmer: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Redhat isn't the only company. Yes, where I work they pay Redhat. You can shop around. Redhat isn't the only game.
      Novel/Suse, and if I were in a position to make the decision, I would surely look at Canonical. I've just fallen in love with Ubuntu, and Canonical's business philosophy.

    7. Re:Get the Facts Ballmer: by lowe0 · · Score: 1

      And I am somehow precluded from asking for help from within the Windows community? Isn't that the whole point of the MS MVP thing - to identify Windows experts willing to help? There's all sorts of places I can go for help, and all of them seem to center around how much help I provide others in return.

    8. Re:Get the Facts Ballmer: by MynockGuano · · Score: 2, Informative

      The apps: are there are any corporate applications at all? Sure there's that nasty office suite, but compared to the MS Office family it sucks balls.

      Hmm, I use Alias Maya on Linux; it is just like the Windows version, except that it's faster and doesn't crash all the time.

    9. Re:Get the Facts Ballmer: by rekulator · · Score: 1
      "Join Microsoft Empower for ISVs" compared to RedHat Enterprise product range? How can you compare those?
      Try http://www.redhat.com/apps/commerce/developer/stan dard/ for a fair comparison.
      Not trying to bash on linux ..
      puh-lease
    10. Re:Get the Facts Ballmer: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We use Softimage XSI 4.0 here, and I would love to convert the farm to RH WS, but unfortunately the MI renderer for Linux is not nearly as good as BatchUniversal for Windows, not to mention the costs associated with purchasing the RH Network support. Maybe in the future...

      Patching the farm (currently running W2K Server) is a cast-iron bitch as I don't know what each sec update from MS is going to do to the renderer.

    11. Re:Get the Facts Ballmer: by walt-sjc · · Score: 2, Informative

      Obviously MS doesn't know what the T stands for either, which is why they always leave out the massive costs of dealing with Windows insecurity.

    12. Re:Get the Facts Ballmer: by BJZQ8 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Exactly. Microsoft and closed-source people carry on about "support" and things of that nature...when most of that support is non-existant (lets hear it for Windows 98!) or costly (any sort of closed support is not cheap.) With a community-based model, at least you have a large group of people that are not motivated by profit and competition...and more than willing to help. Many times, with open-source applications, you get to talk to the programmer of the application him/herself. When's the last time you got to talk directly to the programmer of a particular part of Windows? Short answer...you CAN'T. Closed-source companies create a veil of authenticity around themselves by creating "support"...when that support is often times worse than nothing.

    13. Re:Get the Facts Ballmer: by lowe0 · · Score: 1

      I'm not totally in disagreement. MS has stepped up a lot in the past year in terms of trying to put secure code out on the market, but there's still a long way to go in terms of making the process of securing many servers and workstations.

      Still, if you hire competent people, Windows security isn't that expensive. And competent people cost money, regardless of which platform they specialize in (assuming they limit themselves at all by specializing). Eliminating the "paper MCSEs" would go a long way towards cleaning things up. A former employer of mine saw a real improvement when they put one such professional in charge of IT.

    14. Re:Get the Facts Ballmer: by walt-sjc · · Score: 1

      It's not just the cost locking down windows, it's the damage caused by malware, spyware, etc. The productivity and business lost.

  12. Say it enough Times, It becomes Reality? by brandonp · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It seems like they think that if they say Windows is more secure enough times it will become a reality. They should put more focus on developing secure software, than simply paying lip service to secure software.

    --
    Brandon Petersen
    Get Firefox!

    1. Re:Say it enough Times, It becomes Reality? by julesh · · Score: 1

      But their software _must_ be secure. I mean, it says right there that three years ago they decided to make it a top priority. How could they have failed to sort it all out in three years?

    2. Re:Say it enough Times, It becomes Reality? by Daedala · · Score: 1
      Maybe Suskind talking about Ballmer, too.
      The aide said that guys like me were "in what we call the reality-based community," which he defined as people who "believe that solutions emerge from your judicious study of discernible reality." I nodded and murmured something about enlightenment principles and empiricism. He cut me off. "That's not the way the world really works anymore," he continued. "We're an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you're studying that reality -- judiciously, as you will -- we'll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that's how things will sort out. We're history's actors . . . and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do."
      --
      What I say does not represent the views of my employers, my friends, my cats, or myself.
    3. Re:Say it enough Times, It becomes Reality? by alext · · Score: 1

      True.

      But arguably Dotnet constitutes a significant investment in producing a secure environment.

      Linux-the-platform has nothing equivalent, at least, not without Java.

      So by all means let's relish the feeling of superiority, while we can...

    4. Re:Say it enough Times, It becomes Reality? by Tom · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It seems like they think that if they say Windows is more secure enough times it will become a reality.

      They're smarter than that. They do believe that if they say it often enough, people will start to think it's true. And for marketing, that's what counts - not reality, but what people think. Customers, especially.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    5. Re:Say it enough Times, It becomes Reality? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In fact what they should probably do, if they have not already done so, is to have a text to speech program in a loop which continually reads "At Microsoft, security is a priority." Under the theory of affirmations, that should make it so.

      A Nony Mouse

    6. Re:Say it enough Times, It becomes Reality? by hackstraw · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It seems like they think that if they say Windows is more secure enough times it will become a reality.

      That only works if you say the same thing over and over again.

      They should put more focus on developing secure software, than simply paying lip service to secure software.

      Well, its in the article, and I immediately stopped reading after the quote:

      He claimed that Windows was a better choice than Linux in terms of security

      Please bear with me, I have had all of the microsoft related stuff filtered off of my homepage for years, but that nolonger seems to work, so here I am being a troll (see I said it now you have to mod me up).

      Windows simply is not designed for security and where I work when we have "major problems" its from the microsoft side of the house, not the UNIX side.

      Windows will run anything with the proper couple of letters appended to the end of the filename. UNIX has to have the executable bit set to it, regardless of the name, and no mailer that I know of will dump an executable file so that some luser can just click on it and wreck the LAN and up to a good part of the internet as a whole.

      Windows comes with bunches of stuff turned on by default, and an unpatched system directly exposed to the internet is likely to be compromised in I believe 20 minutes now.

      Windows uses the nebulously defined "current working directory" as the first search path for executables and libraries. Everyone else in the world knows the problem with this.

      Windows must be used from a GUI that is tied to the OS (including a browser) which has caused a couple of problems in the past.

      Windows still does not get multiuser/administrator stuff right.

      Windows service packs/patches frequently break stuff, and take a considerable amount of time to test within an organization before being deployed.

      I mean, windows is OK for my dad to use AOL to do whatever he does online. It doesn't crash too often on him, and its ok to run at home or on someone's desk where nothing really important is done with the machine or the data on it. I wouldn't suggest Linux for this kind of work at all. Using Macs would simply put too many IT people out of business. But when it comes to important stuff, people tend to look for more robust solutions. I don't see any microsoft based machines on the top 500 list. I don't know of any instance where important database kind of stuff is run off of windows. I'm sure there are some, because Oracle and whatnot "works" on windows, but I don't think its any accident that windows is the minority when it comes to server room kind of stuff, nor do I think its any kind of accident that windows is vastly the majority when it comes to desktop stuff.

      Why can't MS figure out what they are good at and do that, instead of talking a bunch of shit and doing things half way? They are already the largest software company in the world, why don't they use these resources to be the best?

    7. Re:Say it enough Times, It becomes Reality? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Saying that Windows doesn't get multiuser administration is so tremendously off the mark. Windows actually DOES get it, delegating specific administrative tasks to specific users. This is a concept Unix doesn't get, where you're pretty much root or a luser. There are exceptions, but they are rare.

    8. Re:Say it enough Times, It becomes Reality? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He said multiuser/administrator which means a user can connect to a Linux box and use it's resources while an administrator can use it for other things at the same time and not interfer with the user.

      Sheesh, thanks to Microsoft, people can't learn computers. They only learn MS company mottos.

    9. Re:Say it enough Times, It becomes Reality? by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      The reason for the problems in Windows security versus Unix security all pretty much come down to one thing:

      Unix was designed from day 1 to be multi-user, so nobody ever got into the habit of running things where security doesn't matter, and no programs were ever written for it with the single-user mentality.

      Windows had multi-user abilities crafted on well after it had been out long enough for 'bad habits' to form, both on the part of the users and the part of the programmers. And since Microsoft's attitude is that the ignorant person is always right (that's how you become popular), the OS never forced a clean break from those bad habits, and MS is trying to wean people off of those habits slowly. The problem is that (A) they are doing it too slowly, and (B) they don't seem to realize that they themselves are also victims of the same mentality and thier own software is just as bad as third-party software (worse in some ways, because it has more permission to screw up). This isn't just a user thing - it's also a programmer thing.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    10. Re:Say it enough Times, It becomes Reality? by TheRealSlimShady · · Score: 1
      Windows will run anything with the proper couple of letters appended to the end of the filename.

      True to an extent. The only caveat is that you must have the execute permission on that file. The trouble is, it's not that common for people to deny the execute permission.

      They are already the largest software company in the world, why don't they use these resources to be the best?

      They're not in the business of being the best, they're in the business of being good enough...
      Linux is lucky in that it doesn't have a development budget that it needs to keep to, and doesn't have a release schedule that it needs to keep either.

    11. Re:Say it enough Times, It becomes Reality? by hackstraw · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Linux is lucky in that it doesn't have a development budget that it needs to keep to, and doesn't have a release schedule that it needs to keep either.

      I don't work in a commercial environment, and don't plan to in some time unless its my company. I cannot fathom going back and having to write code based on budgets and release schedules. That whats so cool about startups and OSS. Money is not the goal, its a byproduct.

      Hmm, isn't their a saying in a book somewher about the love of money and evil and stuff? Gotta check that out...

    12. Re:Say it enough Times, It becomes Reality? by nzkbuk · · Score: 1
      Why can't MS figure out what they are good at and do that, instead of talking a bunch of shit and doing things half way? They are already the largest software company in the world, why don't they use these resources to be the best?


      Why be the best when you can spend that money to force their way into more markets?
    13. Re:Say it enough Times, It becomes Reality? by hackstraw · · Score: 1

      Why be the best when you can spend that money to force their way into more markets?

      Best vs more. I'd pick best anyday.

  13. From Linux to Windows by Enigma_Man · · Score: 5, Funny

    I don't. It'd be much more expensive IMO to convert from Linux to Windows. First off, you gotta buy it. Second off, you'd have to hire all new IT staff, because the previous guys would've committed hari-kari in the bathroom. Second, you'd have to figure out how to get all of your applications running again in an environment that is as stable as a drunkard on a fence.

    -Jesse

    --
    Nothing says "unprofessional job" like wrinkles in your duct tape.
    1. Re:From Linux to Windows by pjt33 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Judging by the way you count, I think you're speaking from experience...

    2. Re:From Linux to Windows by lpp · · Score: 2, Funny
      because the previous guys would've committed hari-kari in the bathroom


      Ooooooohhh.

      Is that what they're calling it now?
    3. Re:From Linux to Windows by Enigma_Man · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Fourth off, I hate you :)

      It's the day after the Sox won the World Series, I'm allowed to be a belligerent and wrong.

      -Jesse

      --
      Nothing says "unprofessional job" like wrinkles in your duct tape.
    4. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the previous guys would've committed hari-kari in the bathroom

      What's "hari-kari"? Is it anything like hara-kiri?

    5. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes, only more like the way it sounds when some japanese people actually say it. Both are "wrong".

    6. Re:From Linux to Windows by martingunnarsson · · Score: 1

      Hey, there't two "second" in that sentence! I wonder who's the drunkard...

      --
      Martin
    7. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      And third, or forth for those counting, you'd have to hire a team of attendants to clean that bathroom so you don't scare off prospective employees.

    8. Re:From Linux to Windows by Enigma_Man · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Sox won the world series last night. My BAC is probably a significant nonzero number still.

      -Jesse

      --
      Nothing says "unprofessional job" like wrinkles in your duct tape.
    9. Re:From Linux to Windows by Mattintosh · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Yeah, same here... I'm a Cardinals fan.

      I'm just taking solace in the fact that every time the Red Sox have ever lost in the past or lose in the future, it's because they suck. There is no curse, and now it's been proven.

      I'm not too worried about the Cardinals, though... It's their decade. They always win a World Series in even numbered decades.

    10. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention the overtime for the janitor who has to clean up the mess in the bathroom.

    11. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I liked the yankee newspaper headline... "See you back in 2090"

    12. Re:From Linux to Windows by Enigma_Man · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Redundant? To what?

      I might be offtopic, but... Redundant?

      -Jesse

      --
      Nothing says "unprofessional job" like wrinkles in your duct tape.
    13. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why no, I don't read the replies before I post. Why do you ask?

    14. Re:From Linux to Windows by pilgrim23 · · Score: 1

      What are you guys saying? I mean think man think! How many people are employed in IT? Now imagine a world in which the desktop was oh..Mac OS X and the servers, database systems and other infustructure was all Linux/Open Source, etc. Rememeber that figure above? Cut it to a TENTH!
      All Hail St Redmond of the Kludge for Thine is the Kingdom of Screw-up..... and that my friends, keeps me employed...

      --
      - Minutus cantorum, minutus balorum, minutus carborata descendum pantorum.
    15. Re:From Linux to Windows by Total_Wimp · · Score: 2, Informative

      I wish people would stop cracking on MS stability in the server realm. It's a myth. My experience with a shop full of Windows 2000 Server (mostly) and Windows Server 2003 is that stability is not a problem.

      Please feel free to continue cracking on virus vulnerabilities, patching issues, lack of flexibility and even cost. But my experience is that people who crack on the stability of Win2K servers and above either don't use them or horribly misuse them. Real Win2k admins simply don't have an issue with stability.

      TW

    16. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Both are "wrong".

      So, what's the correct Romanization/pronunciation?

    17. Re:From Linux to Windows by hunterx11 · · Score: 1
      What's "hari-kari"? Is it anything like hara-kiri?

      Actually, it involves getting drunk and commenting on Cubs games.

      --
      English is easier said than done.
    18. Re:From Linux to Windows by mkldev · · Score: 1
      Definition 1:

      1. Superfluous; going beyond that which is necessary.
      2. Repetitious.

      Of course, you can agree or disagree, but it can legitimately be said that your continuation of this thread is superfluous.

      (This message moderated score 0: Redunandtly redundant.)

      --
      120 character sigs suck. Make it 250.
    19. Re:From Linux to Windows by f()rK()_Bomb · · Score: 5, Informative

      I would second this as i worked in a pure 2000 domain but if you actually think about uptime exactly how often do win2k servers reboot? We were generally rebooting the things every couple of weeks due to patches. Leave one up for more than 60 days and things start to get wierd. For instance our DCHP server decided to stop giving out addresses. Reboot and it was fine. I would definately consider this as unstable.

      --
      "The space elevator will be built about 50 years after everyone stops laughing." - Arthur C. Clarke ~1980
    20. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well if I didn't take a dump for 60 days I'd get weird too...

      We all know that if you leave Linux unattended for 90 days it becomes self-aware and purges the world of those pesky contaminating humans.

      So reboot Linux, or we all die!

    21. Re:From Linux to Windows by TelJanin · · Score: 1

      The win2k server in my office seems to dissapear off the intranet whenever somebody opens a shared .xls that has macros in it. No pings, no more sharing, nothing. Then when you click the generic error dialog (with no message) that's appeared on the server's screen, everything is fine. Unstable.

    22. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's so kewl that your SECOND comment about "Redundant?" was marked redundant too...Some mods may actually have remembered their medication today.

    23. Re:From Linux to Windows by MrResistor · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think the general response would be that they seem stable because you don't have any *nix servers running next to them for comparison. Virus vulnerabilities and patching issues are still instability, just going by a different name. Planned downtime is still downtime.

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
    24. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah, not Hari-Kari, I'd say sepukku. At least let your IT staff have an honorable death.

    25. Re:From Linux to Windows by Total_Wimp · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I think the general response would be that they seem stable because you don't have any *nix servers running next to them for comparison. Virus vulnerabilities and patching issues are still instability, just going by a different name. Planned downtime is still downtime.

      This is actually a good response. But I would caution that when a network admin says "unstable" a user thinks "flaky" rather than "there are periods of planned downtime." So do other network admins. If Windows servers have more planned downtime (likely) then that can be clarified and quantified just fine without putting it under the blanket of "unstable" where it will be assumed something else is meant.

      Our Windows servers have about the same uptime as the Netware servers sitting right next to them (no, not Suse based), but actually have less unplanned downtime. I'm not trying to crack on Netware, or anyone else, but if the servers are up unless we take them down on purpose then that's certainly not something I'd call "unstable", especially if the users is going to hear "flaky".

      TW

    26. Re:From Linux to Windows by alw53 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wasn't it a Windows lockup that took out Los Angeles air traffic control system last month? I think the procedure tells them to reboot once a month and they just forgot.

      That would seem to me to be a stability issue.

    27. Re:From Linux to Windows by brianosaurus · · Score: 1

      Educate your users, or come up with a better term. Maybe "downtime" is sufficient.

      I've had FreeBSD servers running in a busy environment with over 2 years uptime. No planned or unplanned downtime for 2 years.

      How much downtime did your "stable" windows servers have?

      Downtime is downtime.

      --
      blog
    28. Re:From Linux to Windows by gadget+junkie · · Score: 1

      " my experience is that people who crack on the stability of Win2K servers and above either don't use them or horribly misuse them. Real Win2k admins simply don't have an issue with stability."

      ...that's the problem. I am *not* a real win2k admin. I think that the learning curve is too steep, if not in effort, in risk. It could get difficult for me to sleep at night, if I had to learn that on my skin.

      Besides, no one is giving me a copy of win2k server for free to play on. Apache, anyone?

      --
      "If a boss demands loyalty, give him integrity. But if he demands integrity, give him loyalty." (John Boyd, 1927-1997)
    29. Re:From Linux to Windows by gadget+junkie · · Score: 3, Funny

      " Wasn't it a Windows lockup that took out Los Angeles air traffic control system last month? I think the procedure tells them to reboot once a month and they just forgot."

      Yes. suddenly all the windshields of flying aircrafts turned blue ;-)

      --
      "If a boss demands loyalty, give him integrity. But if he demands integrity, give him loyalty." (John Boyd, 1927-1997)
    30. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Wasn't it a Windows lockup that took out Los Angeles air traffic control system last month? I think the procedure tells them to reboot once a month and they just forgot. Seems like that according to http://socalscanner.com/2004/091604_1.htm Skip to the end and you find
      Microsoft software contained an internal clock designed to shut the system down after 49.7 days to prevent it from becoming overloaded with data.
      I recently shutdown (because it had to move) a HP-UX server that had been up in full production for 449 days.
    31. Re:From Linux to Windows by jcr · · Score: 1

      I wish people would stop cracking on MS stability in the server realm. It's a myth.

      No, it's a fact. USPS.gov's main web site (which a friend of mine had the contract to administer) had a typical uptime of five hours per host. Their initial stopgap measure was to have one machine reboot the others every four hours. The long-term remedy was to run the Windows apps on virtual hosts under VMWare on Linux (on the same hardware), and just restart them when they died.

      One side-benefit to running MS Windows in VMWare was that it defeated MS's brain-dead paging algorithm, and they were able to run the apps on three hosts, instead of the 21 hosts they had been using.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    32. Re:From Linux to Windows by Total_Wimp · · Score: 2

      No, it's a fact. USPS.gov's main web site (which a friend of mine had the contract to administer) had a typical uptime of five hours per host.

      This is definately a bummer for the USPS, but is hardly representative of Windows servers. The vast majority of servers we have only come down for patching and upgrades and some of them work damn hard and are on the public internet(our mail servers, for example). Our corporate web servers are not as high voume as the USPS, but they basically never go down unless it's planned.

      We do reboot our Citrix servers every night, but that has more to do with the fact that they work more like workstations than servers and run just about any user app you can imagine. That said, we don't experience flaky behaviour with them during the day while in operation and they're very heavily used.

      Now I have experienced many lock-ups in Linux. Netscape used to get me on a regular basis a few years ago, though now I just experience random usability issues. Sure, there are workarounds, and I know the kernel was still chugging away during those lock-ups, but that didn't stop it from being a pain in the ass. I'm definately not trying to ding Linux, I'm just saying that user-level environments and apps have a tendency to play havock that server-level apps tend to avoid.

      Anyway, I encourage you to ask a broader subsection of Windows admins what their stability situation is. The USPS example is not what you can expect to find in the MS shops I've worked at.

      TW

    33. Re:From Linux to Windows by Llama_STi · · Score: 1

      (This message moderated score 0: Redunandtly redundant.) and don't forget IRONIC!! :rolleyes:

    34. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are a typical Unix asshat who just had to turn a reasonable discussion into a dicksize "uptime" flamewar. Furthermore, you are a liar because unless your server is doing nothing, you must have had service downtime (that's what counts) for patches. Eat a turd. -- S.Ballmer

    35. Re:From Linux to Windows by Karzz1 · · Score: 1

      I have a Linux box that has been up for 549 days! Granted, it is not a real busy machine but I have had Windows 2000 servers go down for no reason whatsoever. Someone tries to print and the spooler locks up the entire box?? File sharing anything with a macro and the machine goes ballistic (I hear that happens with Samba as well). And what the fuck is up with having to reboot because the browser crashed???

      I am a MCSE/MCSA who uses Linux everywhere that I can because I have learned what happens when I use Windows.

      just my $0.02

      --
      Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master.
    36. Re:From Linux to Windows by alw53 · · Score: 1

      It's an overflow in a 32-bit counter.

      http://support.microsoft.com/kb/216641/EN-US/

      But it's stable once it crashes :)

    37. Re:From Linux to Windows by slittle · · Score: 2, Informative

      Have you discovered the Services control panel yet? Try restarting the DHCP Server before rebooting the whole box.

      --
      Opportunity knocks. Karma hunts you down.
    38. Re:From Linux to Windows by stor · · Score: 1

      DCHP under NT4 is solid as a rock.

      Not sure about >2K. If it's unstable well that's a pretty embarrassing regression imnsho.

      Cheers
      Stor

      --
      "Yeah well there's a lot of stuff that should be, but isn't"
    39. Re:From Linux to Windows by crazyphilman · · Score: 1

      Windows servers ARE more persnickety. Just recently, one of our development servers mysteriously stopped responding to anything we did. Keyboard and mouse were dead, and it stopped putting out video (black screen only). It was on a KVM switch, so we thought it might be that. So we reset the switch, we doublechecked the cables, etc... It wasn't the switch (the other computer on that switch was working fine). Eventually we hard-booted the computer, which came back up. It then reported that one of the services failed to start back up. Reboot again, this time normally. As far as I know, it went back to normal at that point -- I had to go to a meeting and couldn't wait around to see what happened.

      I've never had a Linux box suddenly up and die on me, without warning. The Win2000 box just up and died. Weird.

      --
      Farewell! It's been a fine buncha years!
    40. Re:From Linux to Windows by spectasaurus · · Score: 1

      Maybe it's because you didn't splurge and get the DHCP server. I know my copy of Lunix had problems too before I splurged and bought Linux.

    41. Re:From Linux to Windows by jcr · · Score: 1

      Anyway, I encourage you to ask a broader subsection of Windows admins what their stability situation is.

      I might do so if I cared. MS completely exhausted any interest I ever had in their products many years ago.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    42. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Hey, there't two "second" in that sentence! I wonder who's the drunkard..."

      No need to wonder. I've found the answer.

    43. Re:From Linux to Windows by lazybeam · · Score: 1

      My work is switching from linux to windows. (Well in the old stores it's "SCO OpenServer", the newer ones are linux, is that good enough?) Here in Australia our computer systems were supplied by a local company (STM), but head office in the US are pressuring us all to move to the "same as everywhere else", although there are still 14 different systems in use worldwide.

      Some of these STM systems are over 8 years old (eg a P166 running an entire store of 8+ terminals). The main problems I've seen are hardware; keyboard breaking, hard drive crashing. About the only "software" problems are due to the slowness of the CPU and bandwidth to terminals (9600bps on the old ones). The last ones to be installed used 100Mbit ethernet instead. :)

      Looks like one of the main features desired is touch screens, but I've seen touch screens with the same software in a different company. (And they are running RH linux on the POS systems)

      Do you see a windows option lasting this long? Especially since now they are connecting these machines together through the Internet.

      --
      --
      no sig for you. come back one year.
    44. Re:From Linux to Windows by fatphil · · Score: 1

      They must reboot once every <49.7 days (2^32 * 1/1000s). Their instructions tell them to reboot once a month. Some new guy thought that the beginning of one month and the end of the following month would suffice, but alas it doesn't.

      There was a great comp.risks article about the ATC systems, and their laughable fallbacks, about 2 months ago, ISTR.
      I.e. it's worse than it first appears; worse than just occasional windows lock-ups.

      FP.

      --
      Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
    45. Re:From Linux to Windows by alw53 · · Score: 1

      Apparently the FAA has decided to equip this Windows system with a bell that goes off after 30 days to remind the operator to reboot it.

      But at least it fails reliably :)

    46. Re:From Linux to Windows by 4of12 · · Score: 2, Funny

      DCHP server decided to stop giving out addresses

      Seinfeld...Soup Nazi episode...

      "No IP address for you!"
      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
    47. Re:From Linux to Windows by f()rK()_Bomb · · Score: 1

      Was away for weekend and didnt have net access so bit of a late reply, but of course I tried restarting the service. May have been a windows admin but that doesn't mean im an idiot :-) Im currently in a pure *nix environment so im not the kind of person who reboots just to fix every little thing. The crazy thing about it was that it would renew addresses just not give out any new ones.

      --
      "The space elevator will be built about 50 years after everyone stops laughing." - Arthur C. Clarke ~1980
    48. Re:From Linux to Windows by SomeGuyTyping · · Score: 1

      I work for a large-format printer, and our NetWare 6 server has not been down (planned or otherwise) in the 8 months since it was installed. Before that the Netware 5 was running on about 2 years of uptime.

      --
      My posts are definitive. Reality is frequently inaccurate.
    49. Re:From Linux to Windows by Nevo · · Score: 1

      There was little factual information about this released by the FAA.

      Educated speculation is that this was most likely an application error. GetTickCount() rolls over every fifty seven days. An app that doesn't take that into consideration will go belly up when that happens. Not surprisingly, the FAA said they have problems when they leave their Windows boxes up that long.

      This coincidence STRONGLY suggests that this is an application, and not an OS, issue.

    50. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen brother on the windows os being as stable as a drunk on a fence. All the CPUs on my home network use double booting. Windows for games and linux for business and surfing and system control. All use GRUB or LILO as the control booting program. The biggest problem is windows and its propensity to crash at any time for any reason.
      I have one machine with an IBM/Hitachi 'death-star' hard drive, 60GB. It boots selectively SuSE Linux 9.1 full install, and Microscru-us-all 2000 Pooof-essional. The problem is in the W2K side. It crashes with a blue screen of death 'Stop Error' if left on overnight. SuSE does not crash. SuSE NEVER
      crashes. The same hardware and the same disks (samo samo) are in the machine....it is the same machine!!! so it cannot be the hardware's fault that windows crashes unless the MSI board has a built in hatred of windows. It is an MSI KT4Ultra mobo with an Nvidia Ti4400 vidcard. The system has enough fans to choke Paris Hilton and stays cool as Jennifer Lopez on a mag cover.
      I can find no other cause of windows failure than windows itself. Ballmer can piss up a rope. I know that some oaf will bleat...use winXP. To that I will say that that nightmare of a spyware system will never darken my digital doorway. The day will come for those fools stuck with XP when 're-authorizations' will come complete with money charges and 'criminal investigations' for 'using non branded computers'. Bought a laptop with XP on it. That was removed with hours, warrantee or no warrantee. Seems though, that laptops come complete with special XP friendly hardware that is undocumented and other hardware for whom drivers have been deliberately rigged not to work with W2K when they ordinarily would. This writer will live with that. They can cripple my hardware but they will never take our freedom!

    51. Re:From Linux to Windows by metalmaniac1759 · · Score: 1

      Took me while to understand....but har! har! har! once I finally did :-)

    52. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, my only experience with Netware is from two 3.12 boxes wich i had to take down resp. 5 weeks ago and 1 year ago... The first was up for 5 years and served a small network (give or take 15 clients and 5 printers) and never gave a beep... The second had less "uptime" because i used it as a "let's experiment with this"-machine...

      Offcourse there wasn't much network growth on the first box, which was stuffed away in an old storage room of a department that never grew, but nonetheless Netware (and i hope the new SuSE/NW combo) has a special place in my heart :-)

    53. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WTF is DCHP?

    54. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This might more common the not. i had a situation simular to that, apearently it was filling up the table that holds the ipaddresses (forget the name right now) for renewal. restarting the service wouldn't purge this form memory. when you restarted the system it would find the ips already asigned or somethign like that and all would be good. if you just restarted the service, then it would pull the table from memory.

      I think there is a work around or patch that adressed it. We don't use win 2000 for DHCP anymore. We went with a statice ip's across the board except for a few wireless logings that get an ip first then take static after loging into the vpn. It is much smoother that way. Also it helps with allowing outside access more securly.

    55. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i dunno about planned patching downtime. My mandrake boxes don't need to reboot for patching. The most a user would find is a glitch were somethign wasn't avalible for a minute or less.

      Of course they don't do anythign important. They just handle mail services, windows file sharing, of site encrypted backups, webproxy with content filtering, a couple small SQL apps using some propriatary database server (advantage and ads i think) and they generaly serve a web base colaberation software that5 i'm getting sick of. (it seems slow and cumbersome. would like to find a good client server combo that doesn't use a web interface)

      Needless to say i do however reboot them about every 6 months or so. This is when i get to burn the budget and play games on them. if we don't use our budget for manhours, we wont get the same amount back next term.

    56. Re:From Linux to Windows by jabuzz · · Score: 1

      Rubbish, I just did apt-get update today on a Debian Linux server. This lead to my DHCP server being upgraded. The down time was measured in seconds. However any computer trying to do a DHCP request while it was being upgrade would barely have noticed while as the DHCP protocol has retries built in. Same goes for *many* other services. The end result is that you can patch many services live, with an effective downtime of zero.

    57. Re:From Linux to Windows by cypherz · · Score: 1

      Our development box - running IBM's AIX, has been beaten on by a bunch of developers (more than 20) and several dozen other users for _over_a_year_ without a reboot. Try that on a winders box!

      --
      This sig kills fascists.
    58. Re:From Linux to Windows by bot24 · · Score: 1

      Win2k servers need to reboot really often if they are running on really old hardware, and are serving a massive network of old PC's that can barely run Win2k themselves. It gets worse if you add in Domains, buggy DHCP, but to top it off, the whole network is comprised of 10Mbit hubs. USB printers are not allowed, only CAT5 printing. Run an overzealous Squid proxy and monitoring software on the same server, and you have just reconstructed my schools network. The server is always going down, and denying access to the PC's because there are no nonadmin local accounts. Downloading files blocks out the network for everybody. Microsoft Word crashes when you use a saved file(you can edit a file, but not load or save).
      Oh yeah, you have to blank out all of the passwords periodicaly in case the users have forgotten, but don't tell anybody because that would be a security issue. I have been locked out before because I didn't know that they did this.

    59. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My Mandrake box does this to me frequently it is on a kvm, and does not like it at all. Hard boot fixes it by seems odd to me

    60. Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NO its not. I'ved managed dozens of nt server networks and dhcp is a common point of failure for many sites.

    61. Re:From Linux to Windows by DeICQLady · · Score: 1

      hari kari --> hakkiri (aka seppuku)?

  14. Windows TCO by alatesystems · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I am so sick of "get the facts" and "Windows TCO is lower". I am a big fan of windows on the desktop, but it sucks as a server. I contend that anyone who says "Windows is easier to admin than Linux" has never had a Windows problem.

    Since Tuesday, my DFS has been totally screwed up and not replicating. With Linux, you'd just look at a samba config file or something, but NOOO, not with AD and MS domains. I totally removed all of my replica sets and spent HOURS on google trying everything under the sun.

    We ended up having to call Microsoft and paying $245 for the privilege. Well, in case you're wondering, yes they fixed DFS, but now my SysVol is marked as tombstoned. So yeah, my profiles are replicating, but now my SysVol is about to delete itself. Microsoft is trying to figure out WTF it is trying to delete SysVol and every time you set the flag to 0 it goes right back to one, regardless of whether or not you stop or start the File Replication Service(FRS). We had to totally blow everything away in LDAP with ADSI edit and in the registry under HKLM\System\CurrentControlSet\Drivers\NtFRS and DFS.

    Anyway, I hate windows on a server, but you just don't have the same abilities on a Linux domain as you do on a windows domain with windows desktops. We used to have a samba domain, and we're transitioning to AD. I hope Ballmer gets to read this, preferably before my SysVol deactivates and deletes itself.

    This message and SysVol will self-destruct in five seconds.

    1. Re:Windows TCO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      my SysVol is marked as tombstoned

      If your lucky maybe some of that BSD code in windows will save you, since BSD is always dying but never really dies.

    2. Re:Windows TCO by GoofyBoy · · Score: 1

      >I am so sick of "get the facts" and "Windows TCO is lower".

      Yeah, I'm getting tired of seeing the same MS ads on slashdot too.

      --
      The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    3. Re:Windows TCO by RollingThunder · · Score: 1

      That was my number one reason for deciding to adblock ads on Slashdot.

    4. Re:Windows TCO by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 4, Interesting

      ``I am a big fan of windows on the desktop''

      I used to think it was Ok to run Windows on desktops. That was last year. This year, all the problems I've seen people have with their computers were problems they wouldn't have had, had they been running Debian.

      Viruses, unexplicable slowness of the system, instability, unability to replace MSIE with a proper browser, missing or disfunctional drivers for video cards and printers, weird icons or images on the desktop that wouldn't go away, register corruption, the list goes on.

      I really can't understand how people can work with such a system. OTOH, they can't understand how I can work with ratpoison, screen, mutt and vi, either.

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    5. Re:Windows TCO by base_chakra · · Score: 2, Interesting

      All of the major Linux vendors and distributors (including Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Novell [SUSE and Ximian] and Red Hat) have begun charging hefty premiums for must-have items such as technical service and support, product warranties and licensing indemnification.

      Ballmer mentions licensing indemnification because (as he mentions elsewhere) Microsoft recently removed the liabiliy cap on their products. I'll leave it to you to decide how relevant this feature is for other platforms.

      He also makes it sound as thought charging for technical support (et al) is a new development they've only just discovered since their last impartial analysis.

      But in case you haven't seen done this before, let's look at a couple of product pricing and technical support models:

      Red Hat Enterprise Linux Support Options and Pricing
      This chart shows subscription rates for various Red Hat server products.

      Microsoft Windows Server 2003 Assisted Support Options
      These pages describe prices of phone, e-mail, and direct support only. The prices do not include the actual cost of products from the Windows Server 2003 family.

      Windows Server 2003 Pricing
      Prices in USD for Windows Server 2003 products and CALs.

    6. Re:Windows TCO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why exactly do you NEED Active Directory? you did not have it 3 years ago and you were able to do your job.

      hell before we switched to AD things went smoother, now things are more honkey than before.

      switchingto the "new thing" just because is not a smart thing to do.

    7. Re:Windows TCO by k4_pacific · · Score: 1, Troll

      "...were problems they wouldn't have had, had they been running Debian." ... or CPM/80 for that matter.

      --
      Unknown host pong.
    8. Re:Windows TCO by bobcat7677 · · Score: 1

      What about the telephone calls???? I have had very nice representatives from M$ call me twice in the past couple months offering to send me out materials explaining how Linux will cause the great apocolypse and M$ is our savior. And additionally suggesting that "certain things can be done" to help convince customers they need to stay on windows (IE give them cool gadgets or discount their license purchases). I have a rep I can call at any time to get help when I need to convince companies to stay off linux. Ugh...it's pathetic.

    9. Re:Windows TCO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i know what you mean, that's always the problem with the TCO of AD. LDAP is much better but MS will not support DFS or ADSI unless you WTF. GAFL may apply, also .

    10. Re:Windows TCO by Psiren · · Score: 1

      I've asked this question several times, but no-one has given me a decent answer. Where is DFS on Linux? There is no decent (by which I mean stable and usable) piece of software that will allow two servers to mirror their filesystems in the way that DFS will on Windows.

      NFS and GFS suffer from single point of failure.
      Coda is too big and unstable. Likewise for OpenAFS.
      Intermezzo oopses the kernel.

      Linux may be better as a server system in some circumstances, but it still has a way to go imho.

    11. Re:Windows TCO by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      >> "...were problems they wouldn't have had, had
      >> they been running Debian." ... or CPM/80 for
      >> that matter. ... or OS/2 ... or BeOS ... or Solaris ... or MacOS 9 ... or MacOS 10

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    12. Re:Windows TCO by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1
      My experience with Windows is that it works just fine until something unexpected happens.

      As an ex-mainframe guy, we knew a lot of how the stuff works, like how the database pages were written. Get a corruption, and you can probably work it out.

      I've had a really odd problem with a Word document where pressing the enter key actually moves it along a space. Very weird, and I'm wondering if it's going to corrupt. If it does, will I be able to go through and find the problem, or hope that OpenOffice.org will?

      I'm still on Windows, but once I get a spare box, I'm going to start training myself off it. I like how Apache has a config file, not an interface.

    13. Re:Windows TCO by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 1

      You gotta be fair. Windows XP is exactly the OS we needed ... in 1995. Well, putting that aside ... and putting further aside how WinXP is forcing people to upgrade from PentiumIIs ... Windows XP is good enough for the job. But you have to remove MSIE. MSIE is a massive security hole considering how easily it allows users to compromise their systems.

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    14. Re:Windows TCO by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      They're also problems they likely wouldn't have had if their windows machines had been set up properly (and then locked down so users couldnt futz with things)

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    15. Re:Windows TCO by JamesTRexx · · Score: 1

      Would Unisonbe any help to you?

      --
      home
    16. Re:Windows TCO by Kjella · · Score: 1

      they can't understand how I can work with ratpoison, screen, mutt and vi, either.

      With those names, can you blame them?

      Kjella

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    17. Re:Windows TCO by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      I can't believe you just cited "missing or disfunctional [sic] drivers for video cards and printers" as an argument for why Linux is better than Windows.

      (about to get modded into oblivion for suggesting Linux isn't perfect...)

    18. Re:Windows TCO by boodaman · · Score: 3, Informative

      Why does there have to be a 1-to-1 relationship between what you can do with Linux and what you can do with Windows?

      Have you considered that "DFS" might be a solution looking for a problem?

      For example, from the DFS FAQ (http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserver2003/techin fo/overview/dfsfaq.mspx):

      For example, if you have marketing files on multiple servers in a domain, you can use DFS to make it appear as though all of the marketing files are on a single server.

      So why would you have marketing files on multiple servers in a domain? This is a symptom of a larger organizational problem: the balkanization (if you will) of storage by most companies. The way most companies solve their storage problems is by buying another server, typically with a couple hundred GB of storage.

      Then they have issues like "Susie, if you need the marketing files from 2002, they're on the server called HARPO, but if you want the ones from 2003, they're on GROUCHO because HARPO ran out of space. And the 2004 files are on MOE. Or maybe CURLY, I can't remember, ask the help desk."

      The issue isn't "Linux doesn't have DFS", the issue is "most companies manage storage (and knowledge) poorly".

      Many corporate storage problems are a result of poor workflow, poor process management, and an insatiable need by most management grunts to cover their asses by saving EVERYTHING no matter what instead of assessing what really needs to be saved, and organizing it in a way that makes sense to the organization.

      The solution to the problem isn't "use Windows because it has DFS and UNIX doesn't" but "disconnect storage from processing". Don't buy more disk by buying another server...just buy more disk, or better yet, figure out why you're using so much disk and solve THAT problem instead.

      It is easy to get caught in the "server == disk" trap, because you have companies like Dell selling "servers" for $1000. That's great for the short-term, but the long-term costs go up, up, and up as complexity increases and the need to have more admins to manage that complexity increases along with it.

      The long term solution is to understand that you will ALWAYS want more disk, and plan accordingly by buying a "real" server that can accept external arrays, etc. or better yet, buying a filer solution from Hitachi, Network Appliance, or similar. The short term cost will be higher, but its just hardware so you can depreciate it anyway, and the long term costs will be tremendously lower. And your DR (disaster recovery) processes will be much cleaner and more robust.

      In the spirit of Ballmer's e-mail, the TCO on a filer solution is much lower than a corresponding TCO for managing several, or dozens, or hundreds of servers, each with a couple hundred gigs of storage on it (not to mention server OS licensing costs, archiving software costs, etc).

      Heck, if an organization is REALLY smart, they won't even use Explorer-style file management...they'll have an intranet where people search for what they want in a browser, with the results coming from a DB and all they do is click on the "download" link which retrieves the file for them. They never, ever have to know where the physical file even resides.

    19. Re:Windows TCO by krunk7 · · Score: 1
      Is DFS really necessary on *nix systems? iirc, DFS was presented as a solution to having numerous shared drives. No more worries of running out of drive letters or having 20 different drives scattered around "My Computer".

      With *nix systems you can mount numerous drives in one directory under logically organized sub-directories essentially acheiving the same thing.

    20. Re:Windows TCO by mchawi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, that actually isn't why a lot of people use DFS. We have sites over 38 remote sites, and we want them all to have access to the same documents / software / etc. We use DFS so that we can tell people 'go to your * drive' and find this document (usually stuff that doesn't change a lot). DFS allows us to use sites and services to point them to the closest domain controller with copies of that information. This means we save a TON of bandwidth by not having users all come back to the home office to get their documents.

      Of course, you can do the same thing in *nix using some other stuff, but it isn't just about storage.

    21. Re:Windows TCO by Rashkae · · Score: 1

      Actually, configuring a "supported" video card in Linux is much easier and less trouble prone than doing the same in Windows. Hell, even "unsuported" video cards, where there is Vendor support (Nvidia/ATI), are a cakewalk.

    22. Re:Windows TCO by boodaman · · Score: 1

      rsync handles a situation like yours easily.

    23. Re:Windows TCO by codepunk · · Score: 1

      I have 4 servers running GFS in active active mode accessing disk across fiber channel. The problem is obvious, you don't know what you are doing. I can kill off three out of 4 nodes and still be running. Go back to your windows wannabe active passive cluster and quit talking shit.

      --


      Got Code?
    24. Re:Windows TCO by VAXGeek · · Score: 1

      Really? You could mount an 'rsync' volume transparently from Windows, and then read/write files? That would be an amazing piece of technology, but I'm pretty sure it's not possible with rsync today.

      --
      this sig limit is too small to put anything good h
    25. Re:Windows TCO by boodaman · · Score: 1

      Who said anything like that? Not me. I'm not even sure you understand what rsync is...I've never heard of a "rsync volume".

      The poster said they use DFS to "save bandwidth" because they have servers in 38 locations and want users in remote locations to have local copies. Or at least, that's how I read the post.

      You're telling me that I can't export a samba share called "/HomeDir" from the server in Branch Office X to my users in Branch Office X, and then use rsync to keep the files on the server at Branch Office X current with the files somewhere else, like the server at HeadQuarters?

    26. Re:Windows TCO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try installing the latest linux nvidia drivers then getting your LCD monitor to go into "suspend" or "standby" mode. Gimme a call when that works.

    27. Re:Windows TCO by deconstruct · · Score: 0

      Ok.. I can't stand it any more! I have to chime in... it sounds like objectivity is out of the realm of possibilities for the slashdot crowd. I would think anyone here would appreciate that any two systems will have differences... advantages and disadvantages. But to just rant like this whole thread is doing... it's just pathetic.

      I was hoping to read some good discussion arguing the points in Ballmer's email... but instead it's the same predictable spew from Linux extremists.

      Directory Services:
      For your comments about how AD may be making your life miserable... then perhaps you shouldn't use Microsoft's Implementation of it. However, I would like to mention that Active Directory is just and LDAP directory... running on STANDARD protocols [such as LDAP] and it is integrated with technologies such as KERBEROS and DNS which have origins in *NIX. Just because you don't want to use Active Directory doesn't mean you shouldn't use a Directory Service of any kind.

      ANY directory service requires knowledge and expertise about how to use it. If you aren't qualified to run the Windows Implementation... then stick with OpenLDAP or an alternate. Don't just blindly criticize something because you don't understand it.

      DFS & FRS:
      Using a stapler instead of a corkscrew obviously is the wrong tool for the job if you're trying to open a bottle of wine. So don't be naïve in thinking that FRS [File Replication Service] HAS to be used the way you WANT it to.

      DFS is designed to make a collection of network shares appear in one FLAT logical hierarchy... replication is not part of the game.

      FRS is used to replicate small files that don't change very often [such as Group Policies and Login Scripts] It is not a substitution for a document management solution and it is NOT intended for use of constantly changing data being accessed from multiple locations. It sounds like this poster has implemented it incorrectly!

      A solution like XOSoft's WanSync or hell, even ROBOCOPY would be more appropriate. A transacted replication mechanism that guarantees no data will be lost is what this situation calls for. FRS Is a best effort mechanism... and if you happen to break it on a Domain Controller - then YES, you run the risk of hosing up your domain.

    28. Re:Windows TCO by jlrobins_uncc · · Score: 1

      You can surpass Windows DFS, providing a truly enterprise filesystem for both UNIXen and Windows, including unified namespace and read-only volume replication -- www.openafs.org.

      It'll take some time to grok, but it can be done. Too bad AFS was a little too far-reaching for its day, but not much has come to touch it when you really need something like it.

    29. Re:Windows TCO by Piquan · · Score: 1

      OTOH, they can't understand how I can work with ratpoison, screen, mutt and vi, either.

      I don't either. I mean, come on, why the dependence on the GUI? Ditch that ratpoison and work in console mode under screen.

    30. Re:Windows TCO by Psiren · · Score: 1

      I looked at GFS. It seems to be very good at what it does, but it's not what I'm after. What you've just described is a costly setup, and far more complicated than I need. I want two servers to be able to replicate each others filesystems, so that one can take over the others services. Perhaps I'm barking up the wrong tree with DFS, maybe I'm really talking about file replication, but from what little I've read DFS and FRS are quite closely tied in Windows. Oh, and for your information, I'm not a Windows admin, but if you feel the need to throw insults to make yourself feel superior, you go ahead.

    31. Re:Windows TCO by Psiren · · Score: 1

      Thanks, I did look at unison, but it's not quite low level enough to make everything as transparent as it should be. It's been a while though, so perhaps things have improved and I should take another look.

    32. Re:Windows TCO by Psiren · · Score: 1

      Have you tried using rsync to keep files updated both ways? Unison is a better fit for this, but last time I looked it was still not reliable enough for me to trust it to important data.

    33. Re:Windows TCO by DrCode · · Score: 1

      That might be fine in a business, but not so good at home. The only reason my wife or kids use our Windows machine, as opposed to the two Linux boxes, is so they can run Windows software (mostly games) or browse web sites that require IE plugins. If the machine were 'locked down', what good would it be?

    34. Re:Windows TCO by Tony-A · · Score: 1

      explaining how Linux will cause the great apocolypse and M$ is our savior.

      Close, but the "great apocolypse" is Microsoft's and Microsoft expects you to be Microsoft's savior.

      As in "get the facts", Microsoft has little problem playing loose with the truth, and probably believing it themselves.

    35. Re:Windows TCO by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Well you see, he uses a web browser too. I don't know about you, but ASCII pr0n just doesn't do it for me...

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    36. Re:Windows TCO by stor · · Score: 1

      We used to have a samba domain, and we're transitioning to AD.

      Oh man that makes baby Jesus cry :(

      I have a client (the CIO of a large retailer in Oz) running Samba 3 and OpenLDAP 2.2, with home directories NFS and SMB-exported. He *loves* the combo. There was pain setting it up (schema fixes, database fixes... we had upgraded from Samba 2.2 and OpenLDAP 2.0 with schemacheck=off and his database had all sorts of schema violations) but now it chugs away nicely. He can hack login scripts, add/remove users/computers (using idxldapman webmin module) and replicate to his heart's content. Homedir backups are a cinch (we use and love Amanda). What's important to me: I can do an ldapsearch or slapcat to dump his entire database in case of disaster. I can practically guarantee that if his LDAP server exploded tomorrow I'd be able to reload the database on another machine and get him running in an hour or so (could be a lot less, depends mostly on network congestion: his link isn't the greatest...), remotely (he's in a different state).

      Samba 3 and OpenLDAP 2.2. is not good enough for your needs? I realise there's still some features Samba 3 doesn't support which Samba 4 is trying to address. I guess you're reliant on some of these missing features??

      Anyway good luck.

      Cheers
      Stor

      --
      "Yeah well there's a lot of stuff that should be, but isn't"
    37. Re:Windows TCO by nzkbuk · · Score: 1

      ok so you've listed 1 example from windows and 5 from nix. That tell you about how much more choice.

      Also you haven't stated if simple replication would be enough (cron + rsync), or maybe you want a real solution such as having the file system on a seperate network device with raid and both servers having access.

    38. Re:Windows TCO by VAXGeek · · Score: 1

      Go ahead and try it. I dare you. It won't work.

      --
      this sig limit is too small to put anything good h
  15. Nothing new here by menkhaura · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What would we expect of Ballmer? "Okay, okay, I give in, Linux is actually better, cheaper, more stable, faster" and so on? Of course not. He is lying, true, but that is his job (used car salesmen, bow before Ballmer, for he is your god).

    --
    Stupidity is an equal opportunity striker.
    Fellow slashdotter Bill Dog
    1. Re:Nothing new here by imr · · Score: 1

      The fact that there is nothing new here is interresting in itself. It means that at the top of their hierarchy they still continue a quite old and quite ineffective tactic.
      I would be more worried if they actually listened to those guys in microsoft who actually get it about free software and its community.

    2. Re:Nothing new here by menkhaura · · Score: 1

      In that case, what would happen? Would we have a "Microsoft Linux"? Now, that would be unexpected, but I believe it would be a successful product by combining Linux technical superiority with PHBs confidence in Microsoft (yet, Microsoft would probably twist their Linux distro into something incompatible with anything but Windows and MS-Linux). Yeah, scary...

      --
      Stupidity is an equal opportunity striker.
      Fellow slashdotter Bill Dog
    3. Re:Nothing new here by pete-classic · · Score: 1

      I think you can be a company man without lying.

      Their biggest problem is that their business model is dead, it just hasn't cooled off yet. If they want to stick to a proprietary model they will HAVE to start supporting their products. The whole "who are you going to sue" thing has worn mighty thin. Everyone knows that Microsoft does all the suing.

      The TCO argument might slow the hemorrhaging, but until they decided to buckle down and offer some value they will be doomed to a downward trend.

      -Peter

    4. Re:Nothing new here by DMadCat · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually I think they would gain a lot more credibility if they would just admit that yes, linux does have a lower TCO, and then stick to touting the features and ease-of-use of Windows platforms which give the customer more value.

      Simple honest marketing. "We have this, this, this, and this and we think all of that would be a great fit for your company."

      Instead you get, "We have everything you need. You wouldn't really want to trust them with your business would you? This is what we know about them and it isn't good so you should just stay with us. Here. Here's something shiny..."

      Unfortunately Microsoft isn't in the business of making software. They're in the business of making money. Software just happens to be the medium they use to further that end which is why their "Marketing Campaign" seems more like a mud-slinging political engine.

    5. Re:Nothing new here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you pay attention to the news, more and more average CEOs are getting caught telling lies. It seems as though Mr. Ballmer is mostly lying to CEOs, rather than average Joes. Is that why nobody in the Commerce Dept. is complaining that he's not telling the truth or is this what free-market is all about?

    6. Re:Nothing new here by plopez · · Score: 1

      used car salesmen have alot more ethics and morallity that software salesmen in most cases (IMO of course).

      If you sold used cars like software is sold, you would be in prison.

      If you sold real estate like software is sold, you would be in prison.

      --
      putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
    7. Re:Nothing new here by div_B · · Score: 1

      If you sold used cars like software is sold, you would be in prison.
      If you sold real estate like software is sold, you would be in prison.


      And if you, as a private individual, conducted yourself in the manner of a large corporation, you would be considered a pyschopath.

    8. Re:Nothing new here by crazyphilman · · Score: 1

      I for one was really disappointed by the email. I was hoping for another monkey boy dance, or at least a little shouting. All I got was a big chunk of plaintext. What is he, on meds or something? It's just a big letdown.

      Maybe if we got him some espresso...

      --
      Farewell! It's been a fine buncha years!
    9. Re:Nothing new here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You said "lying" and "true" next to each other in the same sentence and you are right. My head hurts.

  16. The lower TC by mpost4 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    will be the one that the most people that have to interact with it know it. If on the server, and all the admins know unix that would be linux or unix. If on the server and all the admins know only windows then it would be windows. On the desktop windows will win most (read 95%) of the time. Unless you have a very very techly set of employees then it just might be linux.

    1. Re:The lower TC by gsaraber · · Score: 1

      That is nonsense, in a company setting the employees just need to be trained with the apps they use windows or linux doesn't matter one bit.. the admins keep their system running. you're thinking of people in a home setting who admin their own computer, yes I can see them sticking with windows.

      People at my company can barely operate a lightswitch without assistance but they are very happy running kde, there were very few problems upgrading from MacOS.

    2. Re:The lower TC by JayTeeUK · · Score: 1
      On the desktop windows will win most (read 95%) of the time. Unless you have a very very techly set of employees then it just might be linux.

      Or your employees have never used a computer before and thus only need to learn, not re-learn, how things work.
      --
      James Tait, Programmer and Free Software Advocate
      JID: jayteeuk@wyrddreams.org
    3. Re:The lower TC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      sorry but if yout IT department are not bright enough to understand and know 2 Os's then you need to stop hiring idiots.

      anyone here MUST be aboe to do windows workstation and linux config and admin. and no you dont get 2X the pay of regular IT... you are in IT you are expected to know your farking job and not just passed some lame MCSE tests.

      TCO of linux = 0 no extra anything on my people for "education" and "retraining" but it did take $14,000.00 to retrain the users when we went from Windows 2000 to XP.

    4. Re:The lower TC by Phleg · · Score: 1

      This is not always true. Remember, it is the Total Cost of Ownership. If going with the initially-cheaper Windows installation because all of your techies are Windows folk enables more security breaches, more downtime due to viruses spreading, etc., you still may lose out in the long-run.

      Of course, the same can be said for Linux; it is not a panacea. If you train the Windows guys in Linux for a little bit then convert your entire infrastructure over, you're asking for services to be install insecurely and for huge hiccups in service due to misguided installations.

      --
      No comment.
    5. Re:The lower TC by KZigurs · · Score: 1

      I seriously doubt that. Even techies are pretty unable to use linux on desktop anyway (and no, using console at your desk doesn't qualifies as Desktop Usage)

    6. Re:The lower TC by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Unless you're talking about MacOS <= 9.x, switching to KDE is not an "upgrade." It may not be much worse than OS X, but it's definitely not better.

      (note: this is not a troll. I use (and like) desktop Linux too, but my iBook has noticeably better usability)

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    7. Re:The lower TC by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      I haven't voluntarily used Windows in the past 2 years. I use Linux instead*, and I only use it on the desktop. Moreover, the group I used to work with exclusively used Linux. It's extremely obvious to me that desktop Linux is usable as long as you don't cling to your Windows assumptions.

      *well, I recently got a Mac so now I mostly use Mac OS. Desktop Linux isn't as good as OS X, but it is better than Windows XP.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    8. Re:The lower TC by KZigurs · · Score: 1

      * Well, i totally agree about MacOS X. I use it exclusively now.

      But windows gets quite usable once you take into account firefox too. Of course, you don't use XP default "THEME"?

      And as much as I would love customizability of Linux desktops it just adds for trouble.

      Not to mention that screen estate is cluttered both in kde and gnome by default anyway, the ability to build a menu bars and advanced widget systems to cover 1/3 of the screen (even windows IS better in this matter) is a criminal offence.

      But this is just my two c. As usually.

      I refuse to use shit. Windows at least covers with newspaper, linux admittedly smacks it into my face on every corner. The fact that it's free doesn't changes anything.

    9. Re:The lower TC by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      I have one simple problem with Windows: they use a "Wizard" for EVERY SINGLE DAMN THING! When I want to change the settings for something, or even find out what they are, I just want to DO it, not click "next, next, next, next, next, next, next, next, next, next, next" a million times and then look in six different places for the information. A text file is OK; a GUI with a bunch of text boxes, combo boxes, and check boxes is OK too. A "wizard" is not.

      Regarding themes, customizability, and screen real estate:

      I don't use the "luna" theme. When I am forced to use Windows now, I change it to classic; when I used Windows on my own PC I used ThemeXP and third-party themes. The nice thing about Mac OS is that the default is good (except for mixing Aqua and Metal; they should just let you choose one or the other globally), and the nice thing about Linux is that you don't need a third-party hack to change themes.

      I love the customizability of Linux desktops because I actually use it. My desktop consists of Sawfish as the WM, GKrellM as the clock and launcher for common apps, Multi-RXVT as the launcher for less common apps, and that's all. Sometimes I use Kicker solely for KNewsTicker, and I might try out GDesklets and one of those OSX Dock lookalikes.

      Incidentally, I don't use GNOME or KDE specifically because they clutter up the screen with panels and try to be "Desktop Environments" -- why can't we just have "X apps" rather than "GNOME apps" or "KDE apps"?! Also, I HATE the fact that there are redundant and incompatible toolkits. I would consider using GNOME or KDE when one of them "wins" or when they merge technologies. Enlightenment is going in the exact opposite direction and is creating their own new set of crap -- it is EVIL!. GNUStep, however, is OK because "in theory" it is compatible with Cocoa.

      I almost look forward to the future when everything will be written in Swing (or SWT?), Cocoa, and Mono, but will wish it all used WxWidgets or Xtk instead.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    10. Re:The lower TC by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      I hate to reply to my own post, but to claify: that one simple problem with Windows was regarding usability. I have many other problems with Windows, but they're of a different sort.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  17. 2600 words? by klocwerk · · Score: 5, Funny

    how ironic.
    ^_^

    --

    "You worthless post!"
    -Shakespeare, 2 Gentlemen of Verona, 1. 1. 147
    1. Re:2600 words? by DrWily · · Score: 1

      2600 is such a beautiful number... Balmer could have made a more direct point with just 42 tho.

    2. Re:2600 words? by secretsquirel · · Score: 1

      In seven lines of six words each?

    3. Re:2600 words? by ggvaidya · · Score: 1

      Microsoft believes Windows is a better
      solution to all your technical problems
      and Windows marketing is the best
      in the world oops did I
      say marketing I meant security hehe.
      Linux is a stupid program without
      any new technology or marketing programme!

    4. Re:2600 words? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      I was wondering if anyone else picked up on that..

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    5. Re:2600 words? by Ford+Prefect · · Score: 3, Funny

      2600 is such a beautiful number... Balmer could have made a more direct point with just 42 tho.

      Developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers, developers?

      Something along those lines, anyhow. ;-)

      --
      Tedious Bloggy Stuff - hooray?
    6. Re:2600 words? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Care to enlighten us n00bs?

    7. Re:2600 words? by amembleton · · Score: 1

      2600 is the name of a Hacker Quarterly.

      Wikipedia Article

      Their website.

    8. Re:2600 words? by stor · · Score: 1

      Ballmer: "I've got 42 words for you...

      I... absolutely positively, fuck me dead, goddamn LOVE... and when I say *love* I mean if Microsoft had a pussy I would go it, THIS... COMPANY YEEEEEAAAAHHH!!! Woooot! Linux sux! Give it up for me!! C'MON!! Gimmie my paycheck... and some deodorant!"

      Cheers
      Stor

      --
      "Yeah well there's a lot of stuff that should be, but isn't"
  18. Microsoft finally offered TCO proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On it's face, all the yankee/MS studies prove that "Vendor Lock In" is more expensive than open source options.

  19. Phoe6 is twisting ZDNet's words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think its interesting that Phoe6 basically cut and pasted the first two paragraphs of the ZDnet article, but chose to add the word controveral before "Microsoft's Get The Facts campaign". Nice subtle bias insertion, there. You should work for 60 minutes and cover George Bush.
    So, Phoe6, care to tell us what is controversal about Microsoft putting its best foot forward?

    "Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer has used the software giant's latest executive email to stoke up Microsoft's fight against the rise of Linux. The 2,600 word missive was titled 'Customer focus: comparing Windows with Linux and UNIX'. In it, Ballmer repeated the key themes of Microsoft's controversial Get The Facts campaign.

    1. Re:Phoe6 is twisting ZDNet's words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      at least he spelled it correctly :-)

  20. Those clever journalists... by nijk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    And as Yankee Group noted in its Linux, UNIX and Windows TCO Comparison study, "Linux-specific worms and viruses are every bit as pernicious as their UNIX and Windows counterparts - and in many cases they are much more stealthy."
    Well they have to be...the simple viruses that invade windows machines wouldn't stand a chance against linux.

    Also, they totally ignore to state the fact that the frequency of Linux viruses on Linux is pretty much null.

    1. Re:Those clever journalists... by jpmkm · · Score: 2, Funny

      Whereas the frequency of Linux viruses on Windows is much higher?

    2. Re:Those clever journalists... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Whereas the frequency of Linux viruses on Windows is much higher?

      You haven't been paying much attention to the news, haven't you?

    3. Re:Those clever journalists... by legirons · · Score: 1

      "And as Yankee Group noted in its Linux, UNIX and Windows TCO Comparison study, "Linux-specific worms and viruses are every bit as pernicious as their UNIX and Windows counterparts"

      See, this is the bit which confuses me. These nasty linux worms. I'm no expert on viruses (read the wikipedia entry once), but I know about 4-5 people in my office (of 20) who got Windows viruses in the last year, all of which trashed their computers, and required a reinstall (some people realise this earlier than others)

      Even looking at the virus/worm reports in the newspapers (i.e. the ones which did serious damage), we see names like Sasser, MyDoom, SoBig, Blaster, SQL Slammer, Klez, CodeRed, SirCam, LoveLetter, and Melissa, all of which affect Windows systems, and many of which had quite serious effects.

      According to Wikipedia's timeline, you'd have to go back to 1988 to see a "notable" non-Windows malware ("The Morris worm"), 17 years ago when the other viruses were hitting Amigas and Apple II systems, spreading by floppy-disk.

      Where are all these Linux-specific worms that Ballmer is talking about, and why hasn't their damage been reported in the news? Even the tabloids and television news are warning people about the latest "trashing all Windows computers in the world" event, but I must have missed the reporting on linux viruses, even though I read technical news.

      "and in many cases [the linux viruses] are much more stealthy."

      As far as I can tell, they're extremely stealthy...

  21. maybe the TCO is lower by havaloc · · Score: 0, Troll

    As a systems admin, I don't want to fuss around with kernels, deciding between a distribution, and all that jazz. With an educational discount, Windows 2003 server costs my department $142 (sure, it's more in a commercial environment), I can install it, set it up, run updates on it once in a while, run the baseline security analyzer on it, and forget about it. Give me a linux that does all this in an easy to use manner, and I'll switch. Sure, I could use apt and the others, but it just takes too much time, and you have to worry about various dependencies and what not. I'd like nothing better than to run a Unix variant, but until you bring me a monolithic distribution that just works, I'll have to stay Microsoft for now.

    1. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a systems admin too ;-). I run dozens of linux servers. Linux costs my department $0.00 (sure, it MIGHT be more in a commercial environment ;-)). I can install it, set it up, run updates on it once in a while (OR COMPLETELY AUTOMATICALLY), and forget about it. You should switch, you're an idiot not too. Every linux system I've got going here has been flawlessly operating with zero downtime for 3 YEARS...can't say that about the room full of Windows boxes that die on a fairly regular basis next door to me...I like to go over and eat my lunch while watching them struggle with their windoze boxes...:-)

    2. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Just look at the "security" of the Linux kernel. Users are limited to 16 groups?? Only one group can have permissions applied to a file? And no group nesting allowed?

      Yeah, there's a security system I'd be proud of.

      You can mod this comment down, but you can't propose a security system like THAT to a company interested in protecting their assets. WAKE UP SLASHDOT.

    3. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Jon-o · · Score: 3, Interesting

      As far as updating goes, generally, debian is much easier to update in my experience. Using the packages included in debian (and this is a HUGE number) you essentially never have to worry at all about dependencies.

      Of course, if you use the unstable distribution, occasionally a package gets uploaded that is a little ... unstable. :)

      But using stable, or even testing, you almost never get this kind of problem. Certainly nothing like the problems with winxpSP2, and of course, the viruses/spyware fun on windows requires far more frequent updating than anything in linuxland.

      Anyway, if all your experience has been with redhat, especially if you weren't using yum or apt-get in it, things can be greatly improved.

    4. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      RedHat Enterprise Linux. If your institution signs an agreement with redhat, you get rhel for $50/year........ and you get all the updates, you dont have to compile any software, all the packages are designed to work together. RHEL will do everything you are asking for.

    5. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by dr_leviathan · · Score: 1

      Clearly this guy has never experienced all of the wonderful automatic dependency checking, rebootless, ease of configuration goodness that is a well made linux distribution. It doesn't even sound like he's tried it.

      Knoppix is a monolithic distribution that just works.

      Go ahead, try it: knoppix.org

      --
      Religion is poison to rationality, and we lose sight of that at our own peril. -- Lurker2288
    6. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by JayTeeUK · · Score: 1
      Sure, I could use apt and the others, but it just takes too much time, and you have to worry about various dependencies and what not.

      Actually, if you use apt then it resolves the dependencies for you. And besides, you still have dependencies even with Windows -- have you never heard of DLL Hell?
      --
      James Tait, Programmer and Free Software Advocate
      JID: jayteeuk@wyrddreams.org
    7. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You seem to have conveniently left out the hyper inflated cost of CLIENT ACCESS LICENSES. That will push your cost of Windows 2003 Server (Standard Edition) beyond your little number you show now.

      Go with Linux Mandrake for a server-easier to setup than Windows 2003 Server.

    8. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Gulik · · Score: 2, Informative

      Just look at the "security" of the Linux kernel. Users are limited to 16 groups?? Only one group can have permissions applied to a file? And no group nesting allowed?

      Yeah, there's a security system I'd be proud of.

      You can mod this comment down, but you can't propose a security system like THAT to a company interested in protecting their assets. WAKE UP SLASHDOT.


      IHBT. Still:

      First off, lots of large companies protect their assets using the standard UNIX security scheme, so that part of your argument is a non-starter.

      Further, if you require a more flexible ACL scheme for some reason, you can always use SGI's XFS filesystem, which has had fairly good support for ACLs for quite awhile.

      Or use IBM's JFS, which likewise has ACL support.

      I believe that there are patches available which will add ACL support the ext2 and ext3.

      So, in summary: Plenty of folks get by without problems with UNIX permissions, but if you want ACLs, they're readily available. Go ye forth and troll no more.

    9. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by randyjparker · · Score: 2, Informative

      FreeBSD. Not only is the entire distribution integrated, but all future updates of all pieces are integrated in the same way.

    10. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have 300 Windows servers in the room next to me and use SMS/SUS to get automatic updates without touching the system. Every system has been flawlessly operating for several years. I don't see the big deal here really.

      They have to reboot for patches periodically, but most of our servers are redundant and can reboot in sequence with no downtime.

      We also administer a lot of Unix/Linux systems as well. I prefer Windows for some things and Unix/Linux for some things. In a large environment though, with Windows 2003 servers - the whole 'uptime' issue just isn't an issue anymore.

      I could go on why I think Linux will win in the future of course - but I don't think uptime or management is really a viable reason anymore.

      Also if you want the same sort of management options - Tivoli / HP OpenView vs SMS/MOM - you're going to be looking at a similar price. Add eDirectory (or whatever today's name for it is) vs. AD - and there is no savings in TCO.

      I think Linux is always going to win hands down in a small environment, but in a large environment with competent administrators they just come out even.

    11. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what the hell has Knoppix got to do with real production environments, exactly?

    12. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by hey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think:

      simple == good security

      So I like the classic Unix security scheme on Linux.
      Windows has no equivalent. It's tricky, you can't see what's happening at a glance.

    13. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Tbeehler · · Score: 0

      While I agree with your arguement, I have a counterpoint. We get a non-profit discount on Windows 2003 Server at $40 and I still wouldn't go back to windows. Say what you will about Linux being difficult and while you are correct, once it's all set up the way you want, you'll never have to touch it. I have nightly updates run as a cron job, I check for a few things from time to time, but for the most part, once linux is set up, you don't have to touch it. I now don't have virus problems running through my servers (which in of itself is reason enough to switch) I don't have to worry about stability issues. If a linux machine is cut off the network for any reason, I can simply plug it back in or restart the service. My users don't have to reboot their machines to reconnect (as it did with windows) You're argument is quite valid and I was in your shoes less then a year ago, but give linux a chance on a server that doesn't do much in your environment (say a minor print server) and see how it works out for you. It'll be one less machine you have to worry about. I did and now all our machines run linux.

    14. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by julesh · · Score: 5, Informative

      Users are limited to 16 groups??

      32, I believe. Still, it isn't perfect, and we should perhaps look at ways to improve it.

      Only one group can have permissions applied to a file?

      Not true. All major Linux filesystems support POSIX ACLs now, enabling you to apply whatever permissions you like.

      And no group nesting allowed?

      What are the security benefits of allowing this? Personally, I am not aware of any, as I believe whether it is allowed or not the systems are actually equivalent -- it is merely an implementation detail that should be ironed out by any reasonably well written management system.

      You can mod this comment down, but you can't propose a security system like THAT to a company interested in protecting their assets. WAKE UP SLASHDOT.

      Even without ACLs, it is more than adequate for 99% of companies. Hell, most of them wouldn't want to spend the admin time required to manage anything more complex.

    15. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need FreeBSD. I don't know how anyone can manage Linux in a corporate environment, it is just too unstable and hackish.

    16. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but until you bring me a monolithic distribution that just works

      I've been administrating Windows server systems for 6 years now and the biggest problem is that Windows doesn't "just work". It is a constant day-to-day job just keeping features working that did work initially. I'm not going to give any concrete examples; posts to this story are already full of them.

      It is primarily due to my experience with Windows at work that I run Linux at home. I have a number of Windows machines and Linux machines networked together. Although I am not an expert at Linux (yet) what I have noticed consistently is that, although it takes a little longer to setup something in Linux, when I get it working it continues to work forever! I find myself constantly going back to the Windows machines and fixing something that used to work and just quit for some damned reason.

    17. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by l3v1 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      As a systems admin, I don't want to fuss around with kernels, deciding between a distribution, and all that jazz

      Well, you must be some kind of a system admin. One thing certain: you'll never be root.

      Thing is, what you say is only true for one type of admin: who raises a hand when asked who wants to do it. No history, no experience.

      Ok, didn't want to do this, but I can't hold it :) There was some guy who set up a RedHat web/db/mail/cvs server. He wasn't an uberguru, just a guy who knew what he was doing. That machine has been going and going for more than 3 years without being stopped, only on power failures. I had to replace it this summer because it's CPU fan stopped and the CPU just went bye-bye, and it was pretty old anyways.

      The new one is going on Debian/Woody of course :)) but that's not the point. The point is, once/month dist-upgrade and it's a runner for at least the next 3 years if the gods of hardware permit :)

      I would openly directly naturally and severly fight any argument war on all fronts of server capabilities against anyone who would replace it with any Windows server version.

      --
      I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
    18. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would hazard a (very strong) guess that you don't work in electrical/computer engineering (or similiar field).

      Were you to come to my university (which I'll keep nameless, as I don't think it pertains much to the discussion), you'd find that every single prof in our department of over 200 staff runs Linux. (Sure, there may be a few Windows machines, but the "real" work -- programming, matlab, IC design, etc. -- is done on Linux, using Linux-based tools.)

      Modern Linux systems are generally so user-friendly and easy-to-upgrade (i.e., how hard is it to click on the "up2date" icon in Fedora Core 2?) that profs maintain their own systems with little difficulty.

    19. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Tom · · Score: 1

      I can install it, set it up, run updates on it once in a while, run the baseline security analyzer on it, and forget about it. Give me a linux that does all this in an easy to use manner, and I'll switch.

      You'll have to spend a bit more time doing the initial setup, but you'll more then regain that over the next few years.
      I'd say it's well worth the investment, and you may want to consider it. Alternatively:

      I'd like nothing better than to run a Unix variant, but until you bring me a monolithic distribution that just works

      There are suppliers for exactly your market. SuSE, for example, is delivering ready-to-run enterprise servers, preinstalled and preconfigured. They'll even show up to complete the installation with your network settings and other requirements and give you a support contract.

      The difference is that there are multiple vendors instead of just one. You will, oh horror, have to choose.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    20. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by realkiwi · · Score: 1

      I just got back from a client where I installed a server 4 years ago. A couple of apps were upgraded last year. The machine is a webapp server, file share (Macs) etc. and firewalled off behind a router. I haven't bothered much with security upgrades.

      We just did an audit and as the hardware is getting on in age decided not to upgrade anything this year. The server is running Redhat 7.2 and a 2.2 kernel I believe.

      Before that the server was a Windows NT box and I had to go and reboot it once every two weeks just to keep it from crashing. It couldn't serve files to Macs without crashing every two days.

      The new server will run Fedora Core and upgrade itself with yum - NOW GET THIS which looks after dependencies all by its self!!! So maybe you could go off and do your job? At least be sufficiently documented on what a modern Linux distro can and can't do.

      --
      realkiwi
    21. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      How lucky are you!
      I could never forget about a windows install, neither run upgrades that easly.

    22. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Kehvarl · · Score: 1

      I don't see why any user would need to be a memeber of more than 16 groups, or why nested groups would be such a great thing, but it would be nice to have ext2 and ext3 support multiple groupsper file without having to find and apply a patch. Then again, I doubt I'd ever use it more than once or twice, and the existing unix file permissions scheme has lasted for so long because it works.

      Other than that if the post you're replying to can't come up with any security problems greater than a proven file permission system that's easy to understand and use, then where's the problem?

    23. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by thepoch · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As a systems admin, you don't have to fuss around with kernels, you can also decide on one distribution if you want. Most distros are freely available on the net for download, so a discount isn't even needed. You can install it, set it up. run updates on it once in a while. Baseline security analyzer? Give me a break. Run a port scanner like nmap on the machine and run 'ps aux' to get a complete list of processes. Keep track of these and most security problems should be avoidable. Fedora does this, Red Hat does this, SuSE does this, the latest Ubuntu does this. You can use yum or apt, how much time does it take anyway? Dependencies are also handled by yum and apt, so no problems there. All these work.

      Here's my question... if you're a systems administrator that believes that Windows 2003 is so easy to use, and takes little time, then why not use that extra time to learn the other side of things? You might actually like it if you read enough. Imagine the advantages of having both Windows and Linux on your resume. Or are Windows problems a little too much that you don't have time to learn? Imagine how much money your boss could save if you spent that extra time learning. Then he could get you to download Linux distros, and use those, without having to pay for additional licenses. Imagine the possibilities of opening your mind to new knowledge.

      As a systems administrator and business owner, all I can say to you is... sheesh.

    24. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Tiro · · Score: 1
      but until you bring me a monolithic distribution that just works, I'll have to stay Microsoft for now.
      Try Mac OS X: BSD for the masses. More stable, more powerful, and easier administration than Windows.

    25. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "I could use apt and the others, but it just takes too much time, and you have to worry about various dependencies and what not"

      Obviously you haven't yet experienced APT. APT's SPECIALITY is managing dependencies. You tell it what to install, it downloads that and all the dependencies for you then installs them.

      With APT, you don't worry about any of this dependancy nonsense. I've got my server running a cron job every day with two simple lines:

      apt-get --yes update >> /var/log/apt-get
      apt-get --yes dist-upgrade >> /var/log/apt-get

      The first line tells APT to retrieve the latest list of packages. The second tells it to upgrade everything that's not the latest version. The output from the commands are then appended to a text file at /var/log/apt-get .

      Try doing that with Wondews :P

    26. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by cvd6262 · · Score: 1

      'k I work at a Uni too, but we get free 2003 server packs. Guess what? We only use them for a Windows Domain Controller. all our databases, webservers, file servers, backups, etc. are all Linux.

      We use Debian where possible, but, for hardware issues, we've had to use RedHat on three boxen. Never had a dependency issue. Never.

      The 2003 Server runs faily well - still requires reboot on a lot of updates - but the Linux systems are almost never rebooted (6-month avg. uptime).

      With recent virius attacks and service packs, the guy in my office whose only job is to admin the windows server and the workstations has had his hands full. I've been kicking back reading /. and spending my time learning new stuff.

      Oh, and I didn't know Linux when I first set up this lab a few years back. So, my advice: Spend the hour it'll take to learn enough about Linux, set up Debian stable, crontab apt-get, and spend your time learning new stuff.

      --

      I'd rather have someone respond than be modded up.

    27. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, I could use apt and the others, but it just takes too much time, and you have to worry about various dependencies and what not

      Errr... the point of apt/yum is that they take care of those dependency issues for you, just like Windows Update does.

      Your idea of Linux comes from posts you read on /., right?

    28. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by naelurec · · Score: 1

      Hey .. stop stealing my story!! heh..

      I have a Red Hat box running Linux 2.2.19 .. Installed June 2001.. Serves up ftp, mail, web, mac & pc files, NAT, DHCPd, databases and who knows what else.. Whats interesting is out of the huge array of Macs (G3, G4, G5, XServe) and PCs (Win98, 2k, XP) at that business, the lowly Red Hat box on 5 year old hardware is the most reliable system there.

      Its getting upgraded here .. one of these days .. I have since moved to FreeBSD for all of my other servers, but this system just works and it would be such a shame to upgrade it just for the sake of upgrading.. heh.

    29. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > I can install it, set it up, run updates on it once in a while

      ...

      > Sure, I could use apt and the others, but it just takes too much time

      You do realize that these two statements are pretty much equivalent? The only apt'ing you should do on production machines is getting security updates. (you can even automate it, if you wish)

      So your argumentation boils down to the following: "I can just run Windows and update it once in a while, but on Linux I have to update it every now and then". Seems like a mighty weird statement to me.

      (I ignored your "baseline security analyzer" bit, because I'm not quite sure what you mean by it.)

    30. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by killjoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Spoken like a man who has never used linux.

      "don't want to fuss around with kernels, deciding between a distribution, and all that jazz. "

      Futzing with kernels? Who does that anymore? How many times do you decide between distributions? I'll give you a hint, once.

      "Sure, I could use apt and the others, but it just takes too much time, and you have to worry about various dependencies and what not."

      Who the hell modded you up after saying something this collosally ignorant. Apt takes too much time? You have to worry about dependencies with apt? What the fuck? The parent does not know what they are talking about or is lying mod them down people.

      "I'd like nothing better than to run a Unix variant, but until you bring me a monolithic distribution that just works,"

      What you mean like debian or suse or something?

      "I'll have to stay Microsoft for now."

      Yes you do that. Clearly you have no idea what you are talking about.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    31. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Phleg · · Score: 2, Informative

      <rant>

      I'm sorry, but comments like these only make you appear incredibly ignorant; when did you use Linux last? In 1994?

      ...I don't want to fuss around with kernels...

      Linux Myth #1: Kernels must always, ALWAYS be compiled by hand. It is utterly impossible for distributions to provide a packaged kernel.

      Linux Reality #1: Welcome to the world of package management! With just every distribution, kernel upgrades are trivial, and are identical to upgrading every other piece of software on your computer.

      apt-get update && apt-get dist-upgrade

      What's that? New kernel installed? Gee, that sure was tough!

      ...deciding between a distribution...

      Linux Myth #2: Distributions are confusing, and the process of selecting which one to use is a time-consuming process. Once you've selected one, you must review the decision over and over.

      Linux Reality #2: Distributions are largely the same, and the selection of them pretty much boils down to personal preference. Some distributions provide benefits that some others don't, but the difference in most cases is marginal, and not worth hours of deliberation.

      In any case, if that is too much work for you, here's a handy list:

      Red Hat Enterprise Got lots of cash? Need a hefty support contract for mission-critical servers? Right now, this is pretty much the only game in town. Debian Linux Don't need a support contract (or can't afford one) but still need enterprise-level stability and the best package management available for Linux? Debian is for you! Fedora Core Need something solid and well-supported, but don't care about extreme uptimes? Looking for the absolute latest versions of several server applications? This is the distro of choice.

      Of course, there are other distributions you can use that I haven't mentioned, but it's all about choice. Like I said before, the difference between distributions is relatively small and widely overblown.

      Give me a linux that does all this in an easy to use manner, and I'll switch.

      Linux Myth #3: People would use it, if only it weren't so damn tough.

      Linux Reality #3: People don't use it because they are comfortable with their misconceptions, and have few current motivations to reconsider them. If you were serious about the above statement, you already would have switched. Linux is not difficult; it is your being wedged in the Windows paradigm that has you stuck there. The same is true in reverse; it's just as difficult for a Linux administrator with zero Windows experience to migrate over to Windows.

      You don't have to compile kernels. Hell, with packaging, you don't even have to compile any software whatsoever. Upgrades are simple. When shit does hit the fan, you have plenty more options available to you to discover the source of the problem. Many distributions' installation processes are almost entirely automated, requiring the user to make less than 5 choices the entire process.

      Is Linux perfect? Of course not. Is it better than Windows? It really depends on the situation: the intended use, the overall cost, and the skill of the administrator. But using age-old excuses like "compiling kernels is hard" and "there are too many distributions" to justify you staying put with Windows is either a cop out or simply being severely uninformed. And even if it wasn't, a good system administrator should be exploring new territory, and trying things that open up possibilities even if they are difficult at first.

      </rant>

      --
      No comment.
    32. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by SysKoll · · Score: 1

      Mod the parent up. Where are mod points when you need them? You need to add that to LinuxQuestions.org in the FAQ section.

      --

      --
      Mad science! Robots! Underwear! Cute girls! Full comic online! http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/

    33. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by oGMo · · Score: 4, Insightful
      As a systems admin, I don't want to fuss around with kernels, deciding between a distribution, and all that jazz.

      So basically you're lazy and incompetant, unwilling to investigate solutions and make a decision.

      With an educational discount, Windows 2003 server costs my department $142 (sure, it's more in a commercial environment),

      I can download Fedora Core for free. Or Debian, Mandrake, Gentoo, ... the list goes on. Oh, but wait, you can't make a decision.

      I can install it, set it up, run updates on it once in a while, run the baseline security analyzer on it, and forget about it.

      More laziness and incompetance. You don't pay attention to advisories? Make sure your setup is tuned for your installation?

      Give me a linux that does all this in an easy to use manner, and I'll switch.

      So you just want a system that lets you be a lazy, incompetant administrator, because you don't want to have to do anything other than click a button now and again?

      Linux actually is easy to administer. A bit of setup and one or two people can maintain a thousand or more Linux boxes. Without that much headache. Sure, they'll have to know Linux, how to use the tools, and maybe even be good. But paying 2 people $80k a year is cheaper than paying 20 people $30k a year.

      Sure, I could use apt and the others, but it just takes too much time, and you have to worry about various dependencies and what not.

      Ignorance. Anyone who is familiar with these tools knows that dependency maintenance is part of what they do.

      I'd like nothing better than to run a Unix variant, but until you bring me a monolithic distribution that just works, I'll have to stay Microsoft for now.

      Please do. We don't need lazy, incompetant idiots running our critical boxes.

      --

      Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage

    34. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You only think that way because that is all yo have been exposed to.

      It's pretty typical for people to not go far outside their box because doing so would gain you nothing. As far as you (and many many people) are concerned, "If Linux doesn't do it, there's not reason for it". This is completely false.

      It's amazing the things you can do when you are given opportunity. Poopooing ACL features just because YOU don't have access to them is ver small minded.

    35. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by skiman1979 · · Score: 1

      There are plenty of distros in linux that deal with dependencies for you. IMHO, Mandrake's 'urpmi' and Gentoo's 'emerge' do a good job of searching for, downloading, and installing package dependencies for you. I can run 'urpmi.update -ac;urpmi --update --auto-select' on Mandrake or 'emerge -uD world' on Gentoo to get the latest fixes. One difference with Gentoo though, is it actually updates the entire system to the latest stable version, not just the latest patches for the current version.

      --
      Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    36. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The use of grouping groups to control access is that you have a level of indirection in your group permissions. e. g. it is easier to add "Bob" to the accounting group which is also a member of the Internet resource group and the Confidential Documents resource group than to add "Bob" directly to the Internet Resource Group or Confidential Documents group. Anyhow, nuff Best Practices and Feeding The Trolls.

    37. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by mdfst13 · · Score: 1

      "Sure, they'll have to know Linux, how to use the tools, and maybe even be good."

      If you replace Linux with MS Windows in that statement, it is almost as true. MS Windows is not actually easier to administer *well*. It's roughly the same difficulty as Linux (easier with some tasks; harder with others). The biggest difference is that it is much easier to administer MS Windows *badly* but well enough that things work. With Linux, one has a much better chance of finding a good admin, because the bad admins are more obvious.

    38. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by temojen · · Score: 1
      I don't know how anyone can manage Linux in a corporate environment, it is just too unstable and hackish.

      By not using a hackish distribution.

    39. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Phleg · · Score: 1

      Where are mod points when you need them?

      Sadly, I have them all. Life's a bitch, eh?

      --
      No comment.
    40. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't see why [...] nested groups would be such a great thing

      Because when only one group can have permissions set on a file or directory, and you want three groups to have those permissions, it would be useful and time saving. Under UGO permissions, your only alternative is to create another group with the members from each of the three groups in it (a maintenance nightmare).

    41. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Kehvarl · · Score: 1

      I did mention that being able to assign multiple groups to files could be nice, but nesting groups isn't really a solution. it's a quick and dirty hack which would end up hiding what groups really have access to the file. Yes you could expand the nested group to see which groups it contains, but with the current method (or the multiple groups per file method) you can quickly see who has what access with an ls -l.

      In any case, I keep trying to find a time when even the ability to assign multiple groups to a file would be needed. If the admin sets up sane groups to begin with, then there shouldn't really be that much need for multiple groups per file. As to it being a maintenance nightmare, I have to ask: "how so?" creating a group is a simple task, adding a user to the group is a simple task, adding several users to the group based on their curren group membership wouldn't be that hard to do with a simple shell script. and it's pretty easy to find out what users are members of any given group. and if you have users ending up as members of more than 16 groups, then I would first check to see if you have a good reason to have that many groups and have users as members of that many groups.

    42. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by Crackez · · Score: 1

      FreeBSD has a daily security checking script that runs via cron, so does NetBSD, I assume OpenBSD does too... So do most of the major Linux distros. Sure there are probably a few that don't, but thats why we have choices! I mean, come on, not being able to learn something new, and you work for an educational institution... pathetic....

    43. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by crazyphilman · · Score: 1

      I don't understand how you arrived at this position. Running a Windows machine is MUCH more of a pain in the butt than running a Linux (or *BSD) machine. With Windows, something is ALWAYS going wrong. Someone's trying to hack you, some schmuck browsed a porn site and loaded you up with viruses or spyware or worse, you patch and crash your machine, worms run throughout your LAN because some CS senior got "frisky" with one of the PCs in the lab...

      With a Linux or *BSD machine, you have to work for a few days to set it up initially (securing the machine, configuring services and firewall, fetching the initial set of patches, etc) but then things calm down. Sure, you'll check for patches fairly regularly, and patch the machine when something comes up, and you'll maintain your users and watch your logs...

      But on a Windows box you'll be doing all that AND sweating bullets, watching your workstation with a handful of prayer beads, praying your college's OWN STUDENTS don't make a horse's ass out of you.

      What good is the ease of point and click when your computer blows up on a regular basis? And, Windows is a pain to back up and fix, besides. It's not like you can pop in a live CD and rebuild your system, because of the registry, and so forth.

      At least with Linux, you can always pop in a Knoppix and take a look around, fixing as you go.

      --
      Farewell! It's been a fine buncha years!
    44. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by nzkbuk · · Score: 1

      cron-apt
      then every now and again log in and run apt-get -y dselect-upgrade.
      Chances are you'll have all the packages thanks to cron apt, your packages will be up to date and it's just a case of applying them

    45. Re:maybe the TCO is lower by isorox · · Score: 1

      Even without ACLs, it is more than adequate for 99% of companies. Hell, most of them wouldn't want to spend the admin time required to manage anything more complex.

      Perhaps, but then 99% of companies are 10 people. It's not enough for many larger companies. It's like saying relational databases are irellvent as you can write your program to simulate relations.

  22. Owooooooo!!!! by Roadkills-R-Us · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think some of the MSies, such as Ballmer, can officially be declared rabid. or at least werewolves in Redmond. (Warren, we need ya!)

    What??? The initial change from any OS to any other OS would cost money? Don't they cover this sort of thing in economics 101?

    1. Re:Owooooooo!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Queerwolves of Redmond.

    2. Re:Owooooooo!!!! by Greyfox · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I think Steve Ballmer's a giant douche and whenever he opens his mouth shit spews forth like that girl in Poltergeist. I'm pretty sure he and Donald Rumsfield are twins, separated at birth. They should lock them both up at the same secret facility we're holding Noriega at (Anyone remember Noreiga?) so that they no longer pose a danger of embarassment to their respective administrations.

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    3. Re:Owooooooo!!!! by cloudmaster · · Score: 1

      Ahhh, Manuel, where have you gone? :)

    4. Re:Owooooooo!!!! by dmaxwell · · Score: 2, Funny

      I think Steve Ballmer's a giant douche ...

      Naaaah. He's a turd sandwich.

  23. Executive Summary by Catiline · · Score: 2, Funny

    Developers, devel... erk, Security, Security, Security!

  24. What do the words mean? by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't think I understand your point. Its expensive to switch from linux to windows or visa versa. So the report says that if you are already a microsoft customer, don't bother spending the extra money it takes to switch. Do you think they are saying that makes Windows a better operating system than Linux? Or are they extending the point too far to imply that starting from scratch, Windows should always be installed? I don't get it.

    --
    Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    1. Re:What do the words mean? by RangerRick98 · · Score: 1
      Do you think they are saying that makes Windows a better operating system than Linux? Or are they extending the point too far to imply that starting from scratch, Windows should always be installed?


      I don't spend much time reading these things from Microsoft, but the impression I've been getting is that while they don't come right out and say "Windows is better because of the extra cost to switch" that is in fact what they are implying.
      --
      "You're older than you've ever been, and now you're even older."
    2. Re:What do the words mean? by shotfeel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Nice how they use a single metric, cost of switching, Don't say much about cost post-switch that I see (though I skimmed pretty fast and didn't read any of the studies they link).

      Under the security part, maybe they should have mentioned something about the extra cost the first time the next big Windows virus/trojan/worm hits the scene. Or the cost of simply keeping up with security and bug fixes.

      Its not what they say, its what they don't say.

    3. Re:What do the words mean? by jcr · · Score: 1

      Nice how they use a single metric, cost of switching,

      Oh, there were a couple of other great metrics there, like touting how much MS has spent on security (which is rather like saying that the USA's public schools must be the best in the world, just because we outspend other countries.)

      The one that really cracked me up was the way that Ballmer pointed out that MSCE's are a dime a dozen. (He didn't use those terms, of course ;-)

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    4. Re:What do the words mean? by dbIII · · Score: 1
      they should have mentioned something about the extra cost the first time the next big Windows virus/trojan/worm hits the scene.
      All I know is I haven't had to remove a virus in eighteen months, which is how long I've been able to keep a few dozen windows machines from talking to the net without adult supervision.

      It's worth remembering that linux is a flavour of *nix while windows is the upstart that is just reaching maturity.

  25. Re:security vulnerabilities is lower on Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is it just me, or has Microsoft changed their patch system so much that it's almost impossible to determine exactly what's being patched, and what systems are effected?

    They released 10 "patches" in October that encompass 20+ vulnerabilties including "re-issued" patches of existing "fixes". Sounds like gibberish to me so that the press can't report the real #s and when they were actually fixed, and what's really still broken.

    This somebody really needs to pull out an all out report on that details all this junk and shows that they are lying, because it sure smells like rotten fish to more than a few folks.

  26. May be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yankee's study concluded that, in large enterprises, a significant Linux deployment or total switch from Windows to Linux would be three to four times more expensive - and take three times as long to deploy - as an upgrade from one version of Windows to a newer release. And nine out of 10 enterprise customers said that such a change wouldn't provide any tangible business gains.

    It could be true If you take into account the custom applications that may be running on windows now. If you have to migrate from Windows to Linux you also need to develop those custom applications to run on Linux. May be they are taking that into considerations. But if it is just office applications(Like MS Word) that should not so much costly as there are Free alternatives available and are as (In some cases More) efficient as MS Office.

    1. Re:May be by rkhalloran · · Score: 1

      Con: The secretaries/accountants/etc. that would have to convert all the Word & Excel macros they've accumulated over the years would be a problem.

      Pro: The push to server-based apps and browser-based presentation is making the OS that browser runs from almost irrelevant. Factor in cost-of-security and cost-of-Windows-upgrades and the penguin starts looking a lot more appealing.

  27. Read between the lines. by ZorbaTHut · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Yankee's study concluded that, in large enterprises, a significant Linux deployment or total switch from Windows to Linux would be three to four times more expensive - and take three times as long to deploy - as an upgrade from one version of Windows to a newer release.

    It's more expensive short-term to switch operating systems than to not switch? Shocker.

    And nine out of 10 enterprise customers said that such a change wouldn't provide any tangible business gains.

    And one of them said it would.

    Did any of them say Windows was actually better? I doubt it - if any of them had, they would have mentioned it.

    Training for IT employees was significantly higher for Linux than for Windows - on average, 15% more expensive. The reasons: training materials were less readily available, and customers spent more on training to compensate for the lack of internal knowledge about Linux.

    There are more Windows admins out there. This surprises who?

    So you've got #1, which basically says "If you're already running Windows, stick with it!" You've got #2, which says "If you're already running Windows, stick with it!" And you've got #3, which says "Right now, there's more people running Windows!"

    Am I the only one who hears an undertone of "Please, please, for the love of God, keep using Windows"?

    Microsoft's marketing, right now, is focused entirely on "Don't switch to Linux". Perhaps this is because many companies still use Windows. Or perhaps it's because they can't come up with plausible reasons to switch *from* Linux. But don't worry - we'll be seeing their first attempts in a year or two, I'll wager.

    --
    Breaking Into the Industry - A development log about starting a game studio.
    1. Re:Read between the lines. by ZorbaTHut · · Score: 4, Funny

      As a completely unrelated aside, my mp3 player chose this moment to start playing "Everything You Know Is Wrong" by Chumbawamba, which has, as part of the bridge, the title and some guy saying "Misinformation!" in the background. I find this highly appropriate.

      --
      Breaking Into the Industry - A development log about starting a game studio.
    2. Re:Read between the lines. by mnelson · · Score: 1

      I don't know much about Chumbawumba, but the song is probably a reference to the Firesign Theatre's 1974 (or was it 1975?) album "Everything You Know is Wrong."

      Very strange/awesome humor. A must listen for all discordians. If you liked "Fight Club," You'd probably dig this stuff... I've been a sort of fan for years.

      --

      "Just another damned fool idealistic crusader..."

    3. Re:Read between the lines. by xeonon · · Score: 1

      I was just looking at some of the "facts" Micro$ has on the security of window$ and linux. One of them, "Is Linux more secure than Window?" states that from June 1st 2002 to MAy 31st 2003, Mircrosoft had 128 security flaws... Now lets examine this. That is 128 flaws in the OS only. During that time Microsoft fixed all of them. Ok, that sounds odd. Let's continue. Redheat had 229 flaws. That includes everything on the Redhat distro CD. Sound a little bloated? And is that even that bad? Those are 229 flaws that were taken care of. Anyway, check this out for yourself: http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserversystem/facts /analyses/vulnerable.mspx

    4. Re:Read between the lines. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would like to take this opportunity to remind everyone that the parent likes Chumbawamba.

  28. Security vulnerabilities and TCO by yeremein · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And it's pretty clear that the facts show that Windows provides a lower total cost of ownership than Linux; the number of security vulnerabilities is lower on Windows, and Windows responsiveness on security is better than Linux

    I wonder if their TCO figures include rebooting all your servers weekly to install new patches...

    Oh, and let me guess... the Linux vulnerability count includes all issues found in an entire distribution, while the Windows count includes only the base OS. I'll bet we'd get a much more accurate picture if they included IIS, SQL Server, Outlook, etc.

    1. Re:Security vulnerabilities and TCO by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      That is not the case. The vunerability counting is right. Take Outlook as an example... It has just one , single, all code long bug.

    2. Re:Security vulnerabilities and TCO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      TCO's do not, and should not include conversion costs, period. Sweeping generalizations do not belong either. Hardened Linux beats XP anyday.

      What are we comparing here?

      Properly hardened Corporate Windows releases Vs properly hardened Linux + GRSecurity, or BSD, running under a VM manager - with both sites having equally competent sysadmins.

      The reviewer has probably never heard of the NSA linux security extensions, or grsecurity. With tweaking, linux is tougher and more secure than windows, but without an EAL rating, one can still snipe and make mischievious and misleading statements.

      Meantime Apple and Sun seem to sit on their haunches - they are being tarred with the same brush - sortof.

      Switching to (Hardened) Linux will give businesses better security. Linux , and all the free extra's has a lower running cost.

      MS is on edge, because for greenfields, linux is now viable and attractive.

      The cost of conversion, has fallen like a stone, now openoffice+Firefox+Thunderbird work good enough for the average office cretin.

  29. MS is sweating by nels_tomlinson · · Score: 4, Informative
    Monkeyboy is sweating. Unfortunately, that's nothing new.

    Seriously, this is just the marketroids doing their thing. When the accountants start warning about threats from Linux, we know there's a real threat. Linux is getting mention in the latest annual filing, too.

    1. Re:MS is sweating by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup. The make more billions every year. Their profits are RISING. He's probably worrying about what island he will buy this year.

      I wish I had things like that to worry about.

    2. Re:MS is sweating by 16K+Ram+Pack · · Score: 1

      I'm reminded of what someone told me once about people who are successful. They don't waste their time telling people how successful they are, they let others do it for them.

    3. Re:MS is sweating by upsidedown_duck · · Score: 1

      Monkeyboy is sweating.

      Microsoft gets a sweating "monkeyboy"
      Sun gets a "rabid libertarian" in a penguin costume
      IBM doesn't get mentioned much...sort of like the smoking man on X-files.
      HP gets some insane woman on a redecorating binge. ...why is it that IT companies are so damn weird?!?

      --
      -- "Makes Little Debbie look like a pile of puke!" - Moe Szyslak
  30. Spam? by SuperChuck69 · · Score: 1
    So now Microsoft has resorted to spam?

    Sad. Just sad.

    --
    :wq
    1. Re:Spam? by julesh · · Score: 1

      You have to specifically request to receive it. In my book, this means it isn't spam.

    2. Re:Spam? by cduffy · · Score: 1
      You have to specifically request to receive it.

      I received it, and I didn't request it. (I've never gotten any other "executive emails" from Microsoft, either).

      Notably, the message contains a subscribe (no, not unsubscribe, subscribe) link. Doesn't seem to me much like something they'd send only to folks who are suscribers already.
      This email is one in an occasional series of emails from Microsoft executives about technology and public-policy issues important to computer users, our industry, and anyone who cares about the future of high technology. If you would like to receive these emails in the future, please go to http://register.microsoft.com/subscription/subscri beMe.asp?lcid=1033&id=155 to subscribe.
    3. Re:Spam? by julesh · · Score: 1

      OK. Microsoft spam. Yep, that's a new one on me. :(

    4. Re:Spam? by SuperChuck69 · · Score: 1
      I certainly didn't request it, either.

      In fact, Windows has been banned from my house and I only begrudingly use it at work.

      --
      :wq
  31. Balmer Shows that Open Source Works in the West by d102804 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    In an indirect way, Steve Balmer shows that open source works in the West. He, like the rest of us, knows that the issue is cost. So, he immediately attempts to criticize the total cost of ownership (TCO) of Linux.

    The single biggest reason for the proliferation of open source software like Linux and Apache is that they are free to own. Most Westerners are relatively honest and do not pirate commercial software; the piracy rate is only about 15%. The sheer high cost of commercial software thus creates a market for free software like Linux and Apache.

    Now, consider China (which includes Taiwan province and Hong Kong). The Chinese steal what they do not want to buy; the piracy rate is about 95%. In China, there is no market for open source software like Linux, for all software is free. Windows XP is "free".

    TCO is not even an issue in China because Microsoft will not support pirated software. Chinese pirates get support for, say, Windows XP from other pirates; the behavior is similar to Westerners getting support from other open source supporters for Linux.

    1. Re:Balmer Shows that Open Source Works in the West by babelex · · Score: 1

      So you are saying that if M$ reduces pirating in china, linux will become more popular. Thats very cool

    2. Re:Balmer Shows that Open Source Works in the West by Tore+S+B · · Score: 1

      Attacking the morality of Easterners is a despicable attempt at an argument. The reason people pirate there is because XP costs as much as a fancy car over there. You could feed a family for years for the price of an Office license.

      --
      toresbe
    3. Re:Balmer Shows that Open Source Works in the West by baggins2002 · · Score: 1

      US piracy 15%
      China piracy 95%

      I'm not doubting your numbers but I would like to know the source.

  32. Translations don't match? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I looked at the Korean translation, and there are bits of English text (like "back office") in the Korean text but those words appear nowhere in the original English text. WTF?

  33. Yeah, right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the evidence at our www.microsoft.com/getthefacts Web site doesn't sufficiently convey the benefits and value of the Microsoft platform, we want to hear from you so we can work even harder to get that information to you.

    "Information"? I'm pretty certain we used to call this "propaganda".

  34. 2600? by hipbase · · Score: 0, Funny
    Ironic?

    I THINK NOT!

    1. Re:2600? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it isnt irony, if it is just a mere coincidence.

  35. Actually the Nick Petreley Report... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...discussed at LinuxWorld yesterday is a far better read than Ballmer's screed.

  36. Oh that one is easy, by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1, Troll
    they ain't vulnerabilities, they are features. Remember if something goes wrong with windows it is the fault of the drivers, the hardware or the user. NEVER EVER Microsoft.

    I am reminded when they tried to compare Apache holes with IIS. They only listed the ones on the default IIS but ALL the ones that could affect Apache with all the extras added.

    Look I will tell you a little secreat. You know how to tell when a Microsoft employee is lying? His mouth is open.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Oh that one is easy, by jmulvey · · Score: 1

      they ain't vulnerabilities, they are features. Remember if something goes wrong with windows it is the fault of the drivers, the hardware or the user. NEVER EVER Microsoft.

      Yeah, I've never heard that one before.

      http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/10/19/023 6213&tid=113&tid=128&tid=154&tid=2 18

  37. That costly UNIX.... by gtrubetskoy · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    One of the hot topics among enterprise IT and business decision makers today is the costs and benefits of migrating enterprise resource planning systems (ERP) from costly, proprietary UNIX environments to Windows or other platforms.

    My Linux and Freebsd machines are particularly costly, I should consider migrating probably... On a second thought, I don't have any ERP (in fact I don't even know what it is).

    1. Re:That costly UNIX.... by SpyPlane · · Score: 1

      I think he is refering to systems such as S&P, CPIOS, and even Peoplesoft type programs. And if you don't have any of these things, consider yourself lucky.

      --
      "We need a fourth law of Robotics: Stop Fingering My Wife"
  38. This is a good thing.. by IamGarageGuy+2 · · Score: 1

    When the opposition starts to use fud and only fud to defend itself it can only mean that it is scared. This is a sign that Linux is gaining momentum and MS will go to any lengths to stop it. The tides are turning. Stay the course and in the end the better OS will win. These are classic tactics used throughout the business world on a daily basis, do not think that this is a personal attack. But also remember that when the enemy is on the ropes, you should do everything in your power to deliver the final blow.

    --
    Stay tuned for new sig...
    1. Re:This is a good thing.. by rm007 · · Score: 1

      I don't know if "scared" is the word - it might be more accurate to say that MS recognizes Linux as a serious and viable competitor. That itself is pretty strong valildation. I don't imagine that MS will actually be "scared" until Wall Street analysts start to make reference to Linux as a major contributor to declining MS earnings.

      --


      I've finally got around to changing my sig
    2. Re:This is a good thing.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus. Get out more. Get a clue.

    3. Re:This is a good thing.. by IamGarageGuy+2 · · Score: 1

      To wait until that happens would be folly on their part. Do you think they should wait until Linux starts to take a large part of the pie before responding? It is always better to recognize a small threat and respond before it becomes a major threat which is usually too late.

      --
      Stay tuned for new sig...
    4. Re:This is a good thing.. by X3J11 · · Score: 1

      Meh, Microsoft © has been using FUD for years now. And for years now everyone's been saying that Linux is gaining momentum and blah blah blah. It's the same nonsense as it was a year, two even three years ago. Same crap, different pile.

      I've used Linux on and off for a few years now (well, more than just a few). Even got Slackware on my kids P3/500 for those occasions where I want to play on a real OS. But my main machine runs... you guessed it, Windows. I hate Windows, I hate Microsoft for what they're doing, but I'm a gamer, and Linux still hasn't caught up to Windows for gaming. I don't blame Linux, though.

      Maybe we need Linus to run around screaming and sweating, yelling "DEVELOPERS DEVELOPERS DEVELOPERS DEVELOPERS", to try to convince game makers to port their games to Linux?

    5. Re:This is a good thing.. by surprise_audit · · Score: 1
      I think Ballmer may be responding to several recent developments currently featured on the /. front page:

      Australian Government Agency Moves Towards Linux
      UK Government Reports Linux is 'Viable'

      Ballmer's seeing two governments about to defect to Linux (to some degree) and is beginning to sweat...

    6. Re:This is a good thing.. by Tanktalus · · Score: 1

      Is this sort of like "the better OS" as in "OS/2", Mac, BeOS, ...? No, when MS turns full-tilt on a specific target, it generally wins. For example, Netscape.

      Anyone ever think that IBM is touting Linux only so that MS focuses on Linux rather than DB2? ;-)

    7. Re:This is a good thing.. by rm007 · · Score: 1

      ... um... exactly... they are not "scared", they are acting proactively to prevent things from becoming "scary". As you say, they are responding to an as yet (they hope) containable threat to their business, not something that they are necessarily "scared" of now.

      --


      I've finally got around to changing my sig
  39. I'm a tad offtopic... by sgant · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...but when I went to read the article at Linuxworld , the formating of the web page was all over the map.

    Now, I'm using Firefox...which I would think Linuxworld...being to promote Linux and such...would be formated in a way that Firefox/Mozilla wouldn't have a tough time reading. Yet, when I open the page in Internet Explorer, everything is fine.

    Why is this? What's really going on over at Linuxworld? Is everything over there put together on Linux/Apache and other open source apps?

    Just find it interesting...

    --

    "Leo Fender was in a 'state of grace' when he designed the Stratocaster." -- Paul Reed Smith
    1. Re:I'm a tad offtopic... by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

      I noticed that too.. the article text was crammed into a 100-pixel column, rendering it unreadable. Validating at W3C revealed 461 errors, so display problems are no surprise.

    2. Re:I'm a tad offtopic... by geordie_loz · · Score: 1

      I'm with you all 1" on screen column width. What?? The printable view was readable, but it doesn't look good not rendering well in an open-source browser.

    3. Re:I'm a tad offtopic... by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      You haven't realized by now that Linuxworld is a node for disseminating anti-Linux FUD?

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    4. Re:I'm a tad offtopic... by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Linuxworld is an anti linux site. That should be obvious to anybody who has been there more then once. Just look at the ads for god's sake.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    5. Re:I'm a tad offtopic... by Politburo · · Score: 1

      If ads are any indication, Slashdot is an anti-linux site...

    6. Re:I'm a tad offtopic... by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Ads are one indication. Anti linud fud articles are another.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    7. Re:I'm a tad offtopic... by Feztaa · · Score: 1

      Linuxworld is an anti linux site. That should be obvious to anybody who has been there more then once. Just look at the ads for god's sake.

      Are we looking at the same website? I will admit that I've never been to linuxworld before, but I just went there now, and I saw:

      3 advertisements: one by novell advocating a linux strategy for your business, one for "Windows Server System", and one for oracle about a database that's "cheaper than MS SQL".

      Some article headlines seem to be "Rumors of Microsoft's Demise Are Premature...But Not Unthinkable", and "Ballmer Windows/Linux E-Mail Relies on Previously-Debunked TCO Studies". Those headlines seem to be a bit slanted, if not pro-linux, then definitely anti-microsoft.

      Am I missing something? (perhaps I've been trolled...)

  40. Use Gentoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I switched from Fedora Core 1 to Gentoo and never looked back.

    Just the other day I installed Abiword, it was a nighmare, I had to type literally two words at the console prompt:

    emerge abiword

    All the dependencies were calculated for me, I didn't have to do anything. It just works.

    1. Re:Use Gentoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gentoo is the one of the best linux distro that i have ever used... i recommend it to anyone who really wants to learn linux. I learned more about linux system by installing gentoo than ever from a textbook.

      when i was using redhat and mandrake i was just frustrating finding/installing dependcies or download and build from source) when i wanted to install an application. with gentoo and the portage tree all i need is emerge. emerge calculates the dependcies, downloads the source, compiles + installs, and cleans up after itself.

      emerge mozilla-firefox

    2. Re:Use Gentoo by secretsquirel · · Score: 1

      You didn't have to do anything except wait 3 hours for it to fucking compile, I'll take apt-get or urpmi anyday. Of course I'm pretty bitter at the moment though because when I tried out gentoo a little bit ago my first emerge world after install(synced and updated portage fine) would always have an error("to many levels of symlimks" if anyone knows howto fix it) 80% through and afterwords emerge wouldnt work. After three installs I just said fuck it.

    3. Re:Use Gentoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If your not into "waiting 3 hours for it to fucking compile", perhaps you should look in a "fucking stage3 binary install and you wouldnt have to compile", you tool.

      Yesh - RTFM.

  41. Fourth... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    you gotta learn how to count

    1. Re:Fourth... by flibuste · · Score: 1

      Yes and review or japanese terms...

    2. Re:Fourth... by faragon · · Score: 1

      He/she probably knows how to count, but reached pychological counting saturation on the second point; the topic itself is quite saturating. Linux context it is not expensive, nor open source: the money hungry ones are usually consultant companies, those companies can change the bussines focus, but not the money focus, obviously.

    3. Re:Fourth... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It could be worse. When the Japanese run off a list, every item is "one."

    4. Re:Fourth... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, harikari is an accepted english spelling.

      http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=harikar i

      Of course, according to the modern, and most commonly used, form of transliteration, jap-eng, the spelling would indeed be "harikiri".

  42. Re:read the words -- what he's leaving out. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder what is more expensive... moving from windows to linux and then upgrading that linux infrastructure as better kernels/distributions get built. OR moving from windows to a new version of windows to another new version of windows?

    I can guess...

  43. You gotta admit, though MSFT stinks . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    .:

    You gotta admit, though MSFT stinks, Linux as an OS sux! The problem with Windows is that it's Microsoft's (replace with any illegal monopoly). The OS as a platform for apps, nevertheless, in my opinion, is far better than Linux will ever be.

    :.

  44. What's with that Linuxworld article? by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    It's hard
    to read an
    article when
    it's formatted
    for a 100
    pixel width.

  45. Yankee, Gartner, and Forrester Groups by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The 'Independent Analysts' for Truth

  46. Disappointed by pjt33 · · Score: 1

    I saw "Oh that one is easy" and expected an explanation of Aleph-1 > Aleph-0.

  47. Market Researchers are Spineless... by ctrlaltdestroy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...This memo was passed around at my firm to the people who handle the MS accounts and all of the sudden their eyeballs took on the shape of dollar signs. Nobody wondered about the debate over the veracitiy of the "Get the FUD" campaign when I brought it up. All they thought about was a way to get a piece of the market research action with MS funding, of course.

  48. Microsoft Security Focus by Dink+Paisy · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Microsft did make security a top priority. It's going to take years for Microsft to solve their security problems, but my hunch is that they can do it. They've done a decent job with stability of the operating system, and I think they can do just as well with security. If you compare the early results of their security effort (Windows 2003, IIS 6) with products that didn't get the security effort (Windows XP, IIS 5, IE 6), you will notice a very significant improvement. Microsoft is making a big effort on security and it is getting results. It's not there yet, but chances are it will get there.

    Overall, I wasn't tremendously impressed with the email. I didn't see anything that was literally wrong, but parts of it were stupid or misleading or based on third party studies that weren't necessarily accurate. There were also some things that were completely true. If you can refute every single point in that email then you are making stuff up, and you should re-evaluate your arguments to determine which ones are true and which ones are nonsense.

    --

    Whoever corrects a mocker invites insult;
    whoever rebukes a wicked man incurs abuse.
    --Proverbs 9:7
    1. Re:Microsoft Security Focus by Jane_Dozey · · Score: 2, Interesting

      IMHO they are going to have to do a major re-write of much of the OS to make security a real possibility. There are too many problems with the design of the OS to simply stick a few band-aids over them. Of course, the stability _is_ getting better. If it wasn't they'd be dying.
      I'd love to see microsoft sort out their security. It'd help the internet as a whole (all that pesky malware affects more than just windows users) and would make me feel a bit safer when I'm forced to use their OS at college and at work.

      --
      Silly rabbit
    2. Re:Microsoft Security Focus by Dink+Paisy · · Score: 1
      They are going through all their old code, but that will only find implementation bugs, not design problems with the security model. They are also revisiting security models, and I expect they will have to change some number of them.

      On the other hand, they have also shown quite a bit of innovation (can I use that word?) in dealing with the problem. One of the biggest is the need to run as Administrator in Windows, or lose the ability to run a lot of software. They've fixed that one in Windows 2003. The big reasons for running as Administrator are that applications want to write global registry settings and write potentially dangerous places in the filesystem. In Windows 2003 you can set compatibility mode to redirect writes to global locations so that they write to user specific locations instead. In the next consumer release of Windows that huge flaw in the security model will be gone, and normal users will run as normal users.

      It's going to take a lot of time and effort, but I think that Microsoft will make major improvements to security in the next few years, including security model fixes and workarounds where necessary. It's the same now with security as it was with stability. If they don't improve, they will die.

      --

      Whoever corrects a mocker invites insult;
      whoever rebukes a wicked man incurs abuse.
      --Proverbs 9:7
    3. Re:Microsoft Security Focus by walt-sjc · · Score: 1

      I read something recently (past month or so) where some MS bigwig was claiming that they wouldn't be able to secure Windows for another 10 years. (anyone have a link?)

      MS has several hurdles. First, they REALLY need to choose security over percieved "ease of use" / "features". Settings should be set "secure" by default instead of insecure.

      Second, backwards compatibility needs to be sacraficed. Driver model, Win32 API, Registry, etc. Windows still contains bad Windows 1.0 design decisions. These were kept to make porting easy. Designs that were appropriate for non-networked or closed-networked environments just don't work well in the internet-connected world. Windows has proven that trying to tack security on after the fact just doesn't work. It has to be designed in.

      Finally, MS needs to stop allowing companies to use the Windows logo on products that don't follow acceptable practices. General applications / games / etc. that require that they be run as administrator or with an account that has admin need to be fixed. Applications that install all sorts of crap and DLL's all over the place instead of contained in their own directories / registry areas need to be shunned.

      I could go on, but it's rather pointless. While MS has made some inroads to better security, I do not personally believe that they are truely commited to it.

    4. Re:Microsoft Security Focus by gewalker · · Score: 1

      The problems are not in the security model, it is in the implmentation. You don't have use root/admin all the time, servides can run as a specific user with the correct security levels, etc. I don't recall a chroot feature in Windows, but certainly most of the security model in the O/S is just fine and adding chroot or other missing security features should not change Windows.

      Changing all the apps the use the security model correctly would be challenging, but 99.9% of apps on Windows are not written by MS.

      XP SP2 is the indication that MS is finally willing to break apps (incrementally) in order to fix security issues.

      What security model do you think is missing in Windows? I say it is the mounds of cruddy implmementation that is the problem, not the model. So yes, I believe MS can fix security without chucking everything.

      One might even argue that MS could theoretically make security better than Unix since the Windows API offer may more functions than the Unix kernel and could support fine-grained security control over those API's

      Even the unbelievablity stupid integration of IE that has been so target rich security-wise is still an implmentation issue. If user ran with regular account and IE ran with that security what would be the security model difference Windows and Unix. Nope, it's crappy implmentation all the way down.

      I personally hope they fix it, the world would be a better place. If MS provided security updates for free to current and old versions of Windows for say 20 years, that would be have a unmitigated good thing as far as I am concerned. Just think, my box and Internet connectionwould not have to survive 10K with of probes, worms, etc. every month.

    5. Re:Microsoft Security Focus by superpulpsicle · · Score: 1

      The linux world should start advertising their software with the word "SECURE". We'll call it....

      Open Office Secure Edition

      Apache Secure Edition

      Firefox Secure Edition

      There is NO WAY in hell M$ marketing can successfully counter this.

    6. Re:Microsoft Security Focus by upsidedown_duck · · Score: 1

      IMHO they are going to have to do a major re-write of much of the OS to make security a real possibility.

      Why don't they bring back Windows NT 3? On a dual 2.4GHz Opteron, would people still compilain about the performance? Even Sun is making some performance concessions by putting in end-to-end checksums in Solaris 10's new filesystem. There is enough excess performance, now, that focusing more on security and reliability is truly marketable.

      --
      -- "Makes Little Debbie look like a pile of puke!" - Moe Szyslak
  49. Re:Get the Facts slashies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have a look at the Red Hat site:
    http://www.redhat.com/software/rhel/purchas e/index .html

    You mean people have to pay for Linux?

    Oh I see it's not the same.

    Well where I work we have a lot of Unix/Linux techies and they pay top dollar for this. Windows still cheaper however it's sold.

  50. Huh??? by Chucky+B.+Bear · · Score: 1
    "But the core reason for selecting Microsoft was the increase in network security, complemented by the ability to reduce patch-deployment time by 50 percent while cutting unsolicited e-mail by half."

    'k I've gotta ask... how? How does running windows stop people from sending me spam? No really, if microsoft can magically stop the spammer sending me all the shyte I've been getting then I'm all for it. Microsoft Mind Control 2005 here we come. ;-)

    1. Re:Huh??? by fatgeekuk · · Score: 1

      I suppose, if your email system is unavailable for a large proportion of the day rebooting and applying patches, you will receive less spam.

      Just a thought.

  51. Consider the source by HangingChad · · Score: 5, Funny

    Getting Linux TCO news from Ballmer is about as reliable as getting news about Iraq from Dick Cheney.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
    1. Re:Consider the source by gedeco · · Score: 1

      I would consider "Comical Ali" as a better understatement.

  52. right......... by shaneFalco · · Score: 2, Insightful
    According to Forrester, Microsoft had the lowest elapsed time between disclosure of a vulnerability and the release of a fix.
    Anyone else see the irony? How long did it take for the Mozilla bugs to be fixed and the IE vulnrebilities are still unresolved as far as I know
    1. Re:right......... by nikoliky · · Score: 2, Informative

      I can believe the Forrester remark. But remember, Microsoft, generally, only DISCLOSES a vulnerability once a fix has been made available. Whereas with Mozilla the vulnerability is disclosed almost as soon as it's discovered, then the coders work their asses off to get it fixed.

      So the statement may be true, but it ignores the extenuating circumstances.

  53. Re:Customer Focus? by pjt33 · · Score: 1

    What he forgot to mention was that the customer isn't included in the tab list, and if you try to give it focus with your mouse a modal dialog pops up to get in the way.

  54. Spin city or Spin out of control? by ZWarrior · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I depend heavily on M$ products for my paycheck, and have certifications in M$ products. but I am also a realist... there are times that Linux just does the job better.

    I feel that they both get the job done in different ways, and sometimes one is better than the other. We (the team who manage the servers at my place of employment) have been slowly introducing more and more Linux boxes, just because we can do more with the functions we are introducing them for. [Well, that and the fact that the security team is very Windows centric and can't crack these, much to their frustration and chagrin. ;)]

    However, Ballmers contentions that Windows is just better are beginning to sound more like the ravings of a man demanding that the wind stop blowing.

    As for the facts on the website? My college stats teacher proved that you could make the numbers say anything if you try hard enough.

    --
    Here I come to save the da... *thud*
    I gotta get me a shorter cape.
  55. Quick comparison: FreeBSD vs. Windows XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    A quick comparison for complete system upgrades:

    CPU: AMD XP1700+

    FreeBSD: 3 hours (includes: cvsupping the entire source tree, making and installing world and kernel, running mergemaster), of which 10 minutes of actual console presence is required from the system admin.

    Windows XP: 3 days if you are lucky, of which constant presence is required from the system admin since you cannot predict when you will be prompted for what and what exactly is the next step.

    Time is money, but forget about money for a second. Do you want to waste your life promoting Microsoft? By wasting your time trying to install, configure and maintain their products, that's just what you are doing. Making your life worth less. Worthless.

  56. MOD PARENT DOWN! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dammit! That's not helpful to the slashdot propaganda machine!

  57. can't we all just get along by BeannieBrewer · · Score: 0

    For Microsoft to spend so much energy to show the benefits of their OS vs Linux, is there something else going on?

    --
    Thanks, Beannie
  58. 8th dimension by HarveyBirdman · · Score: 0, Troll

    Windows is not my goddamnned OS. Understand, Monkeyboy?

    --
    --- Ban humanity.
  59. I agree, funny stuff by Weaselmancer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yeah, that takes the cake. But it's worded pretty cleverly, dontcha agree? "About three years ago, we made software security a top priority." Notice they don't say they've actually done anything about it, they just say they've made it "a priority". Hell, anyone can do that.

    Beautiful piece of marketing doublespeak.

    --
    Weaselmancer
    rediculous.
    1. Re:I agree, funny stuff by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      The only product releases since they started that have been:

      Windows Server 2003
      Windows XP SP2

      Both of which have many, many more security features than the last generation of software.

      You can't expect all the old Microsoft software to suddenly and magically patch itself to be perfectly secure, can you?

    2. Re:I agree, funny stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but you should be able to assume that patches released during the "focus on security" period would 1) work, 2) not need to be immediately followed up with by patches to fix bugs introduced by the original patch, and 3) detection tools should correctly identify which machines need the patch and which ones do not.

      So far, I'm not to the point where I can trust any of the 3 to be true. Glad to hear your perception of the same facts has been different.

    3. Re:I agree, funny stuff by legirons · · Score: 1

      "it's worded pretty cleverly, dontcha agree? "About three years ago, we made software security a top priority." Notice they don't say they've actually done anything about it, they just say they've made it "a priority""

      Oh, the doublespeak gets worse! Listen to His Billness, for example: "More has been invested in making IE secure than any browser on the planet by a long shot."

      Presumably he calculated the equivalent hourly rate of Mozilla developers before saying that? I suppose it costs more to fix something afterwards than it does to get it right the first time.

    4. Re:I agree, funny stuff by Weaselmancer · · Score: 1

      I agree completely - these guys are experts at spin. They make the current US election look like a tea party.

      "More has been invested in making IE secure than any browser on the planet by a long shot."

      Y'know, another way to read this statement is "IE has more bugs and holes that need fixing than any other browser on the planet by a long shot, which explains the larger investment." =)

      --
      Weaselmancer
      rediculous.
    5. Re:I agree, funny stuff by jcr · · Score: 1

      Bingo!

      Ballmer's metric for security is how much money he's thrown down the rat hole. Any customer who's not on crack would have to ask, "Gee Steve, it's great that you spent all that money, but did you get any results?"

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  60. Gandhi was right by Gothmolly · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "First they ignore you,
    Then they laugh at you,
    Then they fight you,
    Then you win."

    I'd say we're well into Stage 3.

    --
    I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
    1. Re:Gandhi was right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      I don't get it. Do the people who mod this stuff up (or the people who post it, for that matter) say "Boy, there's a new thought! I've never heard that quote before!"

      I mean, this guy has been here since 1999 and he's like "You know who said somthing relevant to this! Gandhi!"

    2. Re:Gandhi was right by Gothmolly · · Score: 1

      Because its still Insightful.

      --
      I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
    3. Re:Gandhi was right by PetoskeyGuy · · Score: 1

      First they ignore you,
      Then they laugh at you,
      Then they fight you,
      Then you win."


      Unless, of course - You Lose

    4. Re:Gandhi was right by Coryoth · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I don't get it. Do the people who mod this stuff up (or the people who post it, for that matter) say "Boy, there's a new thought! I've never heard that quote before!"

      Because each time it comes up it looks more and more like reality. I remember a long time ago when that was being quoted on Slashdot and things were firmly in the "ignore you" stage. People criticized the quote because (quite reasonably) just because someone was ignoring you was hardly a sign you were going to win.

      Over time though the "ignore" slowly faded, and Microsoft was mostly mocking Linux as a laughable option written by pimply teenagers in their basements, so again out comes the quote, this time with a little more weight because things had actually made the predicted progression.

      A year or two ago Microsoft kicked into gear with a serious range of attacks on Linux, and now they really are fighting it very bitterly even though they still dominate in market share. More and more people are seeing Linux as a viable option. More and more stories about Linux that get posted to Slashdot are, instead of appearing in Wired, eWeek, are from Time magazine or the Wall Street Journal. As the poster points out, presuming things follow this prediction (and they have remarkably well so far) we're well into stage 3, and winning isn't far off.

      Of course it depends on what you mean by "win". Realistically, myself, I see winning as Linux gaining sufficient market share and respect to always be considered as a viable option by anyone looking at buying a computer. That's not 90% market share, and that's not crushing Microsoft, that's just crushing Microsoft's monopoly grip.

      Jedidiah.

    5. Re:Gandhi was right by upsidedown_duck · · Score: 1

      Of course it depends on what you mean by "win".

      Microsoft will always be around as a legacy support services company, so the "win" occurs when they are relegated to that status. I predict: 10 to 15 years, given the magnitude of the difference from Windows 3.1 to Windows XP (i.e., it's a matter of user tolerance of change over time). Moving from Windows 3.1 to Windows XP really isn't that different than moving to Linux, because about as many Win 3.1 apps that run under Win XP is about as many as would run under WINE.

      --
      -- "Makes Little Debbie look like a pile of puke!" - Moe Szyslak
  61. Real world example by sl70 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Check out hosting from http://www.1and1.com/. Linux hosting is $4.99 a month; MS Win hosting with the same features is $6.99 a month. I wrote to 1and1 and asked them why Windows-based hosting was more expensive. I was told that in terms of licensing and maintainence costs, Linux is definitely cheaper.

    How do you respond to that, Ballmer?

    --
    Thank God I'm an atheist!
    1. Re:Real world example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably by yanking 1and1.com's Windoze licenses.

    2. Re:Real world example by mgkimsal2 · · Score: 1

      The higher cost of Windows hosting has *nothing* to do with the fact that it actually costs money to purchase the Windows license? *NOTHING*? It's all just a 'ripoff' by the middlemen, but not by Microsoft?

      I'm just glad you were here to straighten us out. :)

    3. Re:Real world example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, so from the parent post, and your WinFanBoy responce, it looks like it only comes down to maitenance cost differences. Sounds about right, install, reboot, crash, reboot, patch, reboot, rooted, patch, reboot, repeat monthly, vs install, run.

    4. Re:Real world example by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Aha!! That just about proves that 1and1 haven't paid for SCOsource licenses!

      Darl, release the hounds!

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
  62. Keep in mind, ISVs will not migrate to Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    .:

    Linux is free, as in free beer, and that alone will keep all ISVs away. You can't run a business on stuff done by the high-schooler in his basement during his hookey time.

    :.

  63. if this is true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "And nine out of 10 enterprise customers said that such a change wouldn't provide any tangible business gains." then why worry so much about the one customer that didn't think so?

  64. Business plan by say · · Score: 4, Funny
    1. Make shitty product
    2. Claim it's better
    3. When noone agrees any longer: claim it's cheaper because changing is expensive
    4. Profit!
    --
    Roses are #FF0000, violets are #0000FF, all my base are belong to you
  65. So whats new? by The_Real_Nire · · Score: 1

    Latest Ballmergram Bashes Linux TCO

    And now slashdotters bash Microsoft/Ballmer
    Is this really news?

    1. Re:So whats new? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > And now slashdotters bash Microsoft/Ballmer

      And you have been under a rock for, what?, 8 years?

    2. Re:So whats new? by The_Real_Nire · · Score: 1

      umm..

      I didnt mean "And now" in the context that this is the first time this has happened.

      My point was exactly that, that this is just an on going thing and not really NEWs.

  66. Windoze in .edu? Bullshit on lower TCO! by deunan_k · · Score: 4, Informative

    With an educational discount, Windows 2003 server costs my department $142 (sure, it's more in a commercial environment), I can install it, set it up, run updates on it once in a while, run the baseline security analyzer on it, and forget about it. Give me a linux that does all this in an easy to use manner, and I'll switch. Sure, I could use apt and the others, but it just takes too much time, and you have to worry about various dependencies and what not.

    At $142, that's $142 more you have to spend compared to FOSS solutions. What you've described, proved either that your educational institution is filthy rich and caters only for the rich and snobs, or you're just plain lazy.

    Most educational institutions, whether state-run or even privately operated (esp. private with visions of education rather than for profit), are almost always tight budget! This is especially true in third world countries! That is why various bodies such as SchoolForge (and their Case Studies), K12OS, Moodle, OpenSourceSchools, KDE Edutainment Project and a lot more others are being founded and.. surprise! Thrives!

    Personally, I love the K12LTSP Project. A branch out of the K12OS Project, which when deployed properly throughout the campus, can provide access to all students to high-grade apps in a very stable environment. Access from any terminal in any labs, authenticating via NIS, LDAP or whatever you prefer and access your mail accounts, website or whatever. With backend support tools available such as MySQL or PgSQL and PHP/Perl (okay, maybe that's a bit far out, but I've met 12 year olds who can code!)

    Software cost? $0

    --
    Will sys-admin for food
  67. Free kit? by say · · Score: 1

    Hmmm. Can't everyone here order a free Windows vs. Linux evaluation kit? That would cost them a lot. You can find it at microsoft.com/getthefacts/.

    --
    Roses are #FF0000, violets are #0000FF, all my base are belong to you
  68. on the other hand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    in some alternate universe, Linux is the Redmond Giant and Microsoft is the up and coming OS. And of course, we are replaced by monkeys and such.

  69. Don't think! by Martigan80 · · Score: 1

    This is for people who don't think or pay someone else to do it for them. I mean any educated person should know that if you want the truth you look at many different sources. And given that any company would want to check all the viable sources before committing so much money..wait a minute...we are in America? A screw it just buy what popular.

    --
    This SIG pulled due to lack of funding. (This damn war is costing too much!)
  70. FUD Response by acherrington · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I read this when it came out, and read it once again now. It is complete FUD.

    of note:

    They only speak of conversion costs, never upkeep. Conversion is always expensive. Have them look at conversion plus 5 years.

    Look at the cost of downtime. They do not mention what the cost is to the core business.
    Cost of hardware.

    The hardware needs for windows platforms is much more robust compared to platforms for Linux. That's another trick they do... they say, you need P4s and we need P4s... not really. My new server (i.e. jenny's old laptop) is running off of 128 mb of ram and 600 MHz. It is considered overpowered for command line only freebsd.

    Their notes:

    Few companies know what they're really spending. Only five of the 14 kept detailed metrics - and each of those five found Linux more expensive (5% to 20%) than their current Microsoft environments. => Which 5 companies? Cost is one thing, but what are the potential returns? I wont be running any ecommerce website on IIS. Those credit cards will be jacked so quick.

    Preparation and planning activities took 5% to 25% longer for Linux than Windows. What are we planning? => As a counter example... lets talk about active directory migration.

    Training for IT employees was significantly higher for Linux than for Windows - on average, 15% more expensive. The reasons: training materials were less readily available, and customers spent more on training to compensate for the lack of internal knowledge about Linux. => Unknown to me, but I bet this is true due to simple supply and demand. However, if Linux had the marketplace and Microsoft was smaller it would probably reverse

    All 14 companies said it was difficult finding qualified Linux personnel in the marketplace to support their Linux projects. When they did find third-party help, they had less leverage negotiating hourly rates than with Windows consulting resources. => What is qualified? I every MCSE is not qualified.

    --


    Victory is gained, not in knowing your opponents next move, but in preempting them.
    1. Re:FUD Response by nikkipolya · · Score: 1

      oh yeah! If you really consider your "server" to be overpowered run a webserver and post a link here on slashdot? We'll test it out for you until you "get the facts".

  71. Indemnification for Virii & Malware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Steve,

    What is the TCO comparison
    between Windows and Linux
    in the Virus & Malware catagory?

    Could you please indemnify us for the TCO
    of Windows security holes? Please???

  72. Hmm by Omniscientist · · Score: 1

    Excuse my Ballmerism noobness here, but how can using Linux possibly be anywhere close to 5-20% more expensive than using Windows? I'm saying that based off a little investigation of mine...and that investigation was that I payed a couple hundred dollars or whatever for Windows, and I downloaded Linux for 0 dollars. 0 couple hundred dollars. Maybe Balmer is using some arcane, alien form of math?

  73. Re:It used to be 32 not 16 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It used to be a limit of 32 not 16 and since 2.6 that limit of 32 has been removed.

  74. Balmer should stick to bashing suitcases.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go, Monkey Boy, go!

  75. Re:Dear Baldy, by scupper · · Score: 1

    probably with the Ballmer psycho dance he does and adds throwing 180 day trial copies of windows 2003 server disks like throwing stars

  76. In Other News by R.Caley · · Score: 2, Funny

    Pope takes a shit in the woods.

    --
    _O_
    .|<
    The named which can be named is not the true named
    1. Re:In Other News by stevo3232 · · Score: 0

      ...and Shakespeare steps out of his grave.

      --
      s.clementmonkey@sympatico.ca, remove the 'monkey'.
  77. C'mon, give the guy a break... by killpog · · Score: 1

    He's in business. To make money. And he wants to make more of it. The Monkey Dance... "I Love This Company!" Of course he does... It buys him pretty, pretty things.

  78. Gah! Idiot! by saintp · · Score: 1

    This t-shirt comes to mind...

  79. Admit it by DesertFalcon · · Score: 1

    The posting of this article on slashdot has little to do with informing us (this time, anyway) and everything to do with an attempt at slashdotting microsoft.com.

    Click, click, and click again. Send your friends. Bring down microsoft.com, if only for a day!

    --
    --- 11 meters/second, or 24 miles per hour - the airspeed velocity of an unladen European swallow. Really.
  80. Always question the premise of the argument... by gp310ad · · Score: 1

    True, a large scale change in either direction would be expensive.

    However, no CTO in his right mind ever contemplates large scale change without a compelling reason. I.E. he may have secified Apple Mac Lisa Mac XL and then discovered that Apple and developers abandoned support for the platform. This is a compelling reason.

    In reality, a good CTO will consider the benefits of Linux or MS on a project by project basis and weight the TCO (total cost of ownership) over the projected lifetime of the implementation. IBM has discovered that LInux sells well under this reality and is presently training their sales force in selling linux! IBM is doing this BIG TIME with install fests around the country for 1000's of IBM sales people. The upcoming fest in Vegas will have some 1700 IBM sales people install linux on their thinkpads.

    --
    Do not look into LASER with remaining eye!
  81. Ballmer doesn't get it. by multiplexo · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Firstly the numbers that Ballmer quotes are probably bullshit, TCO numbers are computed using a specialized form of mathematics where the operations exist in a mathematical field called "The Bullshit Plane" So you have the field of integers, the field of complex numbers and then the field of bullshit numbers where TCO numbers, presidential polling, WiFi access point range and Best Buy extended service contracts are computed.

    But that aside the reason why I as an IT guy am not impressed by Windows is that it is difficult to administer remotely (when Microsoft shows me a version of Windows that I can admin over a 9600 BPS serial link with a CLI I'll be interested) and the fact that I don't want to be Microsoft's bitch. If I don't like IBM's Linux solution I can buy from HP or SGI. If I don't like Microsoft Windows I'm stuck with it.

    Microsoft's history of price increases is also an issue. When Windows NT 3.51 came out I could purchase it for $95 dollars a license at Academic discount, NT 4.0 cost 135 dollars, Windows 2000 and XP are $165. Microsoft will counter that Windows XP is more functional than NT was and that that justifies the extra price, but my hardware is more functional than it was 8 years ago when NT 3.51 came out and it's cheaper, why hasn't Microsoft's operating system followed the same evolution? (that's a rhetorical question, but in case you're confused it's because they have a monopoly) In addition I take all of Microsoft's claims of increased functionality driving software price with a grain of salt as a lot of what those new releases deliver is bug fixes over the prior version.

    Even if Microsoft can deliver solutions for the same price as Linux a lot of companies are going to look at Microsoft's recent history and say "Do we really want to be their bitches?" and when the answer is "no", go with that Linux solution.

    --
    cheap labor conservatives - they want to keep you hungry enough to be thankful for minimum wage.
    1. Re:Ballmer doesn't get it. by Shillo · · Score: 1

      > But that aside the reason why I as an IT guy am not impressed by Windows is that it is difficult to administer remotely (when Microsoft shows me a version of Windows that I can admin over a 9600 BPS serial link with a CLI I'll be interested) and the fact that I don't want to be Microsoft's bitch.

      Well, using 9600 serial link as an example nowadays would likely give you a blank look and a 'why would you want to do that anyway' from your typical advocacy target (even if -I- know that it comes in handy).

      But a better example would be: I can ssh into my Linux boxen by installing PuTTY on a Symbian mobile phone. Like my Nokia 3660. It's even cheap, since I get charged by bandwidth and not by time.

      You should've seen the faces of my coworkers when I demonstrated this the first time. :)

      --

      --
      I refuse to use .sig
    2. Re:Ballmer doesn't get it. by rikkards · · Score: 1

      You could always set up IPSec and telnet on a 2003 box. Using NetSh and vbscript you can do a buttload of admin work. MS has recognized that not everyone wants to use a gui or may want some automated method of managing multiple boxes.

    3. Re:Ballmer doesn't get it. by aralin · · Score: 1

      Nah, he gets it. He gets several billions of it.

      --
      If programs would be read like poetry, most programmers would be Vogons.
    4. Re:Ballmer doesn't get it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, Windows these days has a ton of command line functionality that virtually no one knows exists. This ignorance then breeds the stupidest of comments. It's very very sad :(

    5. Re:Ballmer doesn't get it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>> Firstly the numbers that Ballmer quotes are probably bullshit, TCO numbers are computed using a specialized form of mathematics where the operations exist in a mathematical field called "The Bullshit Plane" So you have the field of integers, the field of complex numbers and then the field of bullshit numbers where TCO numbers, presidential polling, WiFi access point range and Best Buy extended service contracts are computed.

      There are no bullshit numbers - these are complex numbers. Remembr that a complex number has a real part and an imaginary one.

      Enron used complex numbers quite a lot in their acounting procedures...

    6. Re:Ballmer doesn't get it. by The+Conductor · · Score: 1

      Dude, you missed the perfect opportunity for a HHGTTG reference. Ballmer's numbers are computed using restaurant math. We all know how math that adds up everywhere else never seems to add up correctly when splitting the tab.

    7. Re:Ballmer doesn't get it. by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      the correct term would be bistromathics

    8. Re:Ballmer doesn't get it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > So you have the field of integers, the field of complex numbers and then the field of bullshit numbers

      The integers aren't a field, they're a ring. The rationals are a field. Jerk.

    9. Re:Ballmer doesn't get it. by Cederic · · Score: 1


      Yeah, it was just last week I overheard my IT director asking the CIO, "Do you really want to be Bill's bitch?"

      Wouldn't have minded, but he said, "Sure, I get a pink diamond studded collar to wear"

    10. Re:Ballmer doesn't get it. by cyberphotographer · · Score: 0
      "...TCO numbers are computed using a specialized form of mathematics where the operations exist in a mathematical field called "The Bullshit Plane"

      Maybe Balmer wrote the message in a bistro? Bistromathics: http://www.earthstar.co.uk/bistro.htm

    11. Re:Ballmer doesn't get it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hahahaaaa!
      Symbian/putty blowed the mind right out of our "Marketing Dep Manager" who didn't grasp the idea, only when I showed him a snoop of his desktop connection on one of the subnet routers using a P800/putty & ssh.

      gudiluvthis

    12. Re:Ballmer doesn't get it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny! What are you, a math major?

    13. Re:Ballmer doesn't get it. by fatphil · · Score: 1

      """
      TCO numbers are computed using a specialized form of mathematics where the operations exist in a mathematical field called "The Bullshit Plane" So you have the field of integers, the field of complex numbers and then the field of bullshit numbers where TCO numbers, presidential polling, WiFi access point range and Best Buy extended service contracts are computed.
      """

      I have nothing to add. It simply needed repeating, as it's a complete classic. Hmmm, it's a bit too long for a usenet .sig, but maybe not...

      FP.

      --
      Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
  82. actually makes sense by Anubis350 · · Score: 1

    IE doesnt adhere to web standard rules as closesly as OSS browsers, therefore the errors dont make the page look as bad

    --
    "goodbye and hello, as always" ~Prince Corwin, from Zelazny's Amber series
  83. Who let the ignorant mods in? by HarveyBirdman · · Score: 1

    [EOM]

    --
    --- Ban humanity.
  84. It's all true! by AndroidCat · · Score: 1

    Converting from Windows to Linux really does cost more .. for Microsoft.

    --
    One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  85. what about electric cars? by asoap · · Score: 1
    Apparently it will cost a lot of money to convert the highway system to support electric cars: Replacing gas pumps with electric pumps, re-training mechanics to work with electric motors instead of gas ones, the hole in the economy that will appear when all the oil companies go belly up, etc, etc....

    So in that light we should keep our gas guzzling suvs, and screw the environment. It will just cost to much money to change.

    -Derek

    --
    Treat me like a marketing stat, and I'll treat your movie like a series of ones and zeros
    1. Re:what about electric cars? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are so clueless it's not even funny.

    2. Re:what about electric cars? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He was being sarcastic. The clueless one is you.

  86. ROFLMAO by gnuLNX · · Score: 1

    "Training for IT employees was significantly higher for Linux than for Windows - on average, 15% more expensive. The reasons: training materials were less readily available, and customers spent more on training to compensate for the lack of internal knowledge about Linux."

    Google Linux...then Google windows....LOL

    "A number of third-party reports have questioned how safe the Linux platform really is. For example, a recent independent study by Forrester, Is Linux More Secure than Windows?, highlighted that the four major Linux distributions have a higher incidence and severity of vulnerabilities, and are slower than Microsoft to provide security updates."

    Slower??? lol

    This article realy was just to much. Lets help our customers better determine the right solution!!!! LOL go get 'em microsoft

    --
    what?
  87. In Other News... by spectecjr · · Score: 1, Troll

    Pro-Linux readers bash anti-Linux FUD by spreading... more FUD of their own.

    Can't anybody take the high road here?

    --
    Coming soon - pyrogyra
  88. Re:Err - ACLs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just use Access Control Lists twit.

  89. It works and they are... by microbox · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It seems like they think that if they say Windows is more secure enough times it will become a reality

    This really works... for a recent example look no further than WMD... everyone suspected that it was bogus, but found the media campaign somehow compelling. Sad to say, marketting is very powerful

    They should put more focus on developing secure software, than simply paying lip service to secure software.

    It would be very naive to believe that a company (whose loyality is to shareholders), will sit still on such a burning issue. They have finally realized that they most do this, but it will take years. In the mean time, lip-service it all they can offer.

    --

    Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
    1. Re:It works and they are... by ph1ll · · Score: 1
      It would be very naive to believe that a
      company (whose loyality is to shareholders),
      will sit still on such a burning issue.
      They have finally realized that they most (sic)
      do this
      [make MS Windows secure]

      So, you admit that, at least for some years, they did sit on this "burning issue"?

      --
      --- "We've always been at war with Eastasia."
  90. The trouble is that people belive this cr*p by Alain+Williams · · Score: 2, Funny
    • The survey, by META Group, found that in one large telecommunications company, consolidation on Windows allowed a greater than 50 percent reduction in the number of required servers.

    Presumably they replaced old servers with new ones, so, say, 4 old i386s with 2 new Athlons ? Hardly surprising it is ?

    Any one got any old pics of Ballmer, I'd like to see how much his nose has grown by this last year.

    1. Re:The trouble is that people belive this cr*p by that+_evil+_gleek · · Score: 1

      I was thinking the exact same thing. Also, consider that those old servers were probably running an O.S. version similiarly dated. And, thats a point as well: With *nix you can get to a point where you just stop upgrading, because its not necessary to up grade, in other words once you got everything working and patched, you can just stop, and focus your own stuff.
      Perhaps, their real reason to upgrade was the hardware was too old to get a support contract, that could be problem. Hardware can wear out. And, once something gets really old its support costs can really escalate. Look at terminal costs. Simple curses terminals, are incredibly expensive for their real value, I'd expect them to cost about 1/3 of what they cost.

    2. Re:The trouble is that people belive this cr*p by fatphil · · Score: 1

      I know that one large telecommunications company, from Finland, still uses 1, 50MHz HPUX server as a login server and mail server for 150 people in one of the departments.

      So stick with the 4 old 386es, it's about the same ooomph, and even has built in redundancy!

      FP.

      --
      Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
  91. It's actually interesting... by petrus4 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In terms of talking about the operating system itself, Microsoft's statements come across as the same FUD we'd expect. However there is one thing I noticed in this letter which caused me to think a bit...

    "All of the major Linux vendors...have begun charging hefty premiums for must-have items such as technical service and support, product warranties and licensing indemnification."

    What this means I think is that Microsoft can't compete with the *operating system itself* on technical merit, and they know this. However, what it sounds like they're realising that they *can* do is exploit corporate ambivalence about Linux based on the major distributor companies' pricing structures.

    I understand that in order to make money with Linux, it's always been about the services. What I've also heard talked about several times recently though is how greedy people think Red Hat in particular are becoming. If this is true, RH and the other companies IMHO need to be careful.

    Microsoft as I said know they cannot compete with Linux based purely on technical merit. But if Red Hat and the other companies introduce overinflated pricing structures with regards to the services, this will largely erradicate the "free as in beer" element of Linux, at least as far as the corporate mind is concerned. If it gets to the point where Microsoft can compete based on *initial price*, (and no, I'm not talking about ongoing license fees here...I'm talking about the price of the *initial* contract/box/whatever) then they could even afford to cease caring about people knowing that Linux is a technically stronger solution than Windows. All they need to do is sell someone on the idea that an *entry* price is cheaper than the initial price one of the Linux companies is charging. Based on what I've heard about Microsoft's contracts, I'm guessing they could very easily do this.

    1) Offer a corporation an initial deal comparable to the Linux vendors in terms of unit volume/amount of support, but at a marginally lower price, and of course with Windows rather than Linux.

    2) Fill said corp's heads with usual BS about "independent" (wink, wink) surveys/studies and so on to grease the deal.

    3) Include a fixed term no-vendor-transfer clause in the contract...basically specifying that they can't migrate for a certain time period. 5 years, 10 if they can get away with it.

    4) Once the time period for the Linux "clone contract" runs out, then we're in purely Microsoft time, and can then commence MS fun and profit. Jack up the price for additional support, service packs, bug fixes or whatever, and justify this on the basis that these weren't mentioned in the original contract, or that these are "optional extras." (Even if they are actually mandatory to keep the corp's machines functioning) Use extra context-specific BS as necessary.

    Any client company unfortunate enough to fall into this trap would basically be screwed for the duration of the contract.

    1. Re:It's actually interesting... by argoff · · Score: 1

      I think in reality you are right, companies like Red Hat are seriously overcharging and that does have an effect on MSs' argument - but on the other hand that is a strength not a weakness.

      RedHat is charging more because they can get away with it even if it does limit their market share. Unlike windows, the Linux industry is not co-dependent on market share, but on service and overall value.

      Customer's don't buy an OS because the TCO is cheaper than a competitor - they buy it because it provides an overall value to their company that wasn't there before. In that way MS can't compete.

    2. Re:It's actually interesting... by nerk88 · · Score: 1

      The thing with Linux (or even commercial UNIX to an extent) is that if your vendor is charging huge support prices, you can get a similar/identical product from someone else.

      Microsoft is the sole supplier of Windows. Redhat is NOT the sole supplier of Linux.

  92. Word! by Zedrick · · Score: 0

    Slightly OT, but anyway: Who cares who many words a text is, why not give us the figure in bytes or kb instead? I have no idea how long a 2600 word text is (ok, I don't really need to know either, it's not *that* important), but 15 or 20kb ascii text would mean something.

  93. Gradual conversion? by medarby · · Score: 1

    I've only done cursory reading on migrating to Linux in the workplace. It seems though that most, if not all, of these studies assume a total, flip-the-switch conversion from Windows to Linux. What about a gradual (say over 5+ years) conversion?

    I work for the main IT shop for a state (US) government, and every time I bring up OSS, I always get some version of "We have too many applciations custom written to go back and rewrite them." We are a Mainframe/Windows/Java shop, but no one advocates rewriting a Windows app to the Mainframe, or a Java app to Windows. What I want is a study that projects TCO of a Windows or hybrid shop bringing in Linux, and over time creating new applications and replacing old ones with Linux. In effect, a gradual phase out of the Windows technology. Anyone know of any unbiased reviews?

    As a side question, what does Gartner and their ilk think of this topic? The PHBs don't want the opinions of the grunts and we don't have an R&D shop, so they follow whatever these consultants recommend.

  94. TCO by TheFlu · · Score: 3, Informative

    I appreciate the fact that it's going to cost a company some money to switch from Windows to Linux, mainly to hire competent administrators (and if you're thinking of doing so, hiring competent administrators is an absolute must).

    However, I also appreciate the fact that said company is never going to have to pay for a software and/or operating system upgrade ever again. This is called smart spending. You shell out money in the short term to save significant amounts of money in the long term.

    Speaking from experience here, my company has switched every machine in our office to Linux, both servers and clients, and we've saved a bundle in the long run by doing so.

    1. Re:TCO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I also appreciate the fact that said company is never going to have to pay for a software and/or operating system upgrade ever again."

      Never pay again, eh? I know some guys who thought that when they cut over from Windows to Redhat back when it was a free (and fully supported in a production environment) product.

      Try again.

  95. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  96. Excel and Photoshop by tepples · · Score: 1

    OK, are there any well-designed corporate applications for administrative assistants? What about apps for graphic designers working in print media?

  97. So the smart people will learn Linux now. by LWATCDR · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Look at what he says.
    "# Training for IT employees was significantly higher for Linux than for Windows - on average, 15% more expensive. The reasons: training materials were less readily available, and customers spent more on training to compensate for the lack of internal knowledge about Linux."
    So everyone and their dog "thinks" they know Windows well enough to run a windows server... Except that it all the security issues that seem to be caused by poorly administrated Windows boxs seems to say otherwise. Linux experts are pretty rare.

    "# All 14 companies said it was difficult finding qualified Linux personnel in the marketplace to support their Linux projects. When they did find third-party help, they had less leverage negotiating hourly rates than with Windows"

    So if you know Linux you are more in demand than if you know Windows, and you will make more money doing it.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  98. for ONE upgrade by zogger · · Score: 1

    ..for one upgrade (or change to keep it neutral) going from all MS to all Linux is probably pretty spendy. After that though,when you will want to continue upgrading, I would imagine it drops in price significantly, then stays cheaper forever. See, Balmer wants to keep business locked into that short sightedness, because at least he understands long term view, but he doesn't want other companies to honestly think that way, when it comes to what he has to sell. It is in his best intertest to be disingenuous on the topic. As in, do what I say, not what I do.

    American business (I am generalizing now of course, but I think it is more accurate than not) seems to take short historical future progression extrapolations, this is called the "this quarter mentality". I think it would be more prudent to look at ten, twenty years or more in the future as well as just next year or next quarter.

    CEOs that are only in it for a few years and want to cash out with as much as possible (seems like most of them doesn't it?) do more harm than good to corporations, and we can see that happening in the news all the time. And in order to get there, they do things that look fantastically good for the shareholders in the short term, so they get a free ride on their decisions, then when a WHOOPS happens, a lot of monday morning quarterbacking and lawsuits happen, and Joe CEO is long gone to Aruba with his golden parachute bundle..

    And the weird thing is, you can see it happen over and over again, yet it continues, it's like the shareholding public refuses to learn any constructive lessons from the past.

    see also: shafting your potential customer base by overly outsourcing still useful jobs, then wondering why your sales keep falling. One company doing that, eh, the domestic economy can handle it, almost all of them doing it, well, check out the business news lately to see what happens. Now creating additional jobs overseas is not harmful, but shifting the same job is if you want to maintain your domestic level of employment and the cash that is in the middle class pool, which by far is the most important one in most economies.

  99. You're a moron. by DogDude · · Score: 1

    Yes, you're a moron. TCO means "total cost of ownership". In the "total cost of ownership" of any kind of server, $142 is infitesimally small compared to training and setup costs. No offense, but you can't even troll very well. You sound like some kid looking at a '69 Mustang for his first car, saying "$5,000 is cheaper than a new Honda Civic", all the while, compeltely ignoring the fact that maintenance, gas, lost time with breakdowns, and insurance is going to make that '69 Mustang a hell of a lot more expensive than a Civic.

    --
    I don't respond to AC's.
    1. Re:You're a moron. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, because Linux is so widely known for breaking more than Windows?! Although, I have never seen the insurance costs of Linux servers compared with Windows servers. Perhaps you should get M$ to put that in their next "Get The Facts" report?

  100. Repeat after me: Copying software is NOT stealing by shermozle · · Score: 1

    time to explain this one again.

    If you have a can of Coke and I take it, you no longer have a can of Coke. This is theft.

    If you have a can of Coke and I use my beverage-copying machine to make a copy, we now each have a can of Coke. This is not theft.

  101. Ballmer doth protest too much by rlgoer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The very fact that Ballmer wants to take on Linux gives people the impression that Linux is a worthy opponent.

    It's the same with with US presidential debates, where the incumbent usually tries to negotiate his or her way out of as many debates as possible. Why? Because the mere fact that a challenger shares a stage with a sitting president tends to help the challenger.

    The lesson those of us who use Linux in our daily work, and who see the value in things like open source and open standards, is just to hang loose.

    Ballmer is offering free publicity.

    --
    ---- Richard L. Goerwitz III
  102. Re:hi. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hello.

  103. Your solution by gregarican · · Score: 1

    I didn't read all of the other replies but your problem is due to one of the recent Windows Updates. If you check the Internet Storm Center's diary entries there is a reference to specifically what you are talking about. Microsoft's UNIX Services were broken by a recent Windows Update...

    1. Re:Your solution by alatesystems · · Score: 1

      What are you talking about? I'm not using UNIX services or NFS. I was talking about FRS and DFS.

  104. The scarry part by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the most frightening part about the "get the facts" campaign is that Ballmer probably actually thinks he's telling people the truth.

  105. Linux is cheaper, but not for the obvious reason by gilesjuk · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Thing is the UK government have already identified that the upgrade cycle for hardware and software with Linux is less frequent at 6-8 years compared with 3-4 with Windows.

    Soon when environment laws are toughened further (in the EU they're becoming so) it will cost a lot of money to dispose of computer hardware and so the TCO of Windows will have to include the cost of hardware upgrades and disposal of old hardware.

    If you're doing this twice as often as Linux then you're paying twice as much simply based on the hardware, never mind the upgrade process (installation of new hardware and software) and training (due to software interface changes).

    All this and I've not even mentioned licenses.

  106. Re:I just gotta say... by ratboy666 · · Score: 1

    I am wondering about the obession that Microsoft has with Linux. I mean; COME ON; a free OS developed by mostly volunteers! How can that possibly be competition for the largest software company on the planet!

    As one of the FOSS "minions", I am certainly interested in Microsoft - simply to ensure future interoperability. I want to ensure that future Windows will talk to my Apache Web Server, Email services, &etc.

    I want to ensure that when someone brings a wireless laptop to my house, she can avail herself of the Internet, and local services.

    But WTF does Microsoft care? Is the MS product so weak that FOSS actually hurts them? Then get 5 or 10 thousand developers working on the problem! And give us something better.

    Ratboy.

    --
    Just another "Cubible(sic) Joe" 2 17 3061
  107. Here is the link by gregarican · · Score: 1

    Microsoft posted hotfix that appears to be similar to what you are experiencing...

  108. Is this even news? by JustNiz · · Score: 1

    Microsoft always lies about Linux because its the only way they can justify their bloated product and expensive business model to those with no technical savvy (i.e. the decision-makers). We all know that already. Is more of the same even newsworthy?

    The only reason Microsoft are still in business is because most companies generally put narrow-minded bean-counters in charge of corporate purchasing. Those people are so technically challenged and brainwashed by Microsoft's culture that they don't even care that better alternatives exist.

  109. I have a better one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First you ignore them,
    Then you laught at them,
    Then you fight them,
    Then they win.

    1. Re:I have a better one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, works for the Americans.

    2. Re:I have a better one by pohl · · Score: 1


      First you ignore them,
      Then you laught at them,
      Then you fight them,
      Then they win.

      I wonder if this works backwards. It sure seems like it does: I've gone all the way from the last stage back to the first stage over the last 5 years.

      --

      The "cue the foo posts in 3, 2, 1..." posts will commence with no subsequent foo posts in 3, 2, 1...

  110. why donate your time and money to Microsoft? by geg81 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Ballmer writes:
    At the same time, our worldwide sales organization is going even deeper with customers to understand their needs and create a feedback loop with our product development teams that enables us to deliver integrated solutions that support real-world customer scenarios, and comprehensively address issues such as manageability, ease of use and reliability.
    Anybody who has been part of a software development effort knows that that kind of feedback takes time--lots of time, in fact. Is Microsoft paying their customers for this time? I don't believe they are. Similarly, is Microsoft paying for all the beta testing and bug reporting they are getting out of their customers? I don't believe they are.

    So, the question is: why should anybody give Microsoft many hours of free consulting just so that Microsoft can turn around and use that to further monopolize the market? Why should anybody donate time and effort to Microsoft just to have the company turn around and charge them for everybody's voluntary contributions to their software?

    Microsoft's dirty little secret is that most of the value of their software isn't created by them, it's created by their customers. They are just capturing that value and making a bundle on it. And they are charging their customers for the same effort over and over again, just because they can.

    Even if Linux were no better than Windows, with Linux, people can be sure that they are not getting charged for their own and other people's free contributions to the effort.
    1. Re:why donate your time and money to Microsoft? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "At the same time, our worldwide sales organization is going even deeper with customers"

      Oh boy, did I misinterpret that first time I read it!

    2. Re:why donate your time and money to Microsoft? by bodino · · Score: 1

      With the Windows Logo program, there is the opportunity to download those crash reports often seen running applications under Windows.

      Unless I'm really confused and it already exists, it would be interesting to develop a similar repository (maybe different ones for each distro) where the crash dumps can be stored and provided on demand to Linux app developers.

      Anyone know of any projects like this?

  111. Switch Campaign? by DesertFalcon · · Score: 1

    I can see it now:

    An executive sitting in a board room. With a goatee. "I like the lower TCO I get with Windows."

    He sips his cappucino (or whatever drink is trendy in two years.) We get a different angle on him.

    "I just feel safer knowing that SCO isn't going to sue me."

    The camera angle changes again. "My name is Ben Dover... and I'm a CEO."

    --
    --- 11 meters/second, or 24 miles per hour - the airspeed velocity of an unladen European swallow. Really.
  112. schweeeeet! by Thud457 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Rich is nice, but the part I'm really looking forward to in not being held accountable for my fuck-ups!

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

  113. Who do I trust? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Ballmer says Linux is not viable. The UK government says it is. I have no idea who out of the two I trust least... :(

  114. Free Windows? by geomon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "All of the major Linux vendors and distributors (including Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Novell [SUSE and Ximian] and Red Hat) have begun charging hefty premiums for must-have items such as technical service and support, product warranties and licensing indemnification."

    So Microsoft provides these extras for free?

    I've read the warranty from Microsoft's products. They don't warrant shit. Nor do I expect to see a pro bono Microsoft lawyer pop out of thin air if someone makes a copyright claim regarding their products.

    And customer support?

    Give me a break.

    Yankee's study concluded that, in large enterprises, a significant Linux deployment or total switch from Windows to Linux would be three to four times more expensive - and take three times as long to deploy - as an upgrade from one version of Windows to a newer release.

    You could have fooled our IT department. Because of the shifting sands beneath the code in various Microsoft Office versions, we (a national laboratory) have had to recode all of our Word macros and all of our Access apps everytime there is a "new" release of Office.

    And nine out of 10 enterprise customers said that such a change wouldn't provide any tangible business gains.

    Not because of superior technology, but because of integration hooks and low-ball initial pricing. When you swallow the Microsoft hook, you take the line and sinker with it. Regurgitating all of that 'infrastructure' will inevitably take more money to change. That would be true shifting from a pure *NIX environment to a Windows-centric environment.

    ...more expensive (5% to 20%) than...

    ...took 5% to 25% longer...

    ...three to four times more expensive...

    Shifting from specifics to global ranges indicates they have no idea what the cost structures are. They are cherry picking their report figures and glossing over their own problems.

    Hardly surprising for a marketing letter.

    But keep in mind everyone: Windows is Free!.

    --
    "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
  115. Get the... by kkovach · · Score: 1

    ... shovel!

    - Kevin

    --
    The less confident you are, the more serious you have to act.
  116. Indeed they are. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Reading the latest annual filing, as for the competition on the client side:

    "We believe our operating system products compete effectively by delivering better innovation, an easy-to-use interface, compatibility with a broad range of hardware and software applications, and the largest support network for any operating system."

    Better innovation is questionable. It rarely has originated from Microsoft. They have basically stolen almost all of their "innovation" from someone else, e.g. by developing a clone product and driven some smaller players out of the market through their sheer mass. Stability is not on the list, for obvious reasons.

    As for the competition on the server side:

    "We believe that our server products provide customers with significant advantages in innovation, performance (both relative to total costs of ownership and in absolute terms), productivity, applications development tools and environment, compatibility with a broad base of hardware and software applications, security, and manageability."

    Again, the innovation element, for which applies the same reply as with the client side. As for performance, they're talking trash. And their security is a damn joke. Compatibility goes out the window (no pun intended) the moment it has something to do with being compatible with a competitor. Again, stability is not on the list.

  117. Missives like this stoke no-one by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    The memo might be a great PR move. But memos like this from the upper brass hurt morale in a company. When you have a letter from anyone in a top position that is so far out of whack with reality and does not seem to be taking comptetiton seriously, it makes you wonder if the executives know what they are doing at all.

    So by publishing something like this he is doing Microsoft no favors in the long run.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  118. Re: Church of FUD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    used car salesmen, bow before Ballmer, for he is your god

    You know, you may just be onto something there.

    The great god Ballmer, god of the religion of FUD.

    --
    I can imagine one salesman saying to another, "I need more Ballmer Karma. Hey, wanna go visit the Shrine of Ballmer to offer oblations?"

    [posting anonymously because if I'd posted as a logged in user I'd be modded down instantly]

  119. Re:Repeat after me: Copying software is NOT steali by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 1

    A was going to sell B a can of Coke to B. Instead, B illicitly copies A's can. Now A can't sell it to B. B has stolen revenue from A. As what was stolen from A was precisely the value of the can, and by analogy with the conventional use of the word 'steal', we conveniently describe this by saying that B stole the can.

    --
    Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
  120. Open Source Works in the East by bergwitz · · Score: 1

    Most Chinese neither steal or get Windows for free, they buy it from pirates.

    There are many disadvantages to pirated software. Pirated copies of Windows usually have troubles using Windows Update and pirated software always comes without any sort of support. That is a downside to the Chinese customers who buys pirated software.

    For organizations of some size, pirated software has many limits. First off, they may be so large that it is worth suing them. Secondly, they need support and stability something hard to achieve with pirated software.

    Free software doesn't have these issues. Chinese business and goverment institutions are better off using free software. If the largest institutions adopt free software expect many to follow.

    --
    Evolution is just a scientific theory. Creationism is not.
  121. I am not! by Camel+Pilot · · Score: 1
    From slashdot advertising section:


    Take Control of Your Ad Spend.

    You determine the price you are willing to pay to deliver buyers to your site! You are charged by the click, not the view. If customers don't click on your listing to visit your site, you aren't charged. This means a higher return on investment!


    In other words every time you click on their ad you effect a Microsoft donation to Slashdot!

    Now where is that ad....
  122. Microsoft: Security is our middle name! by geomon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    While [the open source development process] has some validity, it is not necessarily the best way to develop secure software. We believe in the effectiveness of a structured software engineering process that includes a deep focus on quality, technology advances, and vigorous testing to make software more secure.

    But not for the last twenty one years, apparently:

    About three years ago, we made software security a top priority,..

    So they think that the open source approach to development has some validity, but that their approach - THAT THEY ADMIT THEY HAVEN'T BEEN USING FOR 20+ YEARS - is better.

    Hmmmm....

    They found that Microsoft addressed all of the 128 publicly disclosed security flaws in Windows over the 12-month period studied, and that its security updates predated major outbreaks by an average of 305 days.

    There are only 360 days in the study period. That means their average is nearly the timeframe covered by the study.

    I get suspicious when I see this kind of conclusion. Have they only been in business a year?

    After careful analysis, farmaCity concluded that Windows would reduce network administration by 30 percent compared with Linux, and would also simplify identity and desktop management..

    And this is proof of security... how?

    What was the analytical methodology? Why is network administration such a large burden? I don't even see the update activities on my Linux machine, but I have been warned by our IT group not to deploy XP SP2 due to breakage problems.

    Hmmmm....

    --
    "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
  123. FUD, Indemnification and Insurance by dilute · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The "indemnification" point is serious FUD based on way overblown fears of end user patent liability.

    In fact, the most likely "patent" scenario is the one we have today: i.e., patent "hold-ups" in which 2-bit "inventors" demand "royalties" from software users, based on patents they probably never should never have been granted. These patent owners want to bleed a lot of companies for relatively small bucks each. They do not in fact want to actually shut anyone down; they just want to collect a small "tax" from a big population. These are nuisances to big companies (the usual targets of such claims), and certainly potential expense items, but NOT the sort of thing that should make a strategic difference in one's technology direction.

    All that being said, offering uncapped indemnification to customers against potential software patent claims is a valid selling point. Of course, Microsoft software is no less vulnerable to these claims than anyone else's, and the email was a little unclear whether the "uncapped" amount was for the costs of legal defense (attorneys' fees) or that plus the actual liability to the patent owner.

    Microsoft's offer of indemnification is credible if for no other reason than Microsoft's huge financial liquidity. In the open source world, there are also a few companies, such as IBM, that have good financial credit and can credibly make a comparable offer. But there are quite a few providers who are not in a position to do this.

    Perhaps the answer for the others would be to offer reasonably priced group insurance from a financially sound insurer . . . IF the market considers that a response like that is even necessary.

  124. My response to Microsoft by Phil+Karn · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ballmer's missive landed in my mailbox last night (somehow it escaped my spam filter), and I wrote this response. I know no one there will read it, but it was still fun to write.

    1. Re:My response to Microsoft by SysKoll · · Score: 1
      Ouch. It's lucky for Ballmer that he cannot be shamed. Great writing, although a bit... err... un-business-like? :-)

      Reading your http://www.ka9q.net/worm/ write-up. Nice.

      --

      --
      Mad science! Robots! Underwear! Cute girls! Full comic online! http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/

    2. Re:My response to Microsoft by Anthony · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Love this line in your worm missive :-

      Like Disney, Microsoft is happy to borrow from the public domain without giving anything back.

      Looks like another benefit of the GPL. MS won't get its hands on it.

      --
      Slashdot: Where nerds gather to pool their ignorance
    3. Re:My response to Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's to hoping someone does read it. Dead on ;]

  125. Ballmer Finally Admits that Linux is the Best by CyNRG · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Being a former technical software salesman myself, I've experienced and used the TCO defense as the last resort before I lost a sale. That is what Ballmer is doing here. Features and benefits aren't enough to sway the buyer into purchasing Microsoft software, so you have to resort to a different value proposition.

    Features and benefits are valued more than anything else by the customer. It is the reason to even consider a purchase. This being the issue, it simply means that Ballmer realized that Linux has better and more value to the customer than Microsoft Winblows. Hence, the last justification is the TCO stand. And like political races, truth is meaningless, it's only what the voter will believe.

    Analogy mode on:

    If you need to move a refrigerator, then you need a good size pickup truck. A used car salesman will try to sell you a hatchback Honda and give you advice on how to turn the 'frig on it's side and shove it into the hatchback. The Honda may get great mileage and be cheaper, but it doesn't do the job. What good is it?

    Analogy mode off:

    In this case the TCO figures are an out and out lie.

    The "independent" sources of TCO and general IT practices analysis live by the motto: "Never piss off the 800lb gorilla in your house" (Microsoft).

    Linux and all Open Source groups have no fear of the 800lb gorilla.

  126. I love her by geomon · · Score: 1

    The Yankee Group report claimed that some interviewees reported that "a significant Linux deployment or total switch from Windows to Linux would be three to four times more expensive" than the usual Windows upgrade. Well, duh!

    Maria Winslow rocks!

    Any analyst who can get away with using the phrase "Well, duh!" in a position paper is a geek goddess.

    Yes, I did say 'geek goddess' and not 'greek goddess'.

    --
    "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    1. Re:I love her by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      here she is:

      www.ibiblio.org/internetworkers/images/9_7/Dcp00 48 6.jpg

  127. How many ballmergrams are there in an ounce? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought a "ballmergram" was what Steve snorted before his infamous "developers" performance. That guy had to be on something.

  128. Re:I just gotta say... by geomon · · Score: 1

    MS could declare that the sky is blue or 1+1=2 and Slashdot will spend the rest of the week with pendantic arguments and nitpicks proving the sky is blue or 1+1=2 only with Linux.

    While the level of Linux support on /. is unquestionable, the obsession angle is poorly argued.

    If anyone is obsessed, it is Microsoft. Here's why:

    1) Balmer spent the better part of a few productive days drafting his letter, then redrafting it, getting reviews and comments, revising it and having his secretary reformat it, before having their web staff put together the executive letter for the website. What do you think that effort cost Microsoft for those days of work?

    2) In that same timeframe, Linus wrote, received, reviewed, and recompiled code for the next kernel version.

    Who is more obsessed again?

    --
    "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
  129. Jaheejahus, get some new cliches, trade rags! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The software giant's chief executive Steve Ballmer has used the software giant's latest executive email to stoke up the software giant's fight against the rise of Linux. The software giant's 2,600 word missive was titled 'Customer focus: comparing the software giant with Linux and UNIX'. In it, the software giant repeated the key themes of the software giant's controversial Get The Facts campaign. Zdnet has its report here

  130. Between the lines.... by borschski · · Score: 4, Insightful


    Don't read what Ballmer wrote since (IMHO) the focus is NOT on lower TCO...instead read in to what Ballmer meant. This is a public salvo thrown out that clearly signals their intention: they're coming after Linux and open source hard.

    Read in to what Ballmer meant when he said, "Given the growing concern among customers about intellectual property indemnification, what's the best way to minimize risk?" Read this and then think about it.

  131. Re: security in Linux by jonhaug · · Score: 1
    Even without ACLs, [Linux security mechanisms] is more than adequate for 99% of companies.

    This sounds like "640 KB is more than enough". Actually, I often have problems in setting up security domains for projects at the university. Imagine a CVS project where you must use the campus wide file system to set up a reposotory and where you wish to give read/write access to different users in different sub projects. The Linux native access control mechanisms are not flexible enough.

    One way to look at such problems is that the reason that something is good enough, is because users don't know better. Like my grandfather who could not understand the use of planes.

  132. almost time by dougnaka · · Score: 1
    if $name = ".*allmer.*" { ignore_statement(); }

    --
    My Linux Command of the Day site : LCOD
  133. The T in TCO is Supposed to Mean "Total" by Noksagt · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I can't believe how businesses have been hoodwinked into believing that "TOTAL Cost" has a horizon of 1-3 years (whatever the frequency of windows updates is these days). If they intend to be around for decades more, than they should have some vision of those decades to come. Of course switching is expensive! But upgrades to Windows are generally more expensive than upgrades to even commercially-supported versions of Linux.

    This gap could potentially change if MS suddenly moved to a subscription model--presumably they'd see that by keeping subscription costs low "enough" people would stay locked in. But it is also easier to justify the insignificant monthly or anual costs of a subscription than large expenditutres every few years for upgrades.

    The Community needs a study of annually amortized UPGRADE costs for different platforms. Then businesses could make a more informed decision--Is the switch worth it if it pays for itself in 3 years?

  134. It's not a troll, mod parent up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just read carefully what the post says. It is insightful and factual.

  135. I always find these kind of funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whenever I read these anti-open source things from MS I remember back to a year and a half or so ago. I applied for a job with microsoft. It was to be a linux and freebsd administrator.

    I wish I could find the job posting, but it appears to be too old for monster.com to keep track of.

  136. More FUD from the FUDmaster by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I received that ballmer email this morning. I answered it of course explaining why he is full of it. I'm sure he won't read it, but if enough people respond, I figure their exchange server will croak, whereas a Linux box would still be going strong!

    Here is the first paragraph..

    Start of FUD
    In the thousands of meetings that Microsoft employees have with customers around the world every day, many of the same questions consistently surface: Does an open source platform really provide a long-term cost advantage compared with Windows? Which platform offers the most secure computing environment? Given the growing concern among customers about intellectual property indemnification, what's the best way to minimize risk? In moving from an expensive UNIX platform, what's the best alternative in terms of migration?
    End of FUD

    What kind of idiot would ask Microsoft these questions? And yeah, UNIX platform to Windows is much easier than UNIX to Linux, what were they smoking? I wouldn't want to play poker with anyone that could make that statement with a straight face...

  137. Re:Repeat after me: Copying software is NOT steali by tez_h · · Score: 1
    ?!

    But A still has his asset, his can of Coke. So his net loss is zero.

    -Tez

    --
    Haskell, the static-typed, lazy, polymorphic, programming language.
  138. [OT]Re:From Linux to Windows by bicho · · Score: 1

    here

    If I remember right, it literally means "cut one's abdomen"
    hara->abdomen
    kiri->some form of the verb kiru, to cut

    ->seppuku
    ->harakiri
    I wonder why they are reverse, and why seppuku is "preferrable".

    --

    errera hunamum ets
    1. Re:[OT]Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The word "seppuku" is preferable to "harakiri" as it isn't as straightforward as the latter. "Seppuku" is a combination of the Chinese-style reading of characters. "Sep" et "huku" do not have a meaning when taken alone.

    2. Re:[OT]Re:From Linux to Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Basically, the difference between the terms would be analogous to the difference between saying 'circumcision' as opposed to 'cutting the foreskin off your dick'.

  139. Re:Repeat after me: Copying software is NOT steali by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    A was going to sell B a can of Coke to B. Instead, B illicitly copies A's can. Now A can't sell it to B. B has stolen revenue from A. As what was stolen from A was precisely the value of the can, and by analogy with the conventional use of the word 'steal', we conveniently describe this by saying that B stole the can.

    Ummm, no. Your analogy misses a critical component; just because A was going to (attempt to) sell a can of Coke to B, that doesn't mean B was going to buy it.

    People will desire a lot of things when they are free (or at a drastically reduced price) that they would never pay full retail for. If B never intended to buy that Coke, then there is no sale lost.

    Furthermore, if B copies A's Coke, A still has a Coke that he can sell to C, D, E, etc. If B steals A's Coke, not only did A fail to receive payment, he's also out one Coke.

    piracy != stealing

  140. Re:I just gotta say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is no different then a portable audio player story that quickly turns into an iPod story..

    There is an average of 5 front page articles a week that provides a soapbox where the iPod owners can take turns speaking to the crowd and all say the same thing. They state feature X offered by company Y is a complete waste and nobody will use it because the iPod does not have it. Then follow it up with how the iPod scroll wheel has actually defined and documented the meaning of life as we know it. They all get modded as +5 insightful even though the same comments are repeated over and over again in every one of the articles.

  141. Re:Repeat after me: Copying software is NOT steali by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 1

    No, because if such a thing as a can copier existed A could sell copies of the can. A will have incurred an opportunity cost becaue he could have sold the can to B and kept it.

    --
    Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
  142. Re:Repeat after me: Copying software is NOT steali by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 1

    Well yeah. Illicitly copying the Coke can deprives A of the revenue from one payment but actually taking the can away from A deprives A of an entire revenue stream. Taking stuff away from people is even worse than mere stealing.

    --
    Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
  143. wtf? by dougnaka · · Score: 2, Insightful
    "more buisnesses use it"

    I'm sorry, but nothing I've ever seen on Netcraft or anywhere supports your statement, in fact it directly contradicts it.

    And, I would like an example of "integrate better with their internal MS databases and webservers"
    Do you actually use any M$ based/proprietary connections/communications/protocols over the open Internet? Are you high? I'm sure *some* idiot companies are doing netbios rpc to *some* idiot web hoster, or MSSQL over the Internet, I mean I guess you're actually right, becuase all those Code Red/Nimda attacks that I get in my logs have to be coming from somewhere...

    I apologize, you could be right... which would be scary to me if it meant anything more than a slightly annoying increase in traffic..

    emerge codegreen...

    --
    My Linux Command of the Day site : LCOD
  144. If you can run linux by dogfull · · Score: 0

    you are definitly able to run windows... At least, 'till problems arise

  145. you're forgetting who IS using the CLI in Windows by dougnaka · · Score: 1
    The black hats..

    And getting access through your IIS server to the CLI hasn't ever been very hard for them..

    At least that's what I hear.. since I wouldn't know so don't ask, no I did NOT format your hard drive.

    --
    My Linux Command of the Day site : LCOD
  146. Bush Website fiasco: Microsoft bashfest material by IceAgeComing · · Score: 1

    Look at all the bad press coming about GeorgeWBush.com.

    The supposed reason for them blocking their site? Hacking attempts that they could not deal with.

    A few weeks ago, someone on slashdot ran Nessus on Kerry's and Bush's websites. The summary: Bush's website uses Microsoft IIS and had 44 unpatched vulnerabilities. Kerry's used Apache and had 2 vulnerabilities.

    Do you think that the TCO for Bush's website is lower, figuring in all the bad press? I don't think so.

  147. Balmer by sjb2016 · · Score: 1

    Given the monkey boy video, I think that Balmer is certainly an "Excitable Boy". And the grandparent is right, Warren Zevon, you are missed.

  148. Regal Entertainment case study by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Indemnification: ...

    It was certainly a factor for Regal Entertainment Group, the largest movie theatre chain in the world. In 2001, they moved to Red Hat Linux. ...


    That one seemed to hinge on their new tactic. Who else googled for "Regal Entertainment Group Linux Windows"? There are a bunch of articles about their use of Linux but I cound find none about a reverse migration to Windows. (OK, I didn't actually check all 34.6K hits ;) Also worthy of note is that the conversion was announced in 2002.

    You can also go to the Regal Group's web site and search press releases (under Investor Relations) and see that they provide services to Microsoft:

    Regal Entertainment Group's CineMeetings & Events Division to Provide Venues for Microsoft Business Solutions, Technical Sales and TechNet Seminars

  149. Re:Bad move M$ by Stop+Error · · Score: 1

    Will this not make M$ look weaker in the eyes of it's customers? This (IMHO) was a very transparent marketing (panic attack) attempt?

    --
    No keyboard detected. Press any key to continue.
  150. Who they Listen to: by temojen · · Score: 1

    From the first paragraph:

    In the thousands of meetings that Microsoft employees have with customers around the world every day, many of the same questions consistently surface: Does an open source platform really provide a long-term cost advantage compared with Windows? Which platform offers the most secure computing environment? Given the growing concern among customers about intellectual property indemnification, what's the best way to minimize risk? In moving from an expensive UNIX platform, what's the best alternative in terms of migration?

    Gee, I know whenever I need to make a major business decision, the first person I go to is someone who is trying to sell me something. Why bother consulting someone who has not already made up their mind?

    Either Ballmer is lying, or they've had thousands of meetings with idiots.

  151. as an Ex-Morgan Stanley employee... by coronaride · · Score: 1

    I can tell you that their systems are crap..they're still using dumb terminal style programs and old clunky DOS style interfaces for everything..

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, go into business for themselves.
    1. Re:as an Ex-Morgan Stanley employee... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you sure when they came to my school to recruit, they asked in an information session what kind of systems investment banks used and I answered old mainframe type technology primarily and they went off on me about distributed systems. It honestly was ridiculous I was saying that out of my experience in other banks, they also seemed very LINUX and UNIX directed. Most banks like Mainframes because they provide a butload of bandwidth and are easily managed. So I find that to be amusing, when did you work there, just out of intrest because they claim to be the most technologically advanced bank.

  152. Windows campers? by Deal-a-Neil · · Score: 1

    Honestly, if you're pro-Windows in any way shape or form, YOU CAN HAVE IT. Application and storage servers -- I would never host on a Windows box. Not because I'm anti-Microsoft, just because I know how Linux works for my company. The adjectives to describe Linux's role for us are: fast, reliable, secure, inexpensive.

    So, blast through all of your metrics and case studies, and even tell me that I don't measure my costs properly.. but my company has been in the black since its inception, and I have to give a lot of credit to my backend boxes, which, from day one, have always been running Linux.

  153. Hate to be a Japanese nazi but... by orzetto · · Score: 1
    because the previous guys would've committed hari-kari in the bathroom

    I don't know what hari-kari is, probably you mean seppuku or hara kiri.
    Sumimasen.

    --
    Victims of 9/11: <3000. Traffic in the US: >30,000/y
    1. Re:Hate to be a Japanese nazi but... by Kernkraft400 · · Score: 1

      Don't be so pedantic because you obviously DID know what the guy meant, It's not like the internet isn't already full of spelling mistakes and that's not even an english word

    2. Re:Hate to be a Japanese nazi but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here come the Grammar Nazis!

    3. Re:Hate to be a Japanese nazi but... by dextr0us · · Score: 1

      Don't forget frizbee seppuku!

      --
      "Martha Stewart can lick my Scrotum......do i have a scrotum?" -- Sharon Osbourne
    4. Re:Hate to be a Japanese nazi but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      YEAH YEAH everyone else has played MORTAL KOMBAT DECEPTION TOO.

      If it hadn't been for that game and the ability to commit HARA KIRI with the correct spelling.

      You probably wouldn't know it either!

      U S A

      BUSH another 4 years! wtf happened there?

  154. Balmer - Cheney twins separated at birth? by g2racer · · Score: 1

    Anybody ever notice that Balmer and Cheney look a lot alike... A whole lotta fear mongering going on between the two. http://www.ctam.com/conferences/summit/2003/images /photo-balmer.jpg http://www.greatdreams.com/political/dick-cheney-2 002.jpg

  155. Amusing moderation... by spectecjr · · Score: 1

    Heh... that's funny... moderated down for "troll" posting, yet all I'm pointing out is that nearly every post in this thread is spreading anti-Microsoft FUD in response to anti-Linux FUD, and as such is dragging the debate down to their level.

    Not that I'm surprised at all, but I guess y'all just can't take criticism.

    --
    Coming soon - pyrogyra
  156. How many of you got BallmerGram'd ? by nkhorman · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I got mine last nigth at 10:16Pm local.
    I was supprised to find that it wasn't spoofed. (headers, ip address, etc.)
    And then maddend by that fact that I've been spammed yet again, but this time by M$.

    How many of you got BallmerGram'd
    Where is the opt-out?

  157. Re:Sox fan, huh? No worries, FAA to the rescue! by aichpvee · · Score: 0

    So is the lunar eclipse in 2007 going to be during the Series, or are the Red Sox out of luck for another 86 years?

    --
    The Farewell Tour II
  158. Re:Repeat after me: Copying software is NOT steali by iggymanz · · Score: 1

    in a world where things can be (almost) freely copied, you're saying even though EVERYONE and ANYONE could make a free copy of a can of coca-cola, that no, we must all use A's very limited supply and pay money for it? People should starve to death rather than making free copies of food?

  159. Re:Repeat after me: Copying software is NOT steali by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 1

    This is an analogy. Nobody is starving because they can't afford to buy the latest Britney Spears album.

    --
    Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
  160. Re:It used to be 32 not 16 by Trelane · · Score: 1

    Please mod parent up.

    GIDs are stored in a list of 32-gid blocks, with an upper limit of 64k (posted recently on the Linux Kernel list).

    See also, include/linux/sched.h, specifically the task_struct and group_info structs. (at least with 2.6.9)

    --

    --
    Given enough personal experience, all stereotypes are shallow.
  161. I love the power Ballmer gives us by Stevyn · · Score: 1

    Here's Ballmer, a billionaire who runs the largest software company in the world. They're sitting on billions in cash and can do pretty much anything they want with it.

    However, I'm just another geek who uses linux, partly just to dick around and fiddle with it. I'm always trying to make my desktop nicer looking and more usable. And here is Ballmer, scared shitless of people like us. He knows that some day when we're out of college, we'll have knowledge and drive to set up Linux in corporate situations where it could become a lucrative job and take money and control out of their hands.

    I love it.

  162. Big companies want to hire Slashdotters! by solprovider · · Score: 1, Interesting

    From the article:
    - Preparation and planning activities took 5% to 25% longer for Linux than Windows.
    - Training for IT employees was significantly higher for Linux than for Windows - on average, 15% more expensive. The reasons: training materials were less readily available, and customers spent more on training to compensate for the lack of internal knowledge about Linux.
    - All 14 companies said it was difficult finding qualified Linux personnel in the marketplace to support their Linux projects. When they did find third-party help, they had less leverage negotiating hourly rates than with Windows consulting resources.


    Revised version with comments:
    - Linux administrators take longer than Windows administrators to plan their infrastructure.

    This is bad? Linux administrators have more choices, so they think more about what they are doing. Windows administrators know that anything wrong can be blamed on MS's software.

    - Retraining Windows admins on Linux is expensive.

    Windows admins are trained how to reboot. Their prior skill is useless in the new environment

    - Linux admins are expensive and difficult to find.

    Good news for the many unemployed Slashdotters. Very large companies are looking for you, and think you are worth much money. The bad news is they have never heard of Slashdot. Should Slashdot start a job listing or resume website to help these clueless big companies?

    --
    I spend my life entertaining my brain.
  163. I bet you have not been sued - my company was by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can bet that you or your company have not yet been sued. If you were (as my company was), you would know that indemnification comes in handy - as you do not need to waste precious time on fighting bullshit in court. The vendor, BTW, was not MS - it was another software company - and we are not in software business ourselves :-)

  164. TCO lower for whom? by procrusteous · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Just once, I'd like to see one of these "uncommissioned" TCO reports separate OS users into software producers and software consumers. If you produce software you have a vested interest in sticking with MS - they change their OS every few years and that means their customers, and yours, will be back again and again. Let's face it, software is not a consumable - it doesn't wear out or get used up. There has to be something other than new faces driving sales or you're dead as a producer.

    Software consumers don't like to keep buying new versions of software, and if they're home users they don't necessarily care about MS support, or lack thereof, for an obsolete OS. They're going to keep playing those games on Windows 98 as long as they work. Commercial users pretty much need to use supported software - if they can't go to someone when they have a problem it's useless to them. That's the primary allure of MS over open software. Though with Big Blue and others getting into the service end of open software there is a whole lot less reason for saying open software is not supported, particularly if you've got a service contract with a large outfit.

    My company writes a lot of custom software for internal use, only. Expensive software. We need a supported OS. A lot of stuff we have that worked in NT doesn't work in XP, so it's been a major headache making the switch (we're still not half way there). As one of the better MS customers we are actually one of the reasons MS provided support for NT long after it was supposed to expire.

    I don't know when the guys running this outfit are going to see, if they ever do, that sticking with MS means we are going to have to go through this over and over and over again. That's because every MS OS is obsolete and without MS support, right out of the box. It just hasn't happened for the newer ones, yet. That's something that's not given a lot of weight in these TCO analyses, and nobody tells you up front.

  165. Windows' TCO is lower, yeah... by c0l0 · · Score: 1

    If you're measuring "Cost" in seconds you've got to invest, and "Ownership" stands for gaining remote control of the given OS.

    Agreed, since Ballmer's perfectly right with that.

    --
    :%s/Open Source/Free Software/g

    YTARY!
  166. I am not an Microsoft advocate or sympathizer... by msimm · · Score: 4, Interesting

    But I'm curious how Linux distro's compete with Active Directory and the slew of enterprise configuration utilities available on Windows 2003 Server?

    I'm a full time Linux user, but as a workstation doesn't require these types of tools I've never actually come across them before.

    To be honest, in my Windows server classes I've been pretty impressed with some of their enterprise solutions. Considering, for the forseeable future, we'll be developing networking around mainly Windows clients whats Linux got to compete or outdo Windows on the controller end?

    I'd guess Suse is going to have the best chance, if Novell really tosses everything they had going in Netware into making Suse Enterprise a competative product. I'd be curious to hear what Linux admins are doing in the real world.

    Does Linux have a serious enterprise grade alternative?

    --
    Quack, quack.
  167. Re:Sox fan, huh? No worries, FAA to the rescue! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't think it was one game they won, I think they brought the broom to the stadia.

  168. Note this little oblique SCO reference by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2, Informative


    But as the Yankee Group commented in an independent, non-sponsored global study of 1,000 IT administrators and executives, Linux, UNIX and Windows TCO Comparison, things aren't always as they seem: "All of the major Linux vendors and distributors (including Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Novell [SUSE and Ximian] and Red Hat) have begun charging hefty premiums for must-have items such as technical service and support, product warranties and licensing indemnification."

    Obviously they are talking about SCO's false claims there. Fucking opportunistic bastards! Regardless of whether or not the conspiracy theory is true, that MS prompted SCO's frivolous lawsuit to discredit Linux, the fact of the matter is that they are trying to make use of it in their PR. Whether it was planned from the start or not, either way that is now part of their strategy now, the deceptive bastards.

    Call this a troll if you will, but I don't apologise for being honest.

    --

    Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    1. Re:Note this little oblique SCO reference by bruns · · Score: 1

      Probably another Laura DiDidiot quote, cause after all, us Linux users are all suicide car bombers, right? :)

      --
      Brielle
  169. Re:read the *actual* words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Or maybe that's not what he said.

    Yankee's study concluded that, in large enterprises, a significant Linux deployment or total switch from Windows to Linux would be three to four times more expensive - and take three times as long to deploy - as an upgrade from one version of Windows to a newer release. And nine out of 10 enterprise customers said that such a change wouldn't provide any tangible business gains.

    Punctuation exists for a reason. It's clear from the *actual* text that he's referring to "a significant Linux deployment or total switch from Windows to Linux" when he says "such a change".

    Twisting his words is one thing. Changing what he says completely is another.

  170. 50 percent reduction in servers. by Mybrid · · Score: 1
    An independent, qualitative survey of organizations that recently completed a migration of their SAP or PeopleSoft ERP system from a UNIX environment to the Microsoft Windows Server platform found a more than 20% reduction in the number of servers required compared with UNIX. The survey, by META Group, found that in one large telecommunications company, consolidation on Windows allowed a greater than 50 percent reduction in the number of required servers. The survey also found a more than 50 percent improvement in areas such as reliability, accessibility and scalability; significant savings in cost management, IT staffing, performance monitoring and vendor management; and measurable savings in technical support and training.
    Mmm, questions come to mind like "how old were these machines?" A Unix server that was 5 years old compared to a Windows box today indeed might yield a 50% reduction in existing servers.

    But then upgrading to the latest Unix servers would probably yield a 75% reduction in servers.

    You know what they say. There are lies, damn lies and then Microsoft marketing.

  171. M$ is not stealing ideas/contributions from users! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft is doing nothing different than any other software developer. There is always a customer behind a product, either it be the programming company itself or people on the outside. The customer ALWAYS gives their ideas and contributions in hope that the developer will put them into their product. They are the customer, the ones buying the product. You want to keep the ones providing your paycheck happy right? We shouldn't be getting all bent out of shape towards M$ based on this idea that they are stealing our contributions and ideas - its how the software process works. I just wish that M$ would listen to their users when they ask for security and stability. It has taken them how many years to keep their OS from crashing every 4 hours?

    Just so you know, I am definitely not a Windows lover, I have more Linux boxes (Gentoo) than Windows boxes at home. I am a software developer professionally and have been on the recieving end of those ideas and contributions, some of which are definitely laughable.

  172. Simple honest marketing by Infonaut · · Score: 1
    Simple honest marketing (from Microsoft).

    *Picking self off floor after rolling around laughing* Thanks, man, I needed that.

    But seriously, it is amazing how few companies actually understand the value of being perceived as honest.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
  173. Similarities... by GReaToaK_2000 · · Score: 1

    Bush is to Microsoft
    as...
    well, I can't in good conscience say "Kerry is too Linux..."
    Oh wait, this will work...
    Bush is to Microsoft
    as
    Kerry is to Sun
    and
    Nader is to Linux. :)

    Everyone knows that Nader would be good for the country but not enough people are willing to really switch over.

    Times are a changin but slowly. The sad thing is that Nader has looked PRETTY haggard the past couple years... He is still feisty as ever, just looking much older of late.

    ~G

    PS. Oh this is GREAT ...
    AND
    Chenny is to SCO! :)
    LOL! Well, it cracked me up anyway.

  174. Grow up by OreoCookie · · Score: 0, Troll

    Linux is an unusable piece of crap just like Slashdot. The reason 95% of computers run Windows is because it's 100% better than Linux. Get over it, grow up and get a real job, and quite reading Slashdot all day.

    1. Re:Grow up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Cookie, the reason 95% of computers run windows is because billy bathgates is a gangster.

    2. Re:Grow up by c.ecker · · Score: 1
      ... piece of crap just like Slashdot.

      Yet, even a socially retarded cognitively challenged individual such as yourself was able to get Slashdot to work ... as evidenced by your post.

      Hmmm. I should give Linux a try if its that easy.

      --
      My affinity for hyperbole knows no bounds ...
  175. Good news-- means more profit in Linux... by Kazoo+the+Clown · · Score: 1

    If Linux costs more, that means it has singificantly more margin than Windows, which is an important appeal to anyone the term "sales," "marketing," "distributor" or "dealer" applies...

    Keep up the good work Balmer-- such notes make it much easier for those who make a living off Linux distribution... I see $$$$$....

  176. Of course! by microbox · · Score: 1
    So, you admit that, at least for some years, they did sit on this "burning issue"?

    That's obvious by the state of M$ code... they tried to find cheaper PR solutions to their problems. They didn't see the issue as burning.

    You can bet your bottom dollar that they do now... don't dismiss the point because you might find it "uncool". If you're unsure, find a M$ developer, and ask them specifically what they have changed to make their products more secure...

    Some recent changes that I've heard about are:
    1. Having all code reviewed by different departments
    2. Running random data into all program inputs... if it crashes then you've discovered (by brute force) a potential buffer-overflow. A similar approach is used on the linux kernal
    3. There's some formal secure code theory that the code monkey's must now apply
    --

    Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
  177. Look at Secunia's Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I found this on Secunia, it compares the differences between the number of severe "Unpatched" secunia advisories. Microsoft even referenced Secunia's site. Here is a copy of these advisory statistics as of 3:58pm CST - 10/28/2004

    Microsoft Windows XP Professional with all vendor patches installed and all vendor workarounds applied, is currently affected by one or more Secunia advisories rated Highly critical

    This is based on the most severe Secunia advisory, which is marked as "Unpatched" in the Secunia database. Go to Unpatched/Patched list below for details.

    Currently, 19 out of 74 Secunia advisories, is marked as "Unpatched" in the Secunia database. [For Windows XP]

    The Secunia database currently contains 0 Secunia advisories marked as "Unpatched", which affects RedHat Enterprise Linux WS 3.

    The Secunia database currently contains 0 Secunia advisories marked as "Unpatched", which affects Apple Macintosh OS X.

  178. Only Mr. T could pity the fools that buy into this by Devi0s · · Score: 3, Funny

    Ballmer - And as Yankee Group noted in its Linux, UNIX and Windows TCO Comparison study, "Linux-specific worms and viruses are every bit as pernicious as their UNIX and Windows counterparts - and in many cases they are much more stealthy."

    Spin, Spin, Spin! Just more proof that you can take anything out of context... or just outright lie.

    Almost all of the annoying spyware/adware software out there will only infect a Microsoft platform. You've immediately just reduced your maintenance headaches in typical organizations by over 50%.

    Let's look at some information actually based on analysis of CERT data...

    Windows v Linux security: the real facts
    http://www.theregister.co.uk/security/security_rep ort_windows_vs_linux/

    If you prefer, http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/10/22/security_r eport_windows_vs_linux.pdf

    --
    - Have you ever noticed that the more you learn about technology, the more stupid you sound trying to explain it?
  179. Re:Repeat after me: Copying software is NOT steali by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I get a haircut, I run away without paying. I did not take anything physically from you. That is still "theft" under the law (theft of services in this case). In particular, you can reference the "Digital Theft Deterrence and Copyright Damages Improvement Act" which Clinton signed into law which covers software piracy (theft).

    You are just like Ballmer, repeating something many times does not make it true.

  180. Deja vu by DrCode · · Score: 1

    I remember back around 1984, working for a company that made dedicated 'word processor' boxes. When the IBM PC came out, it was obvious to most of us that our whole industry was a dinosaur that was about to go extinct. But our marketing execs. kept insisting that we were fine, since '90% of the time, PC's are only used for word-processing, and we can give them better support'.

  181. The Linux virus (old joke) by DrCode · · Score: 1

    The Linux (originally Unix) virus comes as an email:

    "This is a Linux virus. Please forward this email to 6 of your friends. Then delete all the files you care about."

  182. don't get emotional by geg81 · · Score: 1
    M$ is not stealing ideas/contributions from users!

    I didn't use the term "stealing"; I simply pointed out where most of the value for that company comes from. There is nothing illegal in doing what they are doing, but that doesn't mean that it's fair to the customer either.

    By analogy, most people probably pay too much for their cars, and car dealers make a bundle because of that. That doesn't mean that the car dealer is stealing, it means that the car buyer didn't do their homework. Once you realize how car dealerships and most software houses work, you can start making informed choices that save you money. Like, for example, using open source software.

    Microsoft is doing nothing different than any other software developer.

    Just like there are many car dealers that try to overcharge you, there are many software developers doing the same thing as Microsoft. But there are also some ways in which you can get your software that's more efficient:
    • Open source software developers incorporate your ideas, but because the way open source licenses work, you don't pay for the free contributions made by yourself or by others, you just pay for the actual work performed on your behalf. That's why the open source model is so cost effective for customers.
    • While Microsoft, effectively, has their users do a lot of their software testing, other companies do, in fact, pay for it in-house and then release much more mature products.

    Furthermore, keep the context of this discussion in mind: Microsoft is making grand statements about TCO, but they are sweeping the costs of their development model under the rug.
  183. Re:Linux is cheaper, but not for the obvious reaso by Karzz1 · · Score: 1

    Now wait a second. According to Bill Gates and Sun _hardware_ will be free. In fact, Johnathan Schwartz can even be quoted as saying "Bill Gates and I agree that within four to five years hardware will be free." *sigh*

    --
    Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master.
  184. hari-kari by Finsterwald+P+Ogleth · · Score: 1

    Ummmmm...

    I think it's "Hara Kari"

    Hari Kari sounds like the Cubs' WGN play by play guy.

  185. Protect your PC by kjots · · Score: 1

    3 steps to help ensure your PC is protected:

    1) Format you hard drive.
    2) Install Linux.
    3) I lied. There are only 2 steps.

    (Sorry, I couldn't resist :-P )

  186. Their Numbers by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1

    See, the problem is that you are using their hired consultant's numbers. If I tell you that it will cost you a billion dollars and take you fifteen years to start using my compeditors product I would expect to keep you as a customer. ("Geez Bob, we will never dig ourselves out of that hole!") I would severly doubt that the cost is 3-4 times as expensive for openers. Even if you hire RedHat themselves to help in the conversion, I doubt it would be that much. Also - remember there is no such thing as a "product upgrade cycle for Windows" - you pay out on a regular basis or pay throught he nose for newer versions.

    As for the thrre times as long to deploy stuff, every upgrade 3.1->9x->2000->xp has had a year+ learning curve for users/admins as well. Getting them to train in their spare time by running machines side by side, or setting them up for real training - I give it a year before they could start to roll out some services (DHCP, file server, Domain Control)confidently. There are even pop in distros that will do all this for you, clarkconnect comes to mind.

    In short these are trash numbers, made to spread FUD and nothing more.

    Sera

    --
    Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    1. Re:Their Numbers by The+Spoonman · · Score: 1

      See, the problem is that you are using their hired consultant's numbers.

      Sez who? I've been in those positions before and have done those types of evaluations. I've seen the numbers first hand. Why is it that Linux people think it's just drop in and go? It's not. There's a discovery phase where you need to go in and find everything that's going to be replaced by going to Linux. During that time you also try to find suitable replacements, if any exist. You then need a trial phase where you'll pilot some systems to end users to see if they're acceptable replacements. Because, at the end of the day, they're the ones using it, they should have some input in to whether or not it's going to work for them.

      Then, if you're lucky, your staff already has some Linux knowledge, but more than likely there isn't much. A little home use here and there does not count when you're talking about replacing enterprise systems. So, it's off to train your staff on all of these new systems. It would be nice if there were training courses, but more likely there isn't because Linux is so widely fractured and splintered no two organizations use it anywhere close to each other. So, you try self-training, which always leads to such wonderous results. It's probably got something to do with the lack of good documentation.

      I could go on and on, but I know I'd probably be wasting my time. Linux people never want to hear the truths of reality. They want the same self-perpetuating fluff they get from sites like this where everyone's opinion is the same, and if yours differs, you're an MS troll. Suffice it to say, I think 3-4X more expensive is being extremely generous considering the studies I've been involved in.

      --
      Which is more painful? Going to work or gouging your eye out with a spoon? Find out!
      http://www.workorspoon.com
  187. These are blatant lies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously I have seen most of this, I am a unix guy but have dealt with NT and IBM Mainframe, which I recently had a stint as a sysadmin. A well designed unix setup or Mainframe setup requires a lot less maintenance, has fewer support calls, and generally now with linux has lower software costs and the support runs about the same. So with linux the price of entrance is lower, sure you need higher paid systems people but guess what an MCSE does not cut it you need experienced people. Given that it runs on the same hardware I really think linux has it all over windows. I really think things like Sun Java Desktop and Java Enterprise system are really a great deal compared to MS products and would save large companies millions if not billions. I can get both licensed and supported for $150 a head compared to ms who is charging $70 a seat for Exchange.

    Lets not forget the hell viruses can cause in windows networks, TCO my ass. Windows must have the highest TCO on earth.

  188. I Interned at Microsoft and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...one little known fact is that Ballmer is called "Farley" by the code grunts who feel that he is pretty out of touch with reality. Why Farley? Because he bears a strong resemblance to the characters portrayed by Chris Farley. Clueless, boistrous and largely arrogant without a cause. Pass it on.

  189. Re:Repeat after me: Copying software is NOT steali by argoff · · Score: 1

    OK, well fine. Ford stole market share from Christler and maybe Christler has no incentive to make cars without a government granted monopoly on their production and distribution. But really, does anyone truely think this is "stealing" in the true sense of the word. No it's bullshit morality, and nobody was violated even if Christler felt they were.

    Basically, the Coke argument is the same thing. It suggests market share of information is a property right of the originator - when it isn't really a right at all. It is a form of controll.

  190. Hrmf... by msimm · · Score: 1

    This appears to be one of those questions that doesn't get answers. How about Linux based authentication schemes? If I have a FreeBSD/Mac OSX/BeOS/Win32/Linux workstation can I log into "the network" using a Linux server for authentication? Can a single authentication server work in tandem with secondary servers and can they be configured to replicate any users accounts/configuration I set up on the first one?

    I hear a lot of blurbs about the exchange server and it seems like Linux has support for most (all?) of the important features, what distro take advantage of that? Do any include decent configuration tools?

    I know Linux has made some big headway into corporate business and since I'm going to be trying to make a career out of this stuff any insight would really be appreciated.

    --
    Quack, quack.
    1. Re:Hrmf... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The answer is most people don't need them, or use them even when available.I mean how many Windows sites use the tools in ADS to manage new desktop deployments? Most just use disk imaging because it is easier and cheaper to set up, or third party tools.

      Novell were here first and do cross platform tools, as do IPlanet (Netscape, or whoever they are this month).

      But basic authentication structures like NIS can take Unix/Linux systems to the hundreds of desktops scale, and there really aren't that many people with thousands of desktops. And if those thousands of desktops do exist they are distributed across countries and languages and the MS stuff doesn't hack it.

      The big ISPs almost universally do this kind of stuff with LDAP (i.e. deliberately lightweight directories).

      The problem with all these tools is that they must integrate well with everything to add value, and this means taking the top of and fiddling, which is why the ISPs often use free software extensively in this area.

      I too was impressed with some of the directory tools that come with ADS, but it is heavyweight architecture to make difficult things easy, and that architecture is only ever supportable in large environments.

      Small and nimble is the way to be if the technology changes completely every 3 to 5 years. Don't build cathedrals out of bricks that fall apart in less than a decade, it is a bad investment.

    2. Re:Hrmf... by msimm · · Score: 1

      Thanks a lot for taking the time to answer. I really appreciate the extra information.

      --
      Quack, quack.
  191. .Not and windoze sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only morons use .Not and windoze

  192. Re:Repeat after me: Copying software is NOT steali by iggymanz · · Score: 1

    heh, neither Britney nor the RIAA starves when kid rips her music: they still remain quite filthy rich anyway.

  193. I've got to weigh in on the distro war... by HerbanLegend · · Score: 1

    2 Years ago I was the kind of guy who pirated copies of Windows and thought that Linux was "too hard" or just "whoa."

    The first distro that I tried was RedHat, which I have to admit I was excited to install, but back then I didn't have broadband - so there was very little I could do without an Internet connection. (WinModems - yuck!)

    When I finally got broadband, I tried Fedora, and ran that for a while, but I wasn't getting all that far with it and I was so confused by the layout of the distribution, with configuration files all over the place, dependecies that seemed excessive; I felt like I was drowning in all the things I didn't know.

    So I switched to Gentoo - I heard good things about it, I liked the idea of a source-code optimized distro. Sure, I guess getting it installed was kind of tough - I started from a stage1 and built everything. But all the conf files are in /etc, where they are supposed to be, you don't have to screw around with dependecies, though you can control them, and did I mention that it's smoking fast?

    First, I build a server, which I do hosting from, then I repeated the process with my primary desktop. Gentoo takes a long time to set up, but once it's up, it's up for good. I think my desktop has been up for 40 days continuously, no problems, no incidents, and did I mention I know a WHOLE LOT more about computers and linux now?

    Running Linux versus Running Windows is like studying art with a famous artist versus scribbling with crayons. The best part is, that now I can imagine new things to do with my computer that just weren't possible before - like a web interface to my mp3 collection, building my own home media center, hosting 8 different websites off of my modest server, web design without constant FTP uploading, etc.

  194. Works backwards too by DahGhostfacedFiddlah · · Score: 1

    I noticed a few months back that the quote works just as well in reverse, when applied to Microsoft supporters. I remember the days anyone suggesting MS was the better choice was viciously attacked by "zealots".

    Now it seems the zealots have for the most part disappeared, and cooler heads are prevailing (not too much though, this is /. after all). When you see an MS-friendly post, more often than not the result is condesending, or outright laughing at the poster. Linux supporters no longer have to be on the defensive.

    1. Re:Works backwards too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +5, actually insightful.

  195. Apache 2.052 vs IIS 6.0 by raahul_da_man · · Score: 1

    An analysis of the numbers of the two latest versions shows quite clearly who wins:

    Apache 2.0.52 Latest version

    http://secunia.com/search/?search=Apache+2.0.52& w= 0

    3 vulnerabilities, 0 viruses.

    Internet Information Services 6.0 (IIS)

    http://secunia.com/search/?search=IIS+6&w=0

    30 vulnerabilites, 744 viruses.

    No matter how the facts are carefully selected and edited, the more popular product has far less bugs. And IIS vulnerabilities are examples of why Windows is so unsecure as well. Many IIS vulnerabitlies are shared, for example:

    Microsoft vulnerabilities in Internet Explorer, Outlook, Outlook Express and Internet Information Server (IIS) 2002-11-20

    http://secunia.com/advisories/7567/

    And this is a highly critical advisory as well. Because of Microsoft integration of applications with the fundamentals of Windows, the operating system can be easily compromised by a vulnerabilitiy in any microsoft application.

    1. Re:Apache 2.052 vs IIS 6.0 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      No matter how the facts are carefully selected and edited, the more popular product has far less bugs.
      Oh, really?

      IIS has one version, and releases patches.

      Apache has a new version after every patch.

      You're the one carefully selecting and editing. By the way, some of those bugs aren't even for IIS, they're for IIS add-on applications.
  196. It's only unprofitable if... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    If your bodd owns 2000 shares of Micosoft then if is unprofitable for your boss not to toss 3 million. But fpr your company is a different story.

    I know of an actual case of 4 years uptime in continious service for a Linux Red Hat 6.2 server running DNS, Squid and and another app. Once per week a cron job cycled squid for a minor memory leak.

    It lost it's 4 year mark as the building power. Booted like a charm afterwards.

    Most management didn't know it existed because it didn't cause problems like so many Windows systems. In fact this is where a properly setup Linux system really scores on Microsoft OSes. And never really factored into TCO.

    Until management wakes up and stops listening to the market bu#$%(it so often payed for by the people with billions - we are stuck wuth patch, pray and tons of maintenence on a '60s message passing kernel with inadaquate memory bounds checking and so many holes it couldn't leave port if it were a ship.

    Or like a real good recent humor, "unstable like Charles Manson".

    The number one reason Microsoft doesn't release source? There are so many as of yet undiscovered holes it makes the universe look small.

  197. No, YOU don't get it, self-professed "IT Guy"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "...the reason why I as an IT guy am not impressed by Windows is that it is difficult to administer remotely..."

    Bwahahahha! Difficult? OK "IT guy", I'll bite.

    Remote Assistance? Terminal Services in remote administration mode? Remote registry? MMC? Powerfull scripting languages? SMS? SUS? 3rd party proprietary apps a la PC Anywhere? Open source apps like vnc? Not to mention the underutilized untapped power of AD with Group Policy Objects! If you get to really know what you are doing with GPOs (combined with a bit of scripting) then you can do anything, on all your clients and servers at the same time, fast.

    As far as a built-in remote CLI, have you ever heard of using IPSEC and the MS Telnet service? Are you aware of all the things you can do at the Windows command line, especially with all the CLI tools that come in the the Resource Kit?

    But since you don't have knowledge of how to use all these tools and methods, you claim they don't exist.

    Try to know what you are talking about before you start mouthing off next time...

  198. Springtime for Ballmer by Performaman · · Score: 0

    Reminds me of a line from The Producers:
    "Heil myself.
    Raise your beer
    Every hotsy-totsy Nazi stand and cheer!"

    --

    I have gas, but my car uses petrol.
  199. I know it all too well by Stevyn · · Score: 1

    Getting NVIDIA drivers to work can be a pain in the ass. It took a long time and lots of tweaks in my XFree86.conf file to get tv-out working on my laptop. In windows, it just worked.

    However, this is a problem with NVIDIA. It's is also because of NVIDIA that the drivers work so well in windows. The difference in operating systems isn't the issue here. It's the hardware developers who must take credit and complaint when it doesn't work.

  200. Propaganda versus technology?! by Maljin+Jolt · · Score: 1

    Microsoft syndrome is just a peak of iceberg. For remote observer, economic propaganda steadily replacing real technology is a good recipe to long term disaster. See historic example of the former Soviet Union. Will corporate America be the next empire decayed from within?

    --
    There you are, staring at me again.
  201. Re:I am not an Microsoft advocate or sympathizer.. by evilviper · · Score: 1
    To be honest, in my Windows server classes I've been pretty impressed with some of their enterprise solutions.

    That's funny, I've used the Windows "enterprise solutions" and haven't been the slighest bit impressed. Just for starters, Active Directory is probably the biggest dog I've ever seen.

    whats Linux got to compete or outdo Windows on the controller end?

    Absolutely everything. First off, I must mention Samba, only because I'll be flamed if I don't.

    More than that, just about everything high-end Windows has, the ideas, or the very code has been taken from Unix systems. They didn't even try to hide the fact they were just porting Kerberos and adding Microsoft-only extenions to prevent compatibility.

    Kerberos is what you should look very closely at. It's been around forever, and absolutely any program can use Kerberos for authentication, instead of passwords. Lots of programs like SSH/OpenSSH have native kerberos auth options built-in. Other programs like NFS have been modified slightly to work with Kerberos tokens, rather than IPs. In fact, with kerberos, you can encrypt all NFS data for security. But personally, I'd suggest using OpenAFS for remote filesystems. It's the ultimate in enterprise-quality remote filesystems (from IBM), the likes of which Microsoft can only dream about. It has it's own stripped-down kerberos server/client so you don't have to already have kerberos on your network. But if you do have kerberos, you tell it no to use it's own implimentation, and it'll integrate into your kerberos network seamlessly.

    Although I strongly suggest kerberos, there are many other options as well. OpenLDAP has become fairly popular over the last year or two.

    I can't really list everything that is possible, because there are so many options. With PAM, bsd auth, etc, any authentication method someone works up can be plugged-in, and used by any and all applications.

    OpenSSH looks more and more like it's going to soon develop into it's own platform. Things like port-forwarding, X forwarding, and file transfer have been around for a long time, but now several virtual filesystem interfaces exist, OpenSSH is getting more features, like authpf for changing firewall rulesets when a user logs-in via SSH (perfect for wireless nets), SSH connection multiplexing, and other high-end features, SSH is a few steps away from becomming a public-key replacement for kerberos.
    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  202. Re:Linux is cheaper, but not for the obvious reaso by gilesjuk · · Score: 1

    It's only free if it:

    [a] doesn't require a software purchase

    [b] moves itself to my office

    [c] installs itself

    [d] doesn't disrupt the working day

    [e] doesn't require training

    All I can say is lets not move towards a business model where software costs 3 times what it does now, purely to make hardware free.

    Imagine getting a free PC where you can't run any free software and paying £1,500 for Photoshop, £900 for Office and £300 for Windows.

  203. They found one! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love that: "...in an independent, non-sponsored global study..."

    Took 'em a few times to get that part right, didn't it? Must have taken them a while to find an group they didn't have to pay to get positive study results from.

  204. Re:It used to be 32 not 16 by isorox · · Score: 1

    It used to be a limit of 32 not 16 and since 2.6 that limit of 32 has been removed.

    Mod that up

  205. They're right, but here is the hit ... by relaxrelax · · Score: 1


    They're right, switching to linux costs more than upgrading windows once. BUT...

    -*But who thought you upgrade windows only once??*

    -I've seen companies switch back to previous versions of windows after finding out the new "features". That's twice the cost of single windows upgrade box in lost productivity.

    -The lottery ticket nature of windows service pack bug fixes may mean "no winning this time. Try again?"

    -You can't upgrade only once since the new security vulnerabilities will allow other people to "upgrade" you to being a spam server without your knowledge. Even the upgrade system itself may be a security vulnerability, as it takes twice as long to download fixes to your new fixes packages than it takes to become infected with 10+ spywares. Oh joy!

    -You just KNOW it includes some odd incompatibilities with older windows/office file, forcing you to upgrade because Microsoft wants you upgrade something. They really hate it when you stick with windows 3.1 because it suits your needs...

    -A well-done unixoid server can run 10 years without rebooting or being turned off. Think of the time your programmers are just sitting there, waiting for a reboot or upgrade!!! As unix-type servers DO NOT force its own products into obsolecense a 90's application will still work as good as new!

    -You may check some boxes saying not to send anonymous usage info to microsoft, but it will NOT be always respected... does that count as spyware? How much time is wasted annually by the slowdown?

    -Linux upgrades (and freeBSD upgrades too) can be entirely scripted. Start them when you leave work and it's ready the next morning. (requires a unixoid-competent person, but those are worth it).

    -Some banks have switched to linux over security concerns. Linux may have a negative cost of operation cost for them. BSD is better at security of course but banks haven't noticed yet. (-;

    --
    Microsoft is pure dog-ma. FreeBSD is pure cat-ma.
  206. Only if you're a spammer... by relaxrelax · · Score: 1


    Of course Linux computers are more expensive to upgrade!

    You thought us spammers, virus makers, trojan-makers and spyware vendors would not lose money to how good Linux security is???

    If you knew how long it takes to make a Linux spam server or spyware server out of your computer, you'd [censored] a fuse!!! (of course you'd do that more if you knew how long it takes on Windows but that's not the point). ...and I won't bother trying against BSD security. Port system integrity tampering services are too expensive for me to buy. The TCO is too high on BSD so we're not making any profits.

    Kudos for Microsoft forcing more upgrades than necessary thru old windows product obsolecense techniques. Not having my 17 spywares blocked by a fix made by a competitor's spyware installed during the user's install of the latest windows upgrade fixes for that patch is difficult, but rewarding! And oh the frustration of the competition when I fix security bugs on your computer so they can't get in, ha ha ha ha ha! (-;

    If we didn't have microsoft, we'd have to invent it.

    --
    Microsoft is pure dog-ma. FreeBSD is pure cat-ma.
  207. Deja Vu! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OMFG Deja vu!

    Oh wait, it's cause you said that THREE DAYS AGO!

  208. Re:I am not an Microsoft advocate or sympathizer.. by c.ecker · · Score: 1
    I'd pay particular attention to all the virus, worm, spyware, adware and hacker-friendly support M$ increasingly builds into each and every version of Windows.

    There are real reasons Linux is a Server OS first, and a Desktop OS second.

    --
    My affinity for hyperbole knows no bounds ...
  209. Recent story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This from a friend who works for a large out-sourcing company at a UK bank...

    Last weekend, a new variant of a virus breached their email gateways. Then another variant, and another, all within a few hours. Their virus software company had their Indian programmers working on it right away, and eventually the new signature files were distributed. However, this is not before an estimated 25000 PC's/Servers were infected. It took them all weekend to clear up.

    Not a single UNIX or Linux machine was affected.

    Can you blame the email security/virus scanners for not catching this? I hardly think so if it's a new virus.

    I wonder what would have happened if this had occured mid-week when all those PC's were in use?

  210. Cost of Spyware [Re: The good news is...] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    BTW, why is it none of these "TCO" studies consider the effects or cleanup costs of Windows trojans, worms, viruses, or spyware?

    I totally agree. In a company I worked for, they had a huge amount of documents stored as *.doc files in a document management system. Turns out the whole thing had gotten infected with macro viruses at some stage. Cleanup cost? Too expensive to be even considered!

    Couldn't have happened with a plain text based format.