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AIX On the Desktop Is Getting the Boot

flnca writes "Today, I was playing with the thought again to purchase an AIX workstation one day when I can afford them, and I was surprised to see that IBM is going to give its IntelliStation POWER Series workstations the boot in January '09. A black day for AIX on the desktop. I really wonder what's the problem there, warehouse costs? IBM has a history of burying its best stuff (like OS/2 for instance). Some years ago, I enjoyed hacking away on an RS/6000 workstation running AIX 4.2, and it was a pure joy. Not only the kernel, but also the admin tools, like smit and smitty. Their blade-centric solution uses Windows as a client for workstation application. This truly sounds like IBM wants AIX only for servers anymore. I'm not amused. Although, eXceed on Windows with an XDCMP server running on AIX might also be a viable solution ... whatever. But it can't beat a native POWER box sitting on your desk, that's for sure."

13 of 366 comments (clear)

  1. No, by superskippy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, it's just you.

    1. Re:No, by larry+bagina · · Score: 5, Informative

      It was submitted by someone in Germany (so English is most likely a second or third language). It was edited by... well it wasn't edited.

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    2. Re:No, by tritonman · · Score: 5, Funny

      I'm still waiting to get my IBM mainframe desktop, I'm hoping I can get a port of Wine for it so I can run WoW on it.

  2. Oblig. lame joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Q: What happens when AIX is downsized?

    A: It gets the AX!

    Haw haw, thank you, I'll be here all week!

  3. Another victim of Linux... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Early on, it was said that Linux would kill more Unixs than Windows ever would.

  4. It's not just you by Kraegar · · Score: 5, Informative
    A few years back we had a surplus budget, and I was able to convince management that an AIX desktop box was a good investment - for testing & administration both. It has proven to be that and more. We got one of the 285's, and I get use out of it daily.

    From testing OS & firmware upgrades to just being a great desktop platform, it's proven to be very valuable.

    - Tony

    1. Re:It's not just you by Amarok.Org · · Score: 5, Informative

      I used to be an AIX administrator.

      There's not a lot of benefit to having an AIX box on your desk (though I did), other than it being the same as the systems you're administering.

      (The following is my personal opinion - fanboys of other operating systems need not respond; I'm sure your OS of choice is just peachy too)

      Yes, AIX is more stable and I prefer the management tools and interfaces to other Unix-like operating systems. As such, having it on my desktop was preferable to a Linux system because I was more familiar with the tools and they were the same as the machines I was administering all day long.

      If I was running Linux systems for a living, I'd have a Linux box on my desk for the same reasons.

      There are some advantages to writing/testing your code/scripts/etc on your local machine before pushing it out to a development/production system. While in theory ksh/bash/csh/etc should be the same on every system, we all know there are quirks to the implementations that cause issues.

      So yes, there are some benefits to AIX on the desktop as an administrator.

      Finally, there are some shops (a few military contractors I'm familiar with) that use AIX on the desktop for their engineers because the specialized applications they use only support AIX - usually graphic design hooked into large AIX systems on the backend for modeling/redering cycles.

      --
      -- "Other than that, how was the play Mrs. Lincoln?"
  5. It's your fault by Call+Me+Black+Cloud · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Maybe theirs.

    "I was playing with the thought again to purchase an AIX workstation one day when I can afford them..."

    So you haven't bought one because it's not affordable. Yeah, I have no idea why it makes business sense for them to cut that line. I guess keeping them around to amuse you wasn't enough. Either their hardware is too expensive or their users too poor.

    One things for sure - there was no profit there.

  6. It's a true desaster. by Qbertino · · Score: 5, Funny

    To elaborate: He's bemoaning that this beautyfull desktop is being discontinued. A true catastrophe that will set back the entire industry by years to come.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
  7. Re:Don't be silly by Trespass · · Score: 5, Funny

    Who on earth would need a 5GHz CPU on the desktop?

    Somebody without central heat?

  8. Re:"Smit Happens" by hey! · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If there is any system you don't hate, it is because you don't know it well enough.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  9. Re:Go ahead and suck it up. by Sax+Maniac · · Score: 5, Insightful

    AIX is even worse if you do any system programming it. Around here, AIX is pronounced "aches" for a very good reason. We also have a saying "AIX is always different". Anything difficult you want to do on Unix, you need to code up a special AIX-specific version. It's Always Different.

    And not different-better, different-holy-crap-this-API-was-designed-by-crack-addled-clowns.

    --
    I can explanate how to administrate your network. You must configurate and segmentate it, so it can computate.
  10. I recommend Xming instead of Exceed for X by noc007 · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you're just need an X server on Windows to connect to your *nix box, I suggest using Xming. It's free, lightweight, easy to configure, and one can quickly setup shortcuts to connect to a specific server and run a program. It's also very useful for getting around a content filter if you can access your own *nix server from the internet.

    I don't have any affiliation with Colin Harrison, however I've used other X servers on Windows before and this has been the best. Here's my experience with different X servers:
    Exceed - Bloated, expensive, extra licensing fee for doing X11 over SSH, unstable copy and paste (in the past versions I used)
    ReflectionX - A bit bloated, expensive, funky interface
    Cygwin* - Too many unneeded apps included for just an X server, FREE, difficult to configure if you're not familiar with it
    Xming - Light weight, FREE, quick install, can use PuTTY's plink to do configure free X11 forwarding over SSH, copy and paste works, it just works

    *In regards to Cygwin, I understand that it is more than just an X server, however it has been recommended a number of times to me as a solution for a free X server on Windows