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Munich's Move To Linux Exceeds Target

jrepin writes "In May 2003, Munich's city council resolved to migrate municipal workstations from Windows to Linux and open source. Munich's LiMux project has announced that it has exceeded its annual target for migrating the city's PCs to its LiMux client. To date in 2011, the project has migrated 9,000 systems; it had originally planned to migrate 8,500 of the 12,000-15,000 PC workstations used by city officials in Munich."

235 comments

  1. steve balmer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    in 2003 steve balmer travelled to munich to convince the city council to keep running windows

    1. Re:steve balmer by Dionysus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      in 2003 steve balmer travelled to munich to convince the city council to keep running windows

      And if the CEO of RedHat didn't travel to Munich to convince the city to convert to RedHat, he's an idiot.

      --
      Je ne parle pas francais.
    2. Re:steve balmer by deniable · · Score: 3, Funny

      Well done, Steve. Should we send him a gift basket?

    3. Re:steve balmer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Prior to 2003 they were perfectly happy with using windows.
      After Balmer's trip.. Wholly shit we have to switch to ANYTHING ELSE ASAP.
      Photo from said trip
      http://www.models.hr/models/images/stories/slike/najbogatiji/steve_ballmer.jpg

    4. Re:steve balmer by suprem1ty · · Score: 5, Funny

      I heard several Munich city officials were later admitted to hospital with chair-related injuries

    5. Re:steve balmer by antifoidulus · · Score: 5, Funny

      I was expecting the parent to be goatse, but no, it's actually Ballmer, which is probably more offending to the eye than goatse.

    6. Re:steve balmer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      It's still Gotse, but a different angle

    7. Re:steve balmer by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      In other news, mr. Ballmer will be included in next intercontinental ballistic missile agreement?

    8. Re:steve balmer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, but take out the gifts first!

    9. Re:steve balmer by phonewebcam · · Score: 2

      Well, he did learn from this experience so when it was Finlands turn he just sent a puppet.

    10. Re:steve balmer by The+Creator · · Score: 4, Funny

      He's looks all happy because Bobba Fett brought him Han Solo.

      --

      FRA: STFU GTFO
    11. Re:steve balmer by Lumpy · · Score: 2

      And they probably would have stayed with windows if he did not start throwing chairs all over the council chambers.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    12. Re:steve balmer by mcneely.mike · · Score: 0

      A basket full of chairs!.....

      --
      soylentnews.org Go there to enjoy the people!
    13. Re:steve balmer by hairyfeet · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Well anyone who has seen Steve Ballmer hooting like a madman while leaving sweat pools across the stage would know that Ballmer is waaaay more offensive than Goatse. Frankly i think he makes the Pepsi guy that ran Apple look like a fricking genius.You know its bad when Gates actually had to come out and say "I'm not coming back to MSFT, quit with the rumors already' because so many are unhappy with Ballmer they were hoping for a Jobs style saving of the company.

      As for TFA its nice to see that some that try switching aren't doing it for the WRONG reasons, because they always seem to lead to failure. if you want to switch to Linux because its open? Because it lets YOU decide how long support will last? Because it allows you to look at and modify the code to suit YOUR needs? Congratulations you have switched for the RIGHT reasons and will most likely succeed. Where you see Linux fail time and time again is at these companies where they only care about "free as in beer" and they quickly find out that if all you want Linux for is to save money you are gonna lose and lose big.

      Lets face it folks Linux isn't gonna save you a dime, not in the short or medium term anyway. You are gonna need more expensive Linux admins instead of dirt cheap MCSEs, you are gonna have to hire developers to code FOSS versions of any and all niche programs you have, you are gonna have to pay people to get your files out of proprietary formats and into FOSS ones, its not gonna be cheap friends. That is why the ones that ONLY care about price are doomed to fail, as when they don't see their budgets magically drop by half and in fact see costs initially rise they are gonna bail.

      But if you do it for the right reasons listed above you will stick with it and end up probably better off than you were before since you won't be tied into any products by proprietary vendors like Adobe or MSFT and buy hiring internal coders and admins will be able to DIY instead of going out and buying solutions that will have to be re-bought when the support date ends.

      So its nice to see someone looking like they are gonna have a happy outcome by doing it for the right reasons after all the stories we have seen of Linux being used for the wrong reasons and failing. I bet if you looked at their budget they probably haven't saved squat yet and possibly have even had the price go up as they have paid for all of the above that I listed, but they now have more control and can pay to have it customized any way they desire.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    14. Re:steve balmer by gtall · · Score: 0

      In Ballmer's defense, MS is waaaay more bigger than Apple. And Gates coming back wouldn't have helped them since he's the primary reason MS is as inbred and devoid of creative spirit as an organization. Gates left because was in over his head. It isn't any surprise Ballmer is too.

    15. Re:steve balmer by jyx · · Score: 1

      Lets face it folks Linux isn't gonna save you a dime, not in the short or medium term anyway. You are gonna need more expensive Linux admins instead of dirt cheap MCSEs, you are gonna have to hire developers to code FOSS versions of any and all niche programs you have,

      1> You should be hiring expensive well trained windows admins in the first place. OTOH It is perfectly feasible that a company can hire el-cheap got a piece of paper linux admin that can balls up their infrastructure just like the el-cheapo windows ones.

      2> Just because your using FOSS software does not force all your apps to become FOSS software. If its a niche application you wont be distributing it so who cares what if its glp, if its not and you want to make money selling apps then pay for the non GPL versions of what ever your using just like in windows land.

      I bet if you looked at their budget they probably haven't saved squat yet and possibly have even had the price go up as they have paid for all of the above that I listed

      I think that if you looked closely and included *all* the ongoing support costs for the enterprisey things like sql server, oracle, sharepoint, SAP etc you start getting a massive savings boost. Admittedly this is all back end stuff, but that's were the big money is. (Mind you, at 50$ a year, 1000 machines almost gets you a full time employee)

      I think you are being disingenuous as well by discounting the ongoing costs of licenses and support contracts. Those sorts of costs can hire you a lot of on site, first loyalty is to the company/department people.

    16. Re:steve balmer by donaldm · · Score: 1

      in 2003 steve balmer travelled to munich to convince the city council to keep running windows

      And if the CEO of RedHat didn't travel to Munich to convince the city to convert to RedHat, he's an idiot.

      Why would the CEO of Readhat travel to Munich? The Linux distribution the Council is using is called LiMux which is Debian based.

      --
      There ain't no such thing as proprietary standards only proprietary formats. Standards are by definition open.
    17. Re:steve balmer by dave87656 · · Score: 1

      Prior to 2003 they were perfectly happy with using windows.
      After Balmer's trip.. Wholly shit we have to switch to ANYTHING ELSE ASAP.
      Photo from said trip
      http://www.models.hr/models/images/stories/slike/najbogatiji/steve_ballmer.jpg

      The point is that they were not happy with Windows and the TCO of Windows -- licenses, admin time, viruses, etc.

    18. Re:steve balmer by dave87656 · · Score: 1

      Lets face it folks Linux isn't gonna save you a dime, not in the short or medium term anyway

      It did for us. And it is still saving money.

    19. Re:steve balmer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are also going to save on Open/Libre Office instead of MS Office. Keep adding and it is a lot more than just the base OS you are saving on.

  2. Re:Slashdot Poll, Slashdot Poll, The Best... by Sulphur · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Have you ever had someone, just once, alim tsk tsk your bootyassness minute?

    First posts to hit new low.

  3. Broken link / Florian Schießl blog gone by sugarmotor · · Score: 4, Informative

    The article says, "Last year, Florian Schießl, a LiMux project director, stated that he and his team had been naïve and had underestimated the extent of minor problems."

    "naïve" links to another article on the same site, h-online.com, from March 2010,

      * LiMux project management, "We were naïve", http://www.h-online.com/open/news/item/LiMux-project-management-We-were-naive-958824.html

    This one states: On his blog, the IT expert admits that "We were naïve," and confesses to a "miscalculation".

    This links to

      * http://www.floschi.info/2010/03/quality-over-time-in-munich/

    but floschi.info just says "It works". The Internet Archive records only cover up to Feb 2010 (http://wayback.archive.org/web/20100501000000*/http://www.floschi.info)

    --
    http://stephan.sugarmotor.org
    1. Re:Broken link / Florian Schießl blog gone by erroneus · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yes, I saw that too. I was a little amazed that despite their need to change their approach they stayed with it. This is Microsoft's favorite opportunity to step in and "heal the pain" with discounts and assistance in putting things back as they were.

      I would like to be able to see more about this and how the transition went and most importantly, the lessons learned in all of this.

    2. Re:Broken link / Florian Schießl blog gone by Daniel+Phillips · · Score: 5, Interesting

      He says that 1,000 staff had been maintaining 15,000 Windows computers. Fifteen computers per tech? Not impressive, by an order of magnitude.

      --
      Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
    3. Re:Broken link / Florian Schießl blog gone by bertok · · Score: 4, Informative

      That sounds like a shockingly inefficient network, I doubt it has anything to do with Windows, and more to do with ingrained poor practices and typical bureaucratic inefficiency.

      Switching to anything would have been an automatic improvement simply because it's an opportunity to cleanse the existing system with fire.

    4. Re:Broken link / Florian Schießl blog gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Clearly you don't measure the implications of switching from one architecture to another in any organization. There are a lot (I meal a LOT) of specialiazed applications (from accountancy to library management to any professional branch) that just can't magically go or be replaced, and although I don't work in Munich, I guess there's a lot of Wine running there... In fact, speaking of the software tools everyone in the offices uses (and I mean, non-tech staff), and aside OpenOffice, I don't really see what could easily and conveniently replace Windows-based tools automagically.

    5. Re:Broken link / Florian Schießl blog gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With most organisations moving towards cloud/web-based applications, it's quite possibly that wine usage is very limited. I work at a relatively big company and we don't use any business software, etc, that isn't accessed through the browser.

    6. Re:Broken link / Florian Schießl blog gone by symbolset · · Score: 1

      And most of those specialized applications require IE 6 - which is being cleansed with fire anyway. So as long as you've got to change them...

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    7. Re:Broken link / Florian Schießl blog gone by elashish14 · · Score: 2

      FTA:

      After the difficulties with the first wave of migrations, in 2007 the LiMux administrative team agreed on a new strategy. This involved implementing pilot projects in all departments to convert at least ten percent of existing PCs to the basic LiMux client in order to assess the degree of heterogeneity of the existing organic IT landscape.

      Oh come on... A pilot program is standard practice before _any_ sort of migration. What kind of IT moron would just walk into the department and say 'we're ready!' before wiping every machine and expecting everything to just work? It doesn't happen that way.

      The only way to make a smooth migration is to take it slowly. And the most important step is in the beginning when you gather a working knowledge of what you're dealing with and what it's going to take to migrate it. You plan ahead, and everything that goes after comes smoothly. If you just walk in expecting things to work, well you're just asking for a disaster to happen.

      Naive indeed.

      --
      I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    8. Re:Broken link / Florian Schießl blog gone by dave87656 · · Score: 1

      That sounds like a shockingly inefficient network, I doubt it has anything to do with Windows, and more to do with ingrained poor practices and typical bureaucratic inefficiency.

      That ratio is pretty typical for Windows installations. The statement sounds reasonable to me.

  4. Re:Slashdot Poll, Slashdot Poll, The Best... by deniable · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Next poll, how much crap is living inside your keyboard?

  5. Any information on LiMux? by astropirate · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Anyone have any information on what LiMux looks like? What DE does it come what? Screenshots would be nice... I googled around but couldn't find any information on it.

    1. Re:Any information on LiMux? by Zemran · · Score: 2

      It is there own flavour of Linux, you will not find it anywhere else.

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    2. Re:Any information on LiMux? by moronoxyd · · Score: 3, Informative

      Strange. Google's picture search shows me several screenshots. One can clearly see that LiMux uses KDE.

    3. Re:Any information on LiMux? by Tamran · · Score: 1

      From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LiMux

      "It was based on Debian. Version 3 available from 2011 is based on Ubuntu 8.10 and version 4 will be based on Ubuntu 10.10."

    4. Re:Any information on LiMux? by Zemran · · Score: 5, Informative
      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    5. Re:Any information on LiMux? by rrohbeck · · Score: 3, Informative

      From http://www.muenchen.de/Rathaus/dir/limux/english/index.html:
      LiMux Basisclient based on Linux and free software:
      Debian GNU/Linux sarge“ (Distribution), K Desktop Environment - KDE (Graphical user interface), OpenOffice.org (Offices), Firefox (Browser), Thunderbird (E-Mail), Gimp (Image editing)

    6. Re:Any information on LiMux? by Erikderzweite · · Score: 1

      Little wonder as KDE is an European project.

    7. Re:Any information on LiMux? by realityimpaired · · Score: 1

      Why on earth would they not be using an LTS version of Ubuntu as the base? If they're going to be using Ubuntu in the first place, they're doing it wrong....

    8. Re:Any information on LiMux? by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      And I love that that same search pulls up a naked chick.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    9. Re:Any information on LiMux? by TheLink · · Score: 2

      Doesn't seem to for me. OK the little Linux penguin in my search results is not wearing clothes, but it appears to have its full plumage.

      --
    10. Re:Any information on LiMux? by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Is not having Ubuntu's long term support really such a great loss?

      --
    11. Re:Any information on LiMux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I got this:

    12. Re:Any information on LiMux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why on earth would they not be using an LTS version of Ubuntu as the base? If they're going to be using Ubuntu in the first place, they're doing it wrong....

      I'm a home computer user. I use Ubuntu 10.10 because 10.04 (LTS) sucks badly. Lots of bugs, ancient versions of many applications (that are more buggy then the newer versions in 10.10), poor hardware support, lack of features.

      The quality of Ubuntu versions fluctuate considerably (I've been using Ubuntu since 5.04). One of the previous Ubuntu version I used was 8.04 and it was one of the really good ones (I skipped all 9.X versions, but had to use 10.4 for a while because of software needs). Not all LTS-versions have been among the good ones.

      As I would love to have newer versions of the applications I use and would like to use some applications that didn't exist in 10.10 (having to compile every application I want to try out, or use just one time, is rather tedious), I would love to update to a newer versions of Ubuntu. But everything after 10.10 sucks, at least with my hardware and software. Also, some old applications have disappeared in the 11.X versions, with no new applications with similar capabilities to replace them. I'm now evaluating other Linux-distributions (Trisquell (Ubuntu based, but more modified then other Ubuntu based distros), seem to fit the bill so far, very stable and bug free compared to the Ubuntu version it is based upon, knock on wood, a hassle to install flash (and other propriety software) that don't exist in the repositories, though).

    13. Re:Any information on LiMux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Debian Sarge

      What the fuck, is this 2004?

    14. Re:Any information on LiMux? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not just European, but German.

  6. Cost saving? by xushi · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Interesting move,

    I wonder, how much will this save them cost-wise? That's 9,000 less licences they'll need to have, but I recall Microsoft usually gives discounts on bulk licences, and further discounts if they hint someone is considering an alternative. Also, along with what you'd pay for in licence fees, you get support from them. How much will it cost now to get support (and on demand support) for the Linux OSs (including training, re-training, hiring, etc..)

    1. Re:Cost saving? by Zemran · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The licenses do not tend to be much of a saving but once you have fired the 200+ college drop outs that are looking after the Windows computers and hired 40 people that actually know what they are doing you can save a lot on salaries and the reliability of the system causes a massive saving indirectly. I saw this in reverse several times when places that I dealt with replaced their Sun systems with Windows and had to take on loads of teenagers with a piece of college paper and no idea of how DHCP should be set up. Down times jumped from less than an hour a year to days per year.

      But at least the staff could see the acne ridden youths working, they never believed that the old guys with beards and tank tops did anything as the system just worked...

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    2. Re:Cost saving? by DamonHD · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yes, one place I was at there were 10x the support staff per Windows desktop compared to the Sun workstations. Sometimes I was the *only* Sun support guy for over 500 machines, which was quite hard work but do-able. Actually, they were so low maint that an audit discovered 100 or so Suns that we had forgotten about and that were doing their jobs just fine! (This was a long time ago...)

      And still, the effort that has to go into keeping Windows boxes (even W7) running is hugely more than the Solaris and Linux servers that I have deployed all over the planet, in my experience, though less so than previously.

      Rgds

      Damon

      --
      http://m.earth.org.uk/
    3. Re:Cost saving? by prefec2 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      They require fewer service personal, the developed Debian/Ubuntu based distribution can be shared with other cities, and all the money spent for services by the city stays in Germany and with German companies which is very clever for a Municipal, as this results in jobs and taxes. Instead of a money transfer to the US.

      As a city you should not think in business and macro-economic terms, you have to look on it from a macro-economic viewpoint. And you have to look at the long run. Well you should look on long term results in a company as well, but a state hast to do so. Otherwise it goes bust.

    4. Re:Cost saving? by derfla8 · · Score: 1

      Right...because "40 people that actually know what they are doing" will want to work for the government.

    5. Re:Cost saving? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget the cost of the head buyer + families Bermudan vacation.

    6. Re:Cost saving? by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      Hell if you consider TCO, even macs are cheaper than Windows as it takes* considerably less effort to keep them up and running, not to mention a complete Unix toolset that blows away anything Microsoft has ever offered in terms of automation and being able to fix problems. Does Microsoft still not ship their OS with an ssh client out of the box? Yes I know there are 3rd party solutions, but guess what, those 3rd party solutions become just another package you have to handle and becomes just another thing Microsoft can break with an update...

      *This is only true if your company has a lot of XServes, ever since Apple so stupidly killed off the line without offering a *REAL* replacement, the TCO of Macs in the corporate world has risen a bit, probably still not as bad as Windows, but nowhere near where it used to be.

    7. Re:Cost saving? by HangingChad · · Score: 1

      Also, along with what you'd pay for in licence fees, you get support from them.

      Since when? We paid for user seats on the OS, plus all the software on the machine, plus support and it was damn expensive. Unless your idea of "support" is security patches, then yeah, Windows comes with support.

      They're saving a crap load of money. Maybe not the first year or even the second, but by the third year the savings will be significant, by the fourth year they'll be astounding.

      Now switching a big office over to another OS should be a lot easier. With most services available online, there's less incentive for individual copies of software on every machine.

      --
      That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
    8. Re:Cost saving? by Lumpy · · Score: 5, Interesting

      If they were smart, $200.00 base PC's netbooting from a central server.

      Doing this with linux = support heaven. Weneed to update Libre Office? ok, 20 minutes later it's done for ALL MACHINES.
      Update the OS for security issues? Ok, 1 hour later ALL MACHINES are now up to date.
      Push out a new application.... the same.
      etc...

      Plus a dead workstation is a 10 minute fix. replace the box with a new one, power it on. I can fix a exploded desktop computer while the person is on a smoke break.

      Lost documents? don't exist, they all are on the servers and backed up regularly. with an advantage that is hard to achieve in windows. If a user deletes a file, It's still there in the repository. in fact all changes are saved there as well. so a disgruntled employee has zero damage impact capability.

      For 80% of the staff and executives this system works perfectly. the 20% which are IT staff, engineers, and Programmers they have their own separate stand alone desktops and/or laptops. All the IT staff have both, a Thin client on their desk and a stand alone laptop.

      Number of high power servers dropped from 8 to 5 when we switched, we no longer need a stupid powerful exchange server so that was re-purposed as a application server. and we have a hot backup application server as well.

      If you have ran a Citrix farm, it's much like that except easier. the servers need a buttload of ram and fast drives, but configurations allow the thin clients to take advantage of local ram and processor+video. so the browsers, java, and other processor wasting apps run locally to the thin client but store all data to the server and load from the image.

      It required competent IT admins though, so we pay 2X the typical MS drone rate, but have 5X less employees in IT to deal with every possible issue.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    9. Re:Cost saving? by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

      You need training and retraining for windows, too, and less room for customization.
      And, dunno you but I am starting to get the first "win7 has gotten too slow" reports here.

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    10. Re:Cost saving? by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      The irony of the sysadmin - If your boss thinks you are not doing anything then you are the most important element in his IT systems.(Granted, the systems are actually up and running.)

    11. Re:Cost saving? by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      Well, Windows systems have their upsides and downsides. But I doubt that remote management is something that Windows is lacking in.

    12. Re:Cost saving? by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      I know quite a lot of that kind of people. Remember, that working for the government is a rather relaxed job.

    13. Re:Cost saving? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Munich has been a financial disaster. There are no savings at this point. But it is not just OS licenses in real terms:

      1) OS
      2) Office
      3) Sharepoint, SQL server... and all the associated collection of support servers
      4) Advanced applications are all closed source (dynamics, universal communicator...)

      That gets to around $2k / head up front and around $500 / yr. That's still not too bad as compared to maintaining a large IT department to do this all custom. In theory though most of this is generic and open source should be able to accommodate it.

    14. Re:Cost saving? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      I never saw Citrix as a good solution for anything. Windows applications are designed to run on the local desktop. Windows is a thick client environment. If you want thin client, use a thin client OS and thin client applications. If you want Windows with easy maintenance something like VMWare View is fine.

    15. Re:Cost saving? by joebagodonuts · · Score: 2

      a German government.

      --
      "Give a woman two glasses of wine and some pad thai, and they'll agree to just about anything." the Sports Guy
    16. Re:Cost saving? by swalve · · Score: 1

      Depends on the circumstance. The client server model introduces some points of failure and performance issues if it isn't configured right, but can save a TON of effort with provisioning and maintenance. In an environment where uniformity is a design goal, it really excels.

    17. Re:Cost saving? by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      Perhaps Germans have a different view of working for the government?

    18. Re:Cost saving? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not so sure about that. I have just witnessed an organisation get nailed for millions in "gap" licensing or face fines many times larger than the suspected license gap. Licensing today is a very complex area with many subtleties that can catch the best prepared organisation out.

      Add in the different types of licenses for the same or different versions of the same software and multiply that by the complexities of virtualisation server, client, named user, processor, and the various use constraints on each of these combinations and it can get quite messy - MS reps and gold partners may have differing opinions on what may be a correct interpretation of a license use scenario - only option is to cough up what they suggest is required to protect against being fined. They have heard the linux as alternative threat before and are no longer too worried about it, it just has not happened enough to be taken as a serious threat and has been over-used as a negotiating tactic without real intent.

      The interdependency of licenses also create a cost that can get right out of control as well, Ahh, you need SQL Server with that, but to use it with that client software you need the enterprise version, which means you need another set of cals as the current standard last version cals are now worth nothing except you need them for that other legacy app.

      Being given a way out of this protection racket would lead to significant savings, but change is neither easy nor cheap.

    19. Re:Cost saving? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      I understand the advantage of thin client, I'm a big proponent. I don't understand the purpose of cutting against the grain. If you want to go thin client use thin client apps and a thin client OS. If you have to go windows make the windows system's generic and you still get the provision and maintenance savings with thick client through something like View.

    20. Re:Cost saving? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it's hilarious how MS have introduced a powerful command line tool after dissing them for so many years
        I do have to say, however, that for MS it is a well crafted tool but it does still need some refinement.

  7. User satisfaction level . . . ? by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm more interested in if the users are satisfied. Or works faster? Or works slower? Or users rate the overall experience as positive? Negative?

    A sheer number of workstations migrated is about as useful as a McDonald's "X Billions of Billions Served!" number. Don't tell me how many you served . . . where they eaten . . . ? . . . and how did they taste . . . ?

    --
    Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    1. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      As a Munich user, I can tell you that:

      The Finance Databases are always available (they previously had significant down-time).

      Log-in takes seconds (not the tens of minutes that previously happened with the Windows systems) - the accumulated savings in work time are huge for log-in alone!

      Applications load and run faster - again saving workers significant time.

      E-mail always works (the Windows mail servers were frequently unavailable).

      Security is enhanced, and there are no panicked messages sent around about this week's virus!

      It's just MUCH better and lets us all get our work done more easily. The savings in time, user frustration and in software licences is massive. The staff requirements to maintain the system are fewer, better able people. We've just demonstrated our system to a numer of other cities, and many more are going to adopt it...

    2. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by rtfa-troll · · Score: 1
      Thanks for the summary;

      E-mail always works (the Windows mail servers were frequently unavailable).

      Do you find many formatting problems working with companies outside the city?

      --
      =~ s,(.*),<sarcasm>$1</sarcasm>,g if any_point_you_wish();
    3. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A simple comment like this is music to my ears. There should be a nice big interview and editorial, covering what you said with some hard numbers.

      'Time spent actually working' and 'less user frustration' are often overlooked. Sure people 'cry' that OO.org isn't MSO, but the rest often gets overlooked.

      Being able to link a story about a comment like this, being able to show and tell others that it can work, is awesome.

    4. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like they don't know how to run a Windows environment... lol we don't have any of those problems. But we know what we're doing.

    5. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I love Linux and use it everyday at work, but what you describe sounds like you had a horribly misconfigured Windows environment replaced by a nicely configured Linux environment. My guess is that if someone had torn the old Windows patchwork down and rebuilt it nicely you'd get the same benefits you mentioned.

    6. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by phonewebcam · · Score: 1

      Aren't those the exact arguments the cloud people use?

    7. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by SerpentMage · · Score: 2

      No...

      I just switched my home network (I trade for a living) to Linux and OSX. It was rough doing the switch since, as the Munich people found out, the details can be frustrating. I had to rewrite some apps in Java as the Mono code could not handle some functionality. But once that development was done, Linux/OSX work like a charm.

      I use OSX for my notebook as I have not found a better notebook with Linux on it. For the desktop machines hands down Linux. But I would also add this ease of use where things just work happened in the last year. I have been using Linux since Yggardsil in 95, but completely usable only the last year. Maybe it FINALLY is the year of Linux ;)

      BTW why did I switch to Linux and OSX? Cost! With the new Metro interface and the move away from .NET ( yes yes C# still exists, yada, yada, but it is not the same API! and hence still problematic) I would have to cough up around 5500 USD, and that was just too much. Solution, get Linux, get some Ubuntu One cloudspace, and buy Apple notebooks, still saved money...

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    8. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      So let me get this straight: You switched because of an alpha build that nobody but programmers should even bother playing with and which most users will just skip like Vista? Okay that makes NO sense. you DO know that Win 7 is supported until 2020 yes? Or that it is quite easy to simply skip a Windows release, like going from XP to 7 yes?

      If you'd have said you wanted more control over the code THAT I could understand but throwing out your entire infrastructure because of a developer's preview of an OS that most businesses will probably skip anyway just strikes me as a little nutty or just an excuse. Can't say as i blame you because I hear the new macbooks are quite nice.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    9. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      Thunderbird has no issues with formatting from Outlook or other clients. I regularly switch between Outlook, Thunderbird, Horde IMP and GMail.

    10. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      To be fair, government users rarely need anything as advanced as Excel. And Word is on par with Writer. I mean what else can you add to a rich text editor...
      Excel however is a really advanced tool that barely can be replaced by anything for proper power users. But the number of those users is no more than 1%(at least that is what I feel when interacting with people).

    11. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by Liquidrage · · Score: 0, Troll

      Your post sounds pretty unbelievable. The Finance databases are now always available? So they moved the database servers from Windows to *nix? I'm not going to point fingers but if you can't keep a Windows DB server up it's a people problem not a software problem. Though personally unless it's MS SQL I wouldn't have had it on a windows server anyways. But still, that's interesting that your database servers were moved and now are stable. Interesting as in what assclown was admining them before?

      Log-in's I can see. Windows XP load slow but the 10 minutes are login scripts and bad people writing scripts

      What apps? The ones that were completely rewritten to run natively on your new *nix environment? *boggle*

      Sorry you no longer have exchange. It's easily the best mail server out there.

      Sucks you still have 2001 concerns in 2011. Most places aren't hammered with virus every week.

      Glad your happy, but I don't take your post at face value. At least not with the drivel you wrote about.

    12. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by Flammon · · Score: 1

      If Windows is so easy to configure then why is it misconfigured so horribly? I don't think that's the case. I think Windows was configured as designed and it probably worked great in the beginning but over time the performance degregaded. This performance degredation is something that I've yet to witness on a Linux system.

    13. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by kikito · · Score: 3, Funny

      "Sounds like they don't know how to run a Windows environment.."

      Turn it off and on again. That's how windows is run.

    14. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by Kjella · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I call bullshit. Why would switching desktops to Linux have anything to do with whether databases and mail servers are available? I think some troll is laughing at how his completely imaginary ramblings are now sitting at +5, Informative because it said exactly what the people here wants to hear. I was almost expecting the post to end with "Oh, and users get a free pony..."

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    15. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by unixisc · · Score: 2

      If you are using OS-X and Linux, and want a consistent interface b/w the two, PearOS may be a good one for you. The UX is that of MacOS - they rigged Gnome 3.2 (HA!) to get there, so that one has the OS-X UX on top of an Ubuntu based distro, but w/o either Gnome3 or Unity. Only thing - some menus are in French, even if you select English as the default languages. If one can handle that, this is a great solution for Mac users who want a similar looking OS on a cheaper desktop or laptop.

    16. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, I imagine you're quite the competent systems administrator. "lol".

    17. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by Zarhan · · Score: 2

      Indeed, must be a real karma whore, this Anonymous Coward.

    18. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Take a look at the "mobile workstation" laptops from Dell, HP, Lenovo... they run Linux perfectly, and are well-built.

    19. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by Anthony+Mouse · · Score: 1

      I've found that the people who think they need Excel over Calc tend to be people who shouldn't be using Excel in the first place. It's not a database, people.

    20. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your post sounds pretty unbelievable. The Finance databases are now always available? So they moved the database servers from Windows to *nix?

      That's your conclusion. He (or she) just said they were now always available. The cause of downtime could been anything.

      Log-in's I can see. Windows XP load slow but the 10 minutes are login scripts and bad people writing scripts

      You should be happy if the maximum logon script run time is 10 minutes. I seen places where such logon scripts would actually take up to 30 minutes. Even if it's shorter than 10 minutes, it's still long. And several minutes is more rule than exception. The guy got a point here.

      What apps? The ones that were completely rewritten to run natively on your new *nix environment? *boggle*

      I doubt. In amsterdam, holland, they checked what it would cost to rewrite all existing apps to a more integrated solution. The answer was only expressed in a 3-digit number followed by 'million'.

      Sorry you no longer have exchange. It's easily the best mail server out there.

      Repeat the mantra over and over untill you believe it. Exchange is a great server that can do anything. Except when you just want to send an email, or worse, an email with attachment. It's prone to lag, downtime, errors, artificial limitations and other inconveniences it can come up with. Not true? Sais the manager. O so true, say the users.

      Sucks you still have 2001 concerns in 2011. Most places aren't hammered with virus every week.

      That's a matter of definition. A lot of virusscanners do not tag certain malware as virus. Think of browser plugins (the famous toolbars), bungy's, and other crap that is around. And yes, users will click anything. Not strictly a virus? Maybe. Harmful and counterproductive? Yes.

      Glad your happy, but I don't take your post at face value. At least not with the drivel you wrote about.

      Repeat after me: Microsoft is our OS. There is no OS but Microsoft. We will only worship MS. We do not talk with haidens.

    21. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by Liquidrage · · Score: 2

      He or she is an AC that posted complete drivel. A normal end user wouldn't have posted that. Seriously, think. End user. Posted what he posted? No. And for someone on the inside they posted.

      While there may have been big gains his post amounted to a made up press release. Woah what times it be when such non-technical fluff is taken as truth on the interwebs. It's not a MS vs *nix, it's that their post was garbage.

      Think of the app issue. If they weren't rewritten they aren't going from Windows to *nix. So are they web apps? Did the webservers change? If the webservers changed then did the software just come over like say java or php?

      Again, his post was so clearly made up AC crap it's not even funny.

    22. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Not to mention Mr Coward the so called "Metro UI" that everybody hates can be turned COMPLETELY OFF with a simple registry switch, same as you can take Win 7 now and have it in Win 98 grey if that is what floats your boat. That's one thing MSFT has always been good about and that's making sure conservative businesses have a way of either using the old DE or even using the old OS with software assurance licenses. With the reg switch flipped all you get is Win 7 with a square start button instead of round. oh the horror! I must go out and buy thousands of dollars of Macbooks to escape the square button o' doom ZOMG!

      I can see why so many post as AC now, hell maybe I ought to start posting as AC too. This site used to be the home of damned smart discussions, where arguments over file systems or GUI design could last 200 postings and even when you lost you damned well learned something, now its fanboi central and every argument ends in "nigger faggot cocksucker" aka "Shill troll astroturfer". Its all fanbois and bullshit and flag waving. I hate to say it but I have to agree with Mikey 400+ accounts "Slashdot = stagnated" No damned wonder taco ran away, he probably got sick of the BS too.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    23. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The improved database and mail uptime could be the result of other upgrades happening at the same time. An average user could easily think that they were related.

    24. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hairyfeet, if this discussion has degenerated you have led the downhill charge. You've never been able to resist dragging the discussion down to Windows-level when Windows has always been the last adopter of any given technology. The exceptions are either embarassing (WinFS) or unadopted (Singularity). Beyond that, you don't know enough about computers to talk about anything other than the most superficial aspects of OS design, and yeah, that stuff is mostly cock waving.

      Maybe instead of posting as AC, you could actually learn something, or alternately stop posting. I do of course mean something beyond whatever superficial changes are being made to Windows. Be the change you want to see in Slashdot.

      - tenebrousedge (1226584)

    25. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by s4m7 · · Score: 1
      --
      This comment is fully compliant with RFC 527.
    26. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      And WHY do you think they said that EXACTLY? I'll tell you why: because Ballmer has such a raging hard on for Apple that if you show him an iPad he creams in his pants, that's why! They KNOW the desktop and laptop is gonna simply be a "replace it when it dies" market as PCs have become so insanely overpowered that nobody changes unless theirs goes tits up. They also know that Apple has found a hell of a cash cow in the mobile space because people toss every time their contract is up and in the case of the iShiny they toss every time there is a new model.

      You bookmark this post and come back 6 months after Win 8 is released and watch it come true! Win 8 will make Vista look like Win95, the users won't want a cell phone GUI for a desktop so they'll stick with Win 7, the tablets will be returned en masse thanks to everyone bring their WinTabs home only to find Windows doesn't actually run Windows programs (WTF?) anymore, and Ballmer will "pursue other interests" to keep from being fired by the board when Win 8 goes down in flames. have YOU tried it? Its slow suck ass POS that is ONLY good for grandma. Anyone else will be annoyed as hell at all the resources all those damned constantly updating widgets suck and the attack vector that is having every win 8 desktop tied straight into IE will be a malware writers wet dream.

      Mark my words the reason MSFT is saying this is because WinPhone has bombed and Ballmer thinks by sticking the Windows name on wintab he can get stupid developers to code for it, unlike WinPhone which is been ignored. but developers aren't retards, the public knows a cell phone when they look at it, and the ONLY reason to run Windows anything is WINDOWS PROGRAMS which naturally will run like shit with all those widgets on X86 and won't run at all on ARM. This is gonna be a clusterfuck they talk about for decades like bob only a hell of a lot more expensive, mark my words. Its a shame Jobs ain't here to see it because he'd be laughing his ass off at the uberfail.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    27. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      If Windows is so easy to configure then why is it misconfigured so horribly?

      Driving a car in most conditions is a trivially simple exercise. Yet thousands upon thousands of people every day crash - and die - because they can't manage to do it correctly.

      That is how people act when their lives are at stake. Why do you think they'd be any different with someone as consequence-free as bad sysadminning ?

    28. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You can't be running Exchange if you have machines that don't support MAPI connecting to it. (IMAP on Exchange, particularly 2003 and prior? Surely you're kidding...)

      Same goes for Active Directory. It'd make much more sense to use LDAP in there somewhere, whether as a gateway (caching = win) or directly. One LDAP host oculd easily handle 9000 accounts/systems.

      Applications loading faster? Not a surprise.

      Really, he may be a troll feeding lies, but what he says probably isn't too much off the mark. Linux, unlike Windows, is either make it or break it. There is no 'works poorly', just 'works well but the infrastructure is a convoluted fucking mess'. With Windows, it's much more likely to have something falling apart and still working than working well or not working at all: anything from OEM workstations with shitloads of crapware, poorly sysprep'd images, or bogged down file servers can cause a Windows network to screech to a halt.

    29. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least it works in between. Can't say the same for Linux.

    30. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by Larry_Dillon · · Score: 1

      You need to consider the user (dis?)satisfaction when just upgrading between versions of Windows or even Office. My guess is that many, if not most, users were "dissatisfied" because user are notoriously change-averse. If you let users have their way, they would still be on Windows 95.

      --
      Competition Good, Monopoly Bad.
    31. Re:User satisfaction level . . . ? by kikito · · Score: 1

      The server that answered to your post request is powered by magic fairies.

  8. Why roll their own distro? by revelation60 · · Score: 2

    I don't see why they roll their own distro. This means they have to maintain all sorts of stuff themselves, while there are already so many viable alternatives. If they used, say Ubuntu, support would probably be much better.

    1. Re:Why roll their own distro? by TeXMaster · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If they used, say Ubuntu, they would have to retrain the personnel every time GNOME or Ubuntu folks decide it's a good idea to rethink the whole UI design and human-machine interaction mechanisms. Regardless of whether the new design is or is not better than the old one, it still needs retraining. Retraining = cost. So no, I think that sticking with their own flavor was an excellent idea.

      --
      "I'm never quite so stupid as when I'm being smart" (Linus van Pelt)
    2. Re:Why roll their own distro? by DrXym · · Score: 1

      Then you pick a dist and disable or redirect the sources so it stays still until you decide to change. Ubuntu also has a long term support (LTS) version so you could coast off that, picking up the patches for a few years before deciding whether to continuing to support the dist by yourself or upgrading something more recent. Red Hat is probably a safer bet if you want long term support though.

    3. Re:Why roll their own distro? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Limux is based on Ubuntu 10.04 LTS with KDE 3.5 on top. They do maintain a personalised version of OpenOffice and are keeping Thunderbird and Firefox up to date. source in german (http://www.golem.de/1108/85823.html)

    4. Re:Why roll their own distro? by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 4, Insightful

      As opposed to retraining when Windows completely changes?

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    5. Re:Why roll their own distro? by rrohbeck · · Score: 2

      They didn't. It's Debian sarge/KDE based.
      http://www.muenchen.de/Rathaus/dir/limux/english/index.html

    6. Re:Why roll their own distro? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Just because Ubuntu or GNOME changes their default window manager||metaphor every six months does not mean that you have to use it or follow them.

      (this is what is so insidious about .gvfs, by taking obnoxious liberties with the filesystem it tries to take over your unix system too, not just that one particular user's desktop, so you are left to not allow ANY of your users use GNOME, which stinks because if they like to that should be their business, not the IT manager's)

    7. Re:Why roll their own distro? by FaxeTheCat · · Score: 4, Informative

      We find that a large part of the employees at our company has the new version at home long before they are migrated at work, so due to enterprises being slow adopters of new versions, the problem sort of solves itself.

    8. Re:Why roll their own distro? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows (sadly! - and I say this as a Windows user) didn't change much in terms of UI in the last 10 years.
      Why? Besides the possibility that they just don't have the required skill to improve the UI, backwards compatibility and familiarity is one of Windows' strongest selling points (especially when you're dealing with old secretaries).

    9. Re:Why roll their own distro? by prefec2 · · Score: 1

      As far as I know, they use a Debian derivate. However, most of their installed applications which have to come wit the distribution are municipal specific. So when they would use Ubuntu or Debian alone they would have to install their software by hand on every machine. It is much wiser to use a package system which is already available and make your own distribution.

      According to Wikipedia [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LiMux] they used Debian and are now using Ubuntu 8.04 and will use 10.10 in their 4th version.

    10. Re:Why roll their own distro? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      or they could just usevone of the LTS versions of ubuntu and control the updates so that its a non issue.

    11. Re:Why roll their own distro? by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      10 years is lowballing it. My home PC runs Windows 7 and the UI still looks pretty much like the way I configured Windows 95 to look. Needless to say I'm using the "classic" theme. There are some additions but except for the My Computer link being in the start menu now (and of course the login) I don't think one would need to know more than Win95 to operate it.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    12. Re:Why roll their own distro? by jrminter · · Score: 1

      If I read things correctly, they are basically repackaging a Debian variant. Many places with specific needs do this. CERN did this when they created Scientific Linux. The proliferation of such repacking schemes suggests that it is not as much of a time/resource hog as one might think.

    13. Re:Why roll their own distro? by jrminter · · Score: 1

      You are correct. Note the migration of many to Xubuntu. I was planning to move off of Mandriva because of their continued churn and was concerned about the bloat of both of the new KDE and Gnome desktops. I was many pleased with Xubuntu and gave it a shot. I am generally pleased. Most Linux distributions give the user more choice than they realize; the variants of Ubuntu simply packages these conveniently.

    14. Re:Why roll their own distro? by derfla8 · · Score: 1

      Job security!

    15. Re:Why roll their own distro? by jones_supa · · Score: 1

      KDE 3.5, wow? Isn't it a bit too old? It's a excellent DE though.

    16. Re:Why roll their own distro? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So windows GUI never changes??? Is that what you are saying?

    17. Re:Why roll their own distro? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't see why they roll their own distro. This means they have to maintain all sorts of stuff themselves, while there are already so many viable alternatives. If they used, say Ubuntu, support would probably be much better.

      It is based on Ubuntu (RTFA).

    18. Re:Why roll their own distro? by swalve · · Score: 1

      Rolling their own shouldn't be any harder than maintaining someone else's distro, I don't think. Either way, they have to test and configure new versions of software, configure workstations to point to their internal update server, etc. If they have to do the same work, why not start from scratch and only include what they need, instead of deleting stuff out of someone else's distro they don't need?

    19. Re:Why roll their own distro? by unixisc · · Score: 1

      They can switch to Trinity if they so prefer

    20. Re:Why roll their own distro? by jones_supa · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the tip! Didn't know about Trinity. Seems like a cool project.

    21. Re:Why roll their own distro? by Larryish · · Score: 1

      "Successful businesses are those which sit back and allow problems to solve themselves."

      Is that you, Steve?

    22. Re:Why roll their own distro? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I should have been clearer on the DE: They are actually using Trinity Desktop Environment which is a fork of KDE 3.5 and is still being maintained. It even provides KDE 4 compatibility!

    23. Re:Why roll their own distro? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      KDE 3.5 is / was the best DE ever.

      KDE 4 is pathetic.

  9. inneficiency goes open source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't know which is more unfathomable
    That 15000 _city_ workers actually need computers
    That there is a 3000+/- gap.
    That they allot 1 IT staff for every 12-15 computers.
    That it has taken this long already.
    That their biggest obstacles aren't people - be it fanboys or just stubborn to change.

    I'm sorry, but I don't think switching to Linux can fix the underlying problems here.

    1. Re:inneficiency goes open source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Think of the money... Are you fracking serious?

    2. Re:inneficiency goes open source by swalve · · Score: 1

      First, I don't think we know what percentage of the city workers the 15,000 number is. Maybe 15,000 is only half of the employees? Maybe there are only 10,000 people with machines on their desktops, and the other 5,000 are shared between 15,000 other workers?

      There are a lot of things that are easy to do without computers when the scale is small. If you have a 15 man operation, it's easy to do timesheets on paper. When you have thousands of employees, it becomes way easier to computerize. Once computers become ubiquitous, it becomes even easier to add more things to the "stuff we do on the computer instead of paper" list. The IT to computer ratio seems high, but that number might include a lot of tasks that office staff don't have to do. IE, the guy who makes sure there is a box of paper next to the printers and makes sure the toner cartridges are full might count as IT. In a large enough office building, that simple task can be a full-time job. But the efficiency it adds might very well pay for itself, eliminating the need for office drones to have to do it themselves and focusing on their work instead of wandering down to the supply room.

  10. Which target? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess it depends which target you look at. They certainly haven't met their original target set 10 years ago. Met and exceeded their revised target, yes, they did.

  11. This isn't about Linux by Deliveranc3 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    As much as it is about German efficiency.

    The real amazing thing is that they beat the communists.

    Linux uber alles!

    1. Re:This isn't about Linux by gbjbaanb · · Score: 2

      I'm amazed that they beat the financial crisis. We all know Windows costs a lot for licences and today's governments are very cash-strapped. So like Portugal that recently announced they would not pay for any more Windows upgrades, I'm surprised more countries aren't looking closely at Munich to see if they can reduce their deficits slightly by going this route too.

    2. Re:This isn't about Linux by KDR_11k · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Have you SEEN the horrible job the communists did? Germany was a neat experiment with the whole GDR shit and after the wall fell it became pretty damn clear which side is better at management. West Germany is still paying for the shitty management of the commies (in the form of a solidarity fee, used to bring the former GDR states up to speed).

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    3. Re:This isn't about Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      West Germany is still paying for the shitty management of the commies (in the form of a solidarity fee, used to bring the former GDR states up to speed).

      It is all of Germany that pays the solidarity fee, not just the western states.

    4. Re:This isn't about Linux by swillden · · Score: 2

      West Germany is still paying for the shitty management of the commies (in the form of a solidarity fee, used to bring the former GDR states up to speed).

      It is all of Germany that pays the solidarity fee, not just the western states.

      True, but it's a progressive percentage surcharge on top of a progressive income tax, so higher-income areas pay nearly all of it. Which means the west pays a lot more than the east because, due to the aforementioned communist management, it's taking a long time for the economy of the east to ramp up to match that of the west.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    5. Re:This isn't about Linux by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Which means the west pays a lot more than the east because, due to the aforementioned communist management, it's taking a long time for the economy of the east to ramp up to match that of the west.

      Ah, so next time I hear about Germany being resistant to bailing out the rest of the Eurozone, I'll remember that they're still working on bailing out their brethren as well.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    6. Re:This isn't about Linux by skine · · Score: 2

      Reminds me of a clip from the British TV show QI.

      Basically one panelist recalls visiting a village in Russia.

      All of the buildings are ugly, built at odd angles, and obviously in a state of deterioration. That is, all buildings except for the opera house at the center of town.

      The opera house that was build by German POWs from WWII.

    7. Re:This isn't about Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, we should hold guns to the heads of all builders to make them work harder.

  12. Achtung, Schweinhunde! by Hognoxious · · Score: 0

    Die Jahre von Linux auf Bürotish ist angekommen, aber ich habe kein Versicherung für meinem Polenuberfallenmittelstoff! Nilpferdsheisse!

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    1. Re:Achtung, Schweinhunde! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meine Güte, wie schlecht ist das denn?!

    2. Re:Achtung, Schweinhunde! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wuuuuusch!

    3. Re:Achtung, Schweinhunde! by swalve · · Score: 1

      HA! Well done. Shouldn't it be Vuuuuusch though?

  13. I feel their frustration by erroneus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    At every turn I am faced with more Microsoft lock-in. Most recently has been an inventory tracking database system. They advertised a "web interface" option but were unable to provide a demonstration of it. After the company bought the product anyway, it was revealed that their "web" interface was actually Silverlight. I realize that Microsoft just released an update to Silverlight, but isn't it already slated for extinction? And when I asked the vendor if they have any HTML 5 intentions, they had no answer at all. So here I am facing yet another application which requires Microsoft Windows, MSIE 8 and a proprietary control set which cannot easily exist in any other way. We already have Documentum which is supposed to be able to use Firefox and the like but thanks to Mozilla's insistence on their INSANE version escalation practices, every update is an X.0 update meaning Documentum thinks it can't support it.

    Frustration all around. Thank you Microsoft for shoving your crap through developers and vendors. Thank you vendors for buying into their crap only to find yourselves having to re-write your software AGAIN as Microsoft drops support for the platforms you built your apps on. Thank you Firefox for making the task of trying to migrate to your client all the more difficult. Thanks go around pretty evenly.

    1. Re:I feel their frustration by FaxeTheCat · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So the fact that they were not able to provide a demonstration did not ring a few bells? LOUDLY?

      I guess the company got what they deserved, then.

    2. Re:I feel their frustration by jimicus · · Score: 1

      We already have Documentum which is supposed to be able to use Firefox and the like but thanks to Mozilla's insistence on their INSANE version escalation practices, every update is an X.0 update meaning Documentum thinks it can't support it.

      Would it be considered acceptable to install a reverse proxy that rewrites the User-Agent?

    3. Re:I feel their frustration by deniable · · Score: 1

      I've seen all of that. We're stuck on Firefox 3.6 or IE8 because Oracle can't give us an answer about supported browsers. Given that they're already on the way out, they're not big on support. We don't know what's going to replace them but it won't be fun. At least we've dumped IE6.

      My biggest bit of fun lately has been developers that think the right-click is OK in a browser interface. Management love their iPads and need to talk to their software.

    4. Re:I feel their frustration by The+Askylist · · Score: 1

      Two seconds of Googling found this: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/uacontrol/

      Depending on the number of users, either this add-on or a reverse proxy might be easier.

    5. Re:I feel their frustration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until the "No one ever got fired for buying $(vender_name)" line becomes untrue $(vender_name) will continue its practices and you'll get this crap.

    6. Re:I feel their frustration by erroneus · · Score: 1

      Oh I tested and used that, but it is complicated to say the least when it comes to deployment of such things. It is a whole other topic... "How do you run an IT shop when you don't have control of your own AD?" Deploying things like that would be trivial with a few scripts at login time.

      The add-on does work. It's a deployment issue primarily.

    7. Re:I feel their frustration by loufoque · · Score: 1

      Good practices for websites and applications are to not check the version of the browser you're using, or even its name. The only thing that could be relevant is the engine used under the hood (which version doesn't keep jumping, even with Chrome or Firefox). And even then, you shouldn't need that at all.

    8. Re:I feel their frustration by eulernet · · Score: 1

      So the fact that they were not able to provide a demonstration did not ring a few bells? LOUDLY?

      I smell some "political" decision here.
      Probably the guy who pushed for this solution is friend with the company that sold the application.

    9. Re:I feel their frustration by erroneus · · Score: 1

      Oracle just need to give us a place where we can add more "acceptable browsers" to the list and be done with it and let the local admins be responsible for that aspect of the deployment.

    10. Re:I feel their frustration by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1

      After my experiences, I would definitely fire anyone who spec'd Oracle products for anything.

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    11. Re:I feel their frustration by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Problem is that the only open source database MySQL is Oracle owned as well

    12. Re:I feel their frustration by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      We already have Documentum which is supposed to be able to use Firefox and the like but thanks to Mozilla's insistence on their INSANE version escalation practices, every update is an X.0 update meaning Documentum thinks it can't support it.

      Try the User Agent Switcher add-on. I use it to spoof versions all the time. It won't spoof some of the version information that is only accessible within javascript, but it is very rare for an app to check that - almost all of them just check the user-agent header.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    13. Re:I feel their frustration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I realize that Microsoft just released an update to Silverlight, but isn't it already slated for extinction?

      No.

    14. Re:I feel their frustration by symbolset · · Score: 1

      Postgres?

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    15. Re:I feel their frustration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Problem is that the only open source database MySQL is Oracle owned as well

      Excuse me, are you high?

    16. Re:I feel their frustration by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      So what is PostgreSQL, a Cuisinart? :-)

    17. Re:I feel their frustration by Anthony+Mouse · · Score: 1

      No.

    18. Re:I feel their frustration by deniable · · Score: 1

      Everyone else got the easy one, so how about SQLite?

    19. Re:I feel their frustration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess the company got what they deserved, then.

      A company might deserve stupid management, but there's no excuse for maintaining that status quo.

      I had a wonderfully interesting experience with a previous employer.. the upper manager said "Upgrade that network!" the techs said "We need $xx,xxx for these Cisco switches" the manager said "Why buy those Cisco switches when these Netgear switches are half the cost?" the techs said "The Netgear switches are rubbish" the manager said "You listen to me, I'm your boss".

      He found out 4 times in the first week why the techs wanted the Cisco switches. After 3 months, the total network downtime was comparable to the combined network downtime for the previous 10 years. The cost of having staff standing around for hours each week was immediately comparable to the cost of the Cisco switches many times over.

      What happened to the manager? .. promotion. He should have been held accountable, as should your managers be held accountable for not properly evaluating the product prior to purchase. Being a manager doesn't mean that you're right, companies need to have mechanisms to get rid of management that overrule the judgment of experts and make a mess.

  14. Oh Yeah, Mr Hillbilly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Continue playing with your GI Joe toys. You just blurbed two words I never heard here in Germany since I was born in the 70s (in Germany to German parents).

    1. Re:Oh Yeah, Mr Hillbilly by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      I don't know, something about the year of linux on the desktop, and something about a hot hippo? Is that the new Ubuntu distro?

    2. Re:Oh Yeah, Mr Hillbilly by prefec2 · · Score: 1

      What do you mean? Efficiency or "beat the communists". By US standards we are all communists in Europe (minus that rainy island) and German "efficiency" can be seen at a daily basis on every commercial or public helpline or office. ;-)

    3. Re:Oh Yeah, Mr Hillbilly by Thumper_SVX · · Score: 2

      By US standards we are all communists in Europe (minus that rainy island)

      Ha! Having lived in the US for the last 15 years I can say that the attitude here is that the UK is as communist as the rest of Europe if not more so. I mean, they have SOCIALIZED HEALTHCARE! Not to mention their government forces them all to take twice as much time off work as we in this more civilized country. How can one live under such an awful regime?

      Yeah... BTW for the record I'm British, and if anything I find myself looking wistfully at that "totalitarian regime" and wondering how this country got so messed up. Then I tend to look at the people around me and realize that they are the reason. Maybe it's just because I settled in the Midwest which is predominantly "red state" areas. That means they're primarily Republican and therefore significantly opposed to anything that smells of "communism". It doesn't help that the education system here is in such a dire state that most people couldn't tell you what the difference is between socialism and communism, and the sad thing is they are in such denial about it that they don't want to know.

      A man when taught to fish will only eat for life if he is willing to put that knowledge to use.

    4. Re:Oh Yeah, Mr Hillbilly by prefec2 · · Score: 1

      I guess there is no EU-country without a socialized healthcare system. And yes we have guaranteed vacation. And continuous payment when we are sick (that have been reduced in Germany in recent years, but it still exist). And when we are poor, we get money from the state as long as necessary (ok and a kick in the ass to change it, bat that is socialism as well ;-))

      However, I have been in the US ten years ago. The people were all nice and forthcoming, but I had the impression that they are a little bit naive. As long as they do not "elect" a crazy president...

  15. Thanks To Your Stupid Managers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If they can't be bothered to check the "Web Interface" by qualified IT personnel (who would have found out about the Silverlight thing), then the situation you describe appears to be primarily the fault of your employer.
    Unfortunately you are not alone with this, I have seen lots of instances of companies buying $hitty software after having been nicely talked to by a seasoned salesman. "Leadership" personnel is quite often extremely sloppy when it comes to software purchasing decisions and they certainly don't even ask for expert advise. They leave it to their experts to attempt a fix of the mess they bought.

    1. Re:Thanks To Your Stupid Managers by prefec2 · · Score: 2

      The problem is, that IT is not seen as a mission critical element of the companies success. It is just a tool, like a coffee machine. As long as it works somehow, everything is fine. Management has to learn that data and information processing is important, yet crucial for company success.

    2. Re:Thanks To Your Stupid Managers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The problem is, that IT is not seen as a mission critical element of the companies success. It is just a tool, like a coffee machine. As long as it works somehow, everything is fine. Management has to learn that data and information processing is important, yet crucial for company success.

      So is coffee. But seriously, many IT staff tend to overestimate what importance they should have, almost like a smoothly running IT setup that causes the least trouble for IT support, even despite user wishes/needs, is the purpose of the org. IT is just a tool to get the other stuff done. It is IT peoples job to keep supporting that million dollar sales rep that IT hates because he is so 'stupid' and causes them so much trouble, because he rakes in the revenue that pays the bills. I'll agree that IT is a fairly important tool in many businesses and even a competitive strategic asset for some (but far from all, for many it is more of a standard utility). But sometimes the 'stupid managers' actually have their priorities right for the business and org, at least better than us nerds complaining about our part of it.

    3. Re:Thanks To Your Stupid Managers by jrminter · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think all sides would benefit from seeing this as a symbiotic relationship and treat each other with mutual respect. Yes, IT staff needs that troublesome salesman who rakes in the orders. That salesman also needs IT support to be productive. And those managers are really only effective when they create an environment where their minons can do what they hired them to do.

      The system breaks down when any one group deludes themselves into thinking they are more valuable to the organization than they are. In my case, I remind myself that even the "lowly janitor" who cleans my lab (always with a smile) and keeps the dust away from my sensitive instruments, the skilled tradesman who fixes the water chiller that keeps my electron microscope running, and the technician that refills my liquid nitrogen cylinders enable my productivity. They each deserves my respect - and admiration. It is honest labor; tasks that I don't like to do or am not good at. It is a much more pleasant work environment when everyone realizes that the whole is more than the sum of the parts...

    4. Re:Thanks To Your Stupid Managers by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      But sometimes the 'stupid managers' actually have their priorities right for the business and org, at least better than us nerds complaining about our part of it.

      That is an exceptionally rare thing to have. Most managers don't have a clue how important IT is. They should be reminded that the first letter in IT stands for Information and all of them know how important is Information.But until someone presents them with a pretty picture of their Enterprise Architecture, they will not have a clue how Information can make or break their company.

    5. Re:Thanks To Your Stupid Managers by Rutulian · · Score: 1

      Excellent comment! I agree 100%

  16. Depends on the level of service you want by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The amount of computers I can personally maintain could be as high as thousands or as low as one. All depends on what your requirements are.

    For example suppose my job is to do nothing but maintain the systems in working order. I don't help users with problems at all, I just make sure the computers and software works properly. I'm allowed total control, all systems are one make and model and are under warranty at all times, they are replaced when they fall out. They all run a single, unified, set of software, none of it custom. Users have no admin access, all data is stored on a highly reliable, supported, central server.

    Well hell in that situation, I can maintain a virtually unlimited number of systems myself. Only real limit is in terms of how often hardware fails and I have to diagnose it and call in warranty support (who will do the actual repairs). Highly reliable central equipment that is supported by the company combined with management software like Ghost mean that I'll do things once and replicate it everywhere.

    Now on the other end of the scale, suppose I am expected to provide extremely hands on support. Each and every computer is custom built to the user's wishes, both hardware and software. They get it setup however they want. They also have full and complete admin access. Plus, I am expected to handle any questions or training they have. In that case, I'm not going to be able to handle many systems. 15 might well be too many. I'm going to have to spend a lot of time per system helping people, fixing their fuckups, and so on. I'll hit my limit at a low number of systems.

    So it is all in what you want. The more service you want, the more staff you need. We go through that with the Dean at work all the time. He wants us to make faculty happy, which means lots of handholding and support for special research projects, but he doesn't want to spend a lot and hire a lot of staff. We have to keep explaining that you can't have it both ways.

    Now they may well have had some inefficiency as well, but part of it can just be a very extensive amount of support. If your support team has a lot of jobs, they need a lot of people.

    1. Re:Depends on the level of service you want by jrminter · · Score: 2

      You are, of course, correct. However, in most organizations, your first model would work for most office staff and production workers but not for some, albeit, limited R&D staff and developers. For the latter, I think both greater control and greater accountability are required. I am one of those .1% in my organization (I do instrument automation and image processing/analysis.) I have a good relationship with our IT staff. If I break something, I fix it. If hardware crashes, they help (they have the parts warehouse.) If I need access to corporate licenses, they either give me access to the share with the licenses or lend a hand. If something is outside my expertise, I ask for a consult before I start the project. The key requirement is mutual respect and high expectations.

    2. Re:Depends on the level of service you want by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      We're talking about the government here.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    3. Re:Depends on the level of service you want by jrminter · · Score: 1

      My comments could apply to a municipal government as well. I would be surprised if a metropolitan area such as Munich did not have at least one data scientist on their payroll looking at economic data and doing the kind of studies that municipalities do to guide setting tax policies to attract jobs. Such an employee would have different needs than the typical office workers. Besides, the post I replied to was far more general than the parent...

    4. Re:Depends on the level of service you want by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Now on the other end of the scale, suppose I am expected to provide extremely hands on support. Each and every computer is custom built to the user's wishes, both hardware and software. They get it setup however they want. They also have full and complete admin access. Plus, I am expected to handle any questions or training they have. In that case, I'm not going to be able to handle many systems. 15 might well be too many.

      I worked in an environment like this at a major medical center in the 90's. There were four support folks for about 3,000 computers. Generally two on the phone, one doing in-person troubleshooting, and one doing installs/migrations.

      OK, it was 6 people if you count the guys who repaired the computers and printers (in-house repair was cost effective at those volumes) but they were also responsible for wiring the network as well.

      MacOS 6-9.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    5. Re:Depends on the level of service you want by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For example suppose my job is to do nothing but maintain the systems in working order. I don't help users with problems at all, I just make sure the computers and software works properly. I'm allowed total control, all systems are one make and model and are under warranty at all times, they are replaced when they fall out. They all run a single, unified, set of software, none of it custom. Users have no admin access, all data is stored on a highly reliable, supported, central server.

      Well hell in that situation, I can maintain a virtually unlimited number of systems myself. Only real limit is in terms of how often hardware fails and I have to diagnose it and call in warranty support (who will do the actual repairs). Highly reliable central equipment that is supported by the company combined with management software like Ghost mean that I'll do things once and replicate it everywhere.

      How would that in any way be an example of _just you_ maintaining such an environment? At that scale you have to deal with lost/misplaced equipment/broken equipment that cannot be replaced with like gear, it would need to be replaced, in whole, frequently to maintain homogeneity, it would almost HAVE to be a call center for that many people to get by with identical privileges and common software & usage. Even those are shifting, always changing landscapes.

      I mean you described an ideal environment, that in practice never happens, or not for a meaningful length of time. Hardware MTBF doesn't magically scale up to infinity, and larger environments would most assuredly not have higher quality equipment, the opposite would more often be true. There are physical and logistical limitations you run into at different scales, you'd only be pretending to do all that by yourself.

  17. 9000 Linux desktops isn't a measure of success. by dicobalt · · Score: 1

    So what? They installed Linux on a bunch of computers. The real test here is measuring productiveness of people using those computers. Are they still doing their jobs just as well as they were with Windows. That's the real reason why desktop Linux deployments fail. Anyone can install a Linux distro but not everyone can use it.

    1. Re:9000 Linux desktops isn't a measure of success. by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 2

      People can be productive using Windows? It all depends what you mean by "productive".

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
  18. German Coast Guard by G3ckoG33k · · Score: 0

    Does the German coast guard have any offices in Munich?

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yR0lWICH3rY

    Waaay off topic. But I like it.

    1. Re:German Coast Guard by johnjaydk · · Score: 1

      Does the German coast guard have any offices in Munich?

      Somebody needs to retake geography 101. Munich is about as far as one can get away from the German coast and still be in the country.

      --
      TCAP-Abort
  19. Submarine parts by roguegramma · · Score: 1

    Well, it is unlikely that the German coast guard have many offices in Munich. However, thanks to advances in military computing, the army can now order submarine parts in Munich, if they feel like it.

    --
    Hey don't blame me, IANAB
  20. Also remember some R&D can be IT in some place by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    In some companies, programming and that kind of thing is IT as well. They need a custom app that does X, so they have an in house programming division that does that kind of thing, and they are called "IT" as well.

    I'm not saying any one model is right, just saying these are ways that you can have lots of IT. A company can well decide it wants tons of computer support and development, and thus have a really large IT staff. It is all in what kind of service you want.

  21. Obligatory by ToiletBomber · · Score: 1

    IT'S OVER 9000!

  22. what an incredibly expensive way to not sav emoney by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So 9000 copies of Windows not bought. Let's say that save you $50 per machine (perhaps less) at OEM pricing. tha'ts $450,000. Now how many linux techs did they hire to maintain this? Id assume at least 1 for every 100 machines and what is their annual salary? Compared to windows techs, linux techs get more money.

  23. why Munich matters by jbolden · · Score: 5, Informative

    Just info for younger people on /.

    In terms of large agencies that tried moving to Linux there were 3 main groups of companies

    1) Companies that never had developed a Windows culture. Generally they were Unix shops (Sun, Sco primarily) and they were able to move to Linux easily.

    2) Companies that were highly motivated tech companies: IBM, Oracle, Sun that all had a Windows culture. They had embarrassing failures in moving to Windows.

    3) Companies that were not particularly technological and wanted to save money. The bag was mixed here but in general the costs got out of control and they threw in the towel.

    Munich represents the one place where despite going way over time and budget they have kept plowing away. Demonstrating what it is actually going to take to move a large enterprise with a Windows culture over to Linux.

    1. Re:why Munich matters by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Just info for younger people on /.

      In terms of large agencies that tried moving to Linux there were 3 main groups of companies

      2) Companies that were highly motivated tech companies: IBM, Oracle, Sun that all had a Windows culture. They had embarrassing failures in moving to Windows.

      Sun had a Windows culture? I thought that Windows boxes were banned in Sun, and that Scott McNealy once said that he uses Mylar transperancies on which he has handwritten instead of PowerPoint - they were that strongly anti-Windows. IBM & Oracle I don't know.

    2. Re:why Munich matters by Anthony+Mouse · · Score: 2

      Munich represents the one place where despite going way over time and budget they have kept plowing away. Demonstrating what it is actually going to take to move a large enterprise with a Windows culture over to Linux.

      I don't know if their experience is going to be that accurate of a measure of what it takes going forward. Certainly it would set an upper bound on the cost, but building the first prototype is always going to be more expensive than the ones made in mass production. It costs more to create a map than to follow it. Munich had to create LiMux. The next municipality to transition will be able to download it, and will have the advantage of all of the solutions Munich forged in the crucible of production use in a large organization.

    3. Re:why Munich matters by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Yes Sun had a Windows culture. The extent of it was a shock to the executives at Sun, I believe. It certainly was an embarrassment that most of the employees at Sun were using Windows boxes to get their work done during a time when Sun was urging other companies to shift to Unix based solutions.

      Scott McNealy might have been that anti-Windows but his people weren't.

    4. Re:why Munich matters by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Oh I agree Munich is an upper bound in terms of cost / work. OTOH it is a an accurate task list. In the late 1990s and early 2000s many people had no clue how far their organizations had adopted a Windows culture and how complex this sort of undertaking would be. Even knowing what the upper bound looks like is a good thing for Linux at this point.

    5. Re:why Munich matters by Skapare · · Score: 1

      Gee, I was not aware of this. Now I know why Sun was ultimately a failure and was bought out by Oracle.

      --
      now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
    6. Re:why Munich matters by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Well Oracle was another company urging people to shift to thin clients that discovered it had a windows culture. The big 3 with the failures were Sun, Oracle and IBM. It was egg on the face for all of them.

      I don't really think of Sun as a failure. Ultimately of all the workstation makers: Dec, SGI, Sun, IBM, NeXT, Symbolics, Xerox, Apollo... they were one of the most successful, certainly one of the most influential. Ultimately I think they failed because their niches disappeared. No one buys $5k-50k desktop systems. On the server side they never had the value add of the minis / mainframes nor the low cost of the Windows / Linux solutions. Sun existed to fill narrowing niches that existed in the 80s and 90s that just don't exist today.

  24. Re:what an incredibly expensive way to not sav emo by gmack · · Score: 5, Informative

    So 9000 copies of Windows not bought. Let's say that save you $50 per machine (perhaps less) at OEM pricing. tha'ts $450,000. Now how many linux techs did they hire to maintain this? Id assume at least 1 for every 100 machines and what is their annual salary? Compared to windows techs, linux techs get more money.

    It is true that Linux admins cost more money but you need fewer Linux admins for the same number of workstations so there is an overall savings.

  25. Re:what an incredibly expensive way to not sav emo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    And 9000 Windows machines don't need no support? You should at least have posted a link to MS's "research" on how Linux TCO is HUEG and everyone should buy Windows instead.

  26. Re:what an incredibly expensive way to not sav emo by guruevi · · Score: 3, Informative

    The 1 to 100 machines ratio is only valid for Windows machines and 1 to 20 for Windows Server w/ Microsoft platforms like Exchange, MSSQL. I personally manage 60 Linux and Mac machines, 10 Windows machines and 10 Linux/Solaris servers. The Windows machines is where I spend most of my time (cleaning up crap others do like inadvertently installing spyware or viruses even though we have antivirus, even with Windows 7 certain software requires Admin privileges) and the rest of the day I can play video games. Beyond updates and permission updates I don't need to touch the Linux servers or workstations. Mac machines are a bit more involved in updates because they don't have a central software repository and because people can muck up their preferences. The Solaris systems literally have several hundred days of uptime and require hardly an update.

    --
    Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
  27. Cowboys by DragonHawk · · Score: 1

    If Windows is so easy to configure then why is it misconfigured so horribly?

    Because most IT people are cowboy admins. The idea of seeking out and reading Best Practices documentation is completely beyond them.

    I rather suspect Linux is easier to manage, if you know what you're doing. I certainly believe Linux is easier to fix when it's broken. And there's the whole not-beholden-to-any-one-company thing, which is a big selling point for me. But the fact remains, the number of IT people who just don't get it is high.

    --

    dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
    I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
  28. Right for the wrong reasons by DragonHawk · · Score: 1

    Does Microsoft still not ship their OS with an ssh client out of the box?

    They do not ship an SSH client. However, they have shipped with Remote Desktop since XP. SSH isn't much use for Microsoft's GUI-centric world. Now, you can argue about the advantages of the command line, and I'd agree with you, but Microsoft doesn't agree, and they do provide an equivalent for their mindset. So that's not a terribly good example.

    (A better complaint is why they introduced this WinRM crap. *That's* RSH/SSH all over again, just NIH. Idiots.)

    Windows does have a rather large set of tools for administration automation, even remote admin automation, but it suffers from (1) being poorly documented, (2) being as confusing as the Unix toolset, complete with convoluted syntax and arcane command names, and (3) Microsoft keeps changing the damn thing.

    So I agree with your conclusions, but your supporting evidence is a bit iffy.

    --

    dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
    I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
  29. Server side? by jon3k · · Score: 1

    What about the server side? That's where most of your licensing costs are. Does anyone know their plans or current setup there? Are they using Exchange, Sharepoint, Terminal Services/Citrix, etc? If they're using any Windows technologies on the server side, are there any migration plans?

  30. Re:check your facts sir. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Lets face it folks Linux isn't gonna save you a dime, not in the short or medium term anyway.

    Uhh, you do know that google runs on Linux because.... it's extremely cost-effective, right?

    And you do recall that Amazon became profitable when they switched from windows/Solaris to linux right? You don't remember? Here's a link:
    http://www.zdnet.co.uk/news/it-strategy/2001/10/31/amazon-saves-millions-with-linux-switch-2098366/

    And you do know that 98% of the top 500 supercomputers run linux, because ... its cost effective?

  31. Re:what an incredibly expensive way to not sav emo by SuperQ · · Score: 2

    I guess it depends on what you count as admins. I figure at my company we have an admin ratio of about 300-500:1 for Linux desktop workstations and laptops. But do you count the helpdesk people who answer any question for any OS including email, and mobile phone access to corp resources? What about the user storage admins? They make the NFS/CIFS and backups work.

    I guess I don't know how that compares to the number of windows and MacOS admins we have, or the number of deployed machines.

  32. Prefix question by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

    As a city you should not think in business and macro-economic terms, you have to look on it from a macro-economic viewpoint.

    Should the first "macro-economic" be "micro-economic"?

    1. Re:Prefix question by prefec2 · · Score: 1

      It should. And it was. I hate my spellchecker! Aaaaah ;-)

  33. Re:what an incredibly expensive way to not sav emo by guruevi · · Score: 2

    I consider all of IT as a group which helps end-users. If an IT group can't manage a 100:1 ratio then you're either extremely bad or you got extremely incompetent end-users.

    I do include in my figure (me) doing all the servers (e-mail, web, database, ...), managing web content, creating disk images, managing 2 SANs doing about 100TB of storage and backups and most of my machines being shared among 250 users (it's a research lab), I receive all the phone calls for everything from 'install this program' and 'my x doesn't work' to 'I have this new gadget, help me' and 'so I have this idea to transfer data to another site, how do I do that'.

    The only thing that's really outsourced for us is our Internet connection, web design and the actual construction of the network (running the wires and drilling holes in the walls).

    --
    Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
  34. Re:what an incredibly expensive way to not sav emo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If your users get viruses, you're doing it wrong

  35. Re:check your facts sir. by symbolset · · Score: 1

    I reject this blatant lie. Google runs on Linux because it's cost effective, but also because it's more secure, flexible and performant.

    Same with the others - especially the supercomputers. Cost effectiveness is only part of the answer.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
  36. Add a "grid" by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

    i.e run your apps on remote app servers, or group the desktops as app servers so they serve specific groups of apps. They will load faster; the libraries and code are already in RAM, will run faster, the CPU cache hit rate is higher and you can run more copies per server with copy on write RAM management.
    For example, you run open office on 200 desktops, you need 200 * 200Mb RAM; 40Gb. You run 200 instances of open office on a central server, you need 200Mb + 20Mb*200 instances; 4.2Gb.
    It's just a matter of utilisation. With a job scheduler (aka grid), you can get up to the high 80% easily. Without, your utilisation will average single digit %.

    --
    Deleted
  37. Re:what an incredibly expensive way to not sav emo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    100 to 1 if you run Linux the EXACT same way you run Windows.

    If you PXE boot a custom distro and run ALL software on a few DNS Round robin X servers you can get ALL your desktop computers managed by ONE dude. So that is one spart guy for 10,000 to 1. match that Microsoft, no matter how much software you buy it will still take more than one guy to do that.

  38. Re:check your facts sir. by hairyfeet · · Score: 2

    Not to mention the coward was talking about multi-billion dollar corps. Corps that size having to hire an army of coders to write custom apps, or paying a couple of hundred guys to convert files? Wouldn't even make line 23 of the budget proposal. When you are talking THAT level of business frankly short terms costs are rarely considered which is the exact opposite of most businesses or even small governments.

    As we have seen several times on /. those that simply looked at Linux as "free as in beer" and didn't figure in migration costs ended up running back to Windows because the initial switch will cost you MORE than simply staying with what you have. This is simply common sense, a major arch or OS switch will always be more expensive than sticking with what you have, especially when MSFT sells site licenses. You have all those gotchas that nobody has figured in, like incompatible hardware, data conversion costs, having to have written a FOSS version of some proprietary app that simply won't run in Wine or paying the Wine guys to add support, etc.

    Change is ALWAYS more expensive that staying where you are, which is why as you say you costs is only a small part and as I say you should change for the RIGHT reasons and not simply the bottom line.

    --
    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  39. Re:what an incredibly expensive way to not sav emo by BetterSense · · Score: 1

    [citation needed]

  40. Re:what an incredibly expensive way to not sav emo by gmack · · Score: 4, Informative
  41. 33 Major Companies VERY PRODUCTIVE on Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    XEROX
    NASDAQ
    MOTOROLA
    NISSAN
    TOYOTA
    RAYOVAC
    CONTINENTAL AIRLINES
    JET BLUE AIRWAYS
    REUTERS
    DELL COMPUTER
    LEXIS NEXIS
    HILTON HOTELS
    HSBC
    FUJIFILM GROUP
    UNILEVER
    7 ELEVEN STORES
    REGAL ENTERTAINMENT GROUP
    CARNIVAL CRUISE LINES
    SWISS INTERNATIONAL AIRLINES
    MEDITERRANEAN SHIPPING COMPANY
    QUALCOMM INCORPORATED
    STARBUCKS
    RADIOSHACK
    TOMMY HILFIGER
    VIRGIN ENTERTAINMENT GROUP
    STATE OF ILLINOIS GOVERNMENT
    SWITZERLAND'S DEPARTMENT OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS
    INFORMATION RESOURCES INC.
    NcSOFT
    PING
    TDC
    GAMEWORKS

    ---

    * Would you like more, &/or, SPECIFICS on what each is doing with them? I can provide it, just ask...

    (Of course - There are 100's more too, of course, worldwide (because of the marketshare/mindshare of users using Windows vs. any other Operating System solution!))

    APK

    P.S.=> Those are all GIANT PRODUCTIVE companies (or governments) running Windows for their information infrastructures in various capacities that are of "enterprise class scale"!

    For example on the specifics I note above?

    E.G. -> NASDAQ's been going STRONG running Windows Server 2003 + SQLServer 2005 in failover clusters since 2005 as their "Official Trade Data Dissemination System", non-stop!

    (7++ yrs. strong now, 24x7, in 99.999% "Fabled '5-9's'" reliability)...

    ... apk

    1. Re:33 Major Companies VERY PRODUCTIVE on Windows by Skapare · · Score: 1

      Several of those companies are nowhere near "very productive". They just can't get things done, and when they purport to have something done, it's so often done wrong. To be honest, these companies would likely be just as UNPRODUCTIVE and INCOMPETENT even if they were using Linux. In these cases it isn't about the OS at all. What should be of grave concern, however, is the metrics of performance involved. If it comes out with all these companies being "very" productive, then the measurement itself is seriously flawed.

      --
      now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  42. Let Me Educate You by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Imagine you want to check how many people in your intranet have a particular application installed. You do

    A) Write a shell script which determines that

    B) Write a shell script which will call the script of A) on the 765 computers of your intranet using SSH

    Any other admin task (and not just the things Microsoft can think of in Active Directory) can be automated this way. A single admin can do quite complex operations this way on a large number of computers in very little time (couple of hours). If that activity is not part of a pre-thought task in AD (or the other colorful GUI tools of MS and partners), the admin has to log into 765 (or more) computers via Remote Desktop (or similar tools like Teamviewer) to perform the same task 765 times. Two weeks later the windows admin will be done.
    You get the idea ? That's a major reason why Google and Facebook are using Linux in their backends and it is a major reason why Linux intranets can be much cheaper to operate, IF you have skilled admins on your team. Microsoft appears to acknowledge the power of the command line with their new server products, by the way. So even MS concedes the GUI is a bad idea when it comes to administration.

    1. Re:Let Me Educate You by bloodhawk · · Score: 1

      Imagine you want to check how many people in your intranet have a particular application installed. You do

      A) Write a shell script which determines that

      B) Write a shell script which will call the script of A) on the 765 computers of your intranet using SSH

      Any other admin task (and not just the things Microsoft can think of in Active Directory) can be automated this way. A single admin can do quite complex operations this way on a large number of computers in very little time (couple of hours). If that activity is not part of a pre-thought task in AD (or the other colorful GUI tools of MS and partners), the admin has to log into 765 (or more) computers via Remote Desktop (or similar tools like Teamviewer) to perform the same task 765 times. Two weeks later the windows admin will be done. You get the idea ? That's a major reason why Google and Facebook are using Linux in their backends and it is a major reason why Linux intranets can be much cheaper to operate, IF you have skilled admins on your team. Microsoft appears to acknowledge the power of the command line with their new server products, by the way. So even MS concedes the GUI is a bad idea when it comes to administration.

      I guess ignorance is bliss, probably why you posted as an AC. the above has always been easy even with Microsoft products. It has been made many times easier over the past 7 or 8 years through the adoption of powershell, but even before that it was a relatively simple task to achieve through scripts. Only a moron would think you have to logon to 765 computers to find out that information. So that task I could do in about 5 mins on windows, back before powershell it might have taken me 15 mins - hour to figure out the scripting for it, but was still an easy task.

  43. Re:check your facts sir. by cavreader · · Score: 1

    What Google uses might have used Linux as the starting point but what they actually use now is something entirely different. From their standpoint Linux was the most cost effective starting point on which to build their technology on. To them Linux was just a basically free and stable OS code base to start with. We are talking about a company that have their own proprietary processors designed and manufactured for their exclusive use. They never release any of their proprietary changes back to the community. Just like you will not see Big Table source code released either. You will never see any details regarding thier web server architectures. Their technology gives them an edge and they are not about to release anything that might benefit any of their competitors. Describing Google as an Open Source friendly company is ridiculous in the extreme. Other companies using Linux also tend to keep their changes to themselves instead of releasing the source code. Only after the changes become basically obsolete do you see these companies throw the open source community a bone.

  44. 10,000 Windows 7 Seats in a Single Migration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Per my subject-line above -> http://news.softpedia.com/news/10-000-Windows-7-Seats-in-a-Single-Migration-136403.shtml

    PERTINENT QUOTE/EXCERPT:

    "On March 2nd, 2010, the software giant revealed that the Shop Direct Group, a U.K. retailer, had upgraded over 10,000 computers to Windows 7."

    APK

    P.S.=> You MAY also be interested in this, per what you stated (as to people being able to use a system productively), because in the link below? Well:

    I listed 33 MAJOR COMPANIES &/or GOVERNMENTS using Windows in "enterprise class" capacities & they're VERY "productive" (to say the least) here -> http://linux.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2579758&cid=38419228

    ... apk

  45. It's not always about saving. by Kludge · · Score: 1

    1. You didn't even suggest, hardly demonstrate,that Linux techs get 450k more than windows techs, and
    2. The 450k does not go out of the country to Microsoft Bill. That 450k goes to people who are employed in Munich, who pay taxes in Munich, and patronize businesses in Munich.

    1. Re:It's not always about saving. by dave87656 · · Score: 1

      Good point -- the money stays in Munich (or at least in country) and when Munich is up and running, there will be other cities which will follow and Munich will be able to leverage their software, experience and investment in other cities.

      BTW, where did the 450k number come from?

  46. AD Networks make it easy on Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ActiveDirectory Networks make managing 100's of 1,000's of seats easy!

    (E.G.-> SIEMENS is doing it, with over 420,000++ Windows machines, over 130 international business units, & in 190 Countries, for example).

    APK

    P.S.=> That said & aside (including the fact that EVERYONE KNOWS Windows makes "volume mgt." of seats/units of servers + workstations down to the departmental server & workstation level a snap)? You're NOT going to get it "easier than that" on Linux...

    ... apk

    1. Re:AD Networks make it easy on Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just fuck right off, you boring cunt.

    2. Re:AD Networks make it easy on Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Such an intelligent reply (not). Go away now, little troll - shoo!

  47. 35 large companies using Windows successfully by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    XEROX: Managing 7++ million transactions a day for office devices for its customers using Windows Server 2003 + SQLServer 2005 64-bit with 99.999% uptime!

    NASDAQ: The U.S.' LARGEST STOCK EXCHANGE, Since 2005 has had Windows Server 2003 + SQLServer 2005 in failover clusters running the "official trade data dissemination system" for them in 24x7 fabled "5-9's" 99.999% uptime, doing 64,000 transactions PER SECOND (compare London Stock Exchange using Linux @ 3,000 per second)

    FUJIFILM GROUP: Tracks data for its imaging, information, & documentation for its products & services using Windows Server 2003 w/ a custom SAP solution on SQLServer 2005, achieving 99.999% uptime.

    HILTON HOTELS: Manages 1.4 Billion records a day for customers in 1000's of their hotels worldwide - for 370,000 rooms & catering services forecasts (switching from 6 *NIX systems to 1 Windows Server 2003 + SQLServer 2005 clustered failover system using a data warehouse with 7 million rows & 99.998% uptime).

    MEDITERRANEAN SHIPPING COMPANY: Manages & Tracks 7 million containers out of 116 countries daily using Windows Server 2003 + SQLServer 2005 in failover clusters with 99.999% uptime.

    SWISS INTERNATIONAL AIRLINES: Serves 70 airport destinations worldwide, with 6,500 employees + 110 branch offices via Windows Server 2003 & Active Directory.
    with 99.95% uptime (all while growing their business 30% per year). THEIR PREVIOUS LINUX SYSTEM COULD ONLY HANDLE 250 concurrent users - the Windows one handles over 500++ users concurrently/simultaneously!

    UNILEVER: Global consumer good leader, migrated to mySAP on SQLServer 2005 + Windows Server 2003 & scaled UP their operations by over 200% & yet saved money + have 99.999% uptime!

    MOTOROLA: Using System Management Server, Windows Server 2003 & SQLServer 2005 to conduct inventory of 65,000 desktops from a single location (e.g. for system updates corporate & worldwide).

    NISSAN: Uses Windows Server 2003 to manage 50,000 employees' email & calendaring (w/ out VPN, & using Exchange Server 2003) for local AND remote + mobile users.

    TOYOTA MOTOR SALES: Reduced the # of techs needed per dealership (1,000's worldwide) from 7, to 1 using Windows Server 2003.

    SIEMENS: 420,000++ people, 130 business units over 190 countries managed in Windows Active Directory

    REUTERS: Managing 3,000 servers worldwide @ customer sites internationally (using only 4 managers to do so, remotely).

    DELL COMPUTER: Managing 130,000 servers & 100,000 PC's worldside using Windows Server 2003 + 40 million customers' data worldwide.

    LEXIS NEXIS: Searches BILLIONS of documents each second delivering news, legal, & business information.

    HSBC: Deploys System Center solutions to 15,000 Servers worldwide & 300,000 desktops using Windows Server 2003.

    RAYOVAC: Chose Windows Server 2003 over Linux to manage their infrastructure - saving 1 million dollars estimated in software, staffing, & support costs.

    JETTAINER/LUFTHANSA/U.S. AIRWAYS: managing shipping to 3,000 flights to 400 airports every day.

    CONTINENTAL AIRLINES: Manages crew communication systems, log on/log off, schedules, & shifts using Windows Server 2008 worldwide.

    JET BLUE AIRWAYS: Managing 12 million flights & their data annually + ticketing, finance, & personnel too.

    TIMEX: Using Windows + Exchange Server for remote personnel & executives (for their ENTIRE workforce)

    7 ELEVEN STORES: Chose Windows Server 2003 over Linux with a 20% TCO (total cost of ownership savings not only ESTIMATED, but actually REALIZED!), managing 1,000's of in-store servers via AD worldwide.

    STATE OF ILLINOIS GOVERNMENT: Chose Windows Server 2003 over Linux to manage its ENTIRE infrastructure, state-wide, in 1,000's of offices remotely, back to central.

    SWITZE

    1. Re:35 large companies using Windows successfully by jbolden · · Score: 1

      How is this related to my post?

  48. Thought you might find those facts interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See subject-line... they're for you & others reading is all.

    APK

  49. 36 Major Companies VERY PRODUCTIVE on Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They productively make money & stay alive: I added 3 more "biggies"

    Oh - Forgot an important one too - Microsoft themselves, lol! Obvious... "You know the shoes are good, if the maker wears them himself" though, on that note.

    Anyhow/anyways: Here is my edited list in rebuttal to your stating those companies aren't being productive using Windows Servers! I hope you like accurate data (from EWeek Magazine):

    ---

    XEROX: Managing 7++ million transactions a day for office devices for its customers using Windows Server 2003 + SQLServer 2005 64-bit with 99.999% uptime!

    NASDAQ: The U.S.' LARGEST STOCK EXCHANGE, Since 2005 has had Windows Server 2003 + SQLServer 2005 in failover clusters running the "official trade data dissemination system" for them in 24x7 fabled "5-9's" 99.999% uptime, doing 64,000 transactions PER SECOND (compare London Stock Exchange using Linux @ 3,000 per second)

    FUJIFILM GROUP: Tracks data for its imaging, information, & documentation for its products & services using Windows Server 2003 w/ a custom SAP solution on SQLServer 2005, achieving 99.999% uptime.

    HILTON HOTELS: Manages 1.4 Billion records a day for customers in 1000's of their hotels worldwide - for 370,000 rooms & catering services forecasts (switching from 6 *NIX systems to 1 Windows Server 2003 + SQLServer 2005 clustered failover system using a data warehouse with 7 million rows & 99.998% uptime).

    MEDITERRANEAN SHIPPING COMPANY: Manages & Tracks 7 million containers out of 116 countries daily using Windows Server 2003 + SQLServer 2005 in failover clusters with 99.999% uptime.

    SWISS INTERNATIONAL AIRLINES: Serves 70 airport destinations worldwide, with 6,500 employees + 110 branch offices via Windows Server 2003 & Active Directory with 99.95% uptime (all while growing their business 30% per year). THEIR PREVIOUS LINUX SYSTEM COULD ONLY HANDLE 250 concurrent users - the Windows one handles over 500++ users concurrently/simultaneously!

    UNILEVER: Global consumer good leader, migrated to mySAP on SQLServer 2005 + Windows Server 2003 & scaled UP their operations by over 200% & yet saved money + have 99.999% uptime!

    MOTOROLA: Using System Management Server, Windows Server 2003 & SQLServer 2005 to conduct inventory of 65,000 desktops from a single location (e.g. for system updates corporate & worldwide).

    NISSAN: Uses Windows Server 2003 to manage 50,000 employees' email & calendaring (w/ out VPN, & using Exchange Server 2003) for local AND remote + mobile users.

    TOYOTA MOTOR SALES: Reduced the # of techs needed per dealership (1,000's worldwide) from 7, to 1 using Windows Server 2003.

    SIEMENS: 420,000++ people, 130 business units over 190 countries managed in Windows Active Directory

    REUTERS: Managing 3,000 servers worldwide @ customer sites internationally (using only 4 managers to do so, remotely).

    DELL COMPUTER: Managing 130,000 servers & 100,000 PC's worldside using Windows Server 2003 + 40 million customers' data worldwide.

    LEXIS NEXIS: Searches BILLIONS of documents each second delivering news, legal, & business information.

    HSBC: Deploys System Center solutions to 15,000 Servers worldwide & 300,000 desktops using Windows Server 2003.

    RAYOVAC: Chose Windows Server 2003 over Linux to manage their infrastructure - saving 1 million dollars estimated in software, staffing, & support costs.

    JETTAINER/LUFTHANSA/U.S. AIRWAYS: managing shipping to 3,000 flights to 400 airports every day.

    CONTINENTAL AIRLINES: Manages crew communication systems, log on/log off, schedules, & shifts using Windows Server 2008 worldwide.

    JET BLUE AIRWAYS: Managing 12 million flights & their data annually + ticketing, finance, & personnel too.

    TIMEX: Using Windows + Exchange Server for remote personnel & exec

  50. Re:check your facts sir. by unixisc · · Score: 1

    Google runs on Linux b'cos when they started, Linux was already mature enough to host what they needed. There was no migration of apps from Windows, the way there is w/ all these government agencies in Europe. So starting w/ a clean slate, it was relatively easy to make the choice.

    Incidentally, does Google use a Debian or RedHat or other based distro for its servers (I'm not asking about Android, which I know is Gentoo based)? Did they ever do an analysis of that vs any of the BSDs?

  51. Re:what an incredibly expensive way to not sav emo by dave87656 · · Score: 1

    Thanks! That reflects our experience. Our system is java based and most of the machines are linux. I write the software and manager the linux boxes. For the few Windows boxes we have we have another admin who manages those. Essentially the time needed to manage 10 Windows PCs is significantly higher than the time needed to manage 100+ linux boxes.

  52. Re:what an incredibly expensive way to not sav emo by dave87656 · · Score: 1

    Compared to windows techs, linux techs get more money

    Not sure where that came from but Windows techs need more schooling to keep up with the MS products required to do their job. The Linux admin can usually deal with most network and admin issues due to the more straightforward approach Linux has. I believe freebsd is even easier to maintain than linux.

  53. I can confirm a few of those.... With Windows itse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The firm I am in (and as probably all firm do) are way way behind in term of hardware and software. WinXP with 256 MB and processor slow as hell (5 to 8 year old computers). The results is that log in tend to take a long time during which the worker read newspaper. They have replaced the computer with new PC + win 7 and cloud connection. The PC boot up *fast* and switch off fast. Discuting with one of the admin he thinks in average people win 10 to 15 minutes every day. Multiply by 700+ persons that 110 to 175 hours per day. Even if only 1/3 was used for work, with a total cost of 100â per hour, that come down to 4000 euro to 6000 euor per work day that the firm spare.

  54. Re:Slashdot Poll, Slashdot Poll, The Best... by RockDoctor · · Score: 1
    If only they hit the new low from a great height.

    "Terminal Velocity" is a great concept - you don't need to reach such great heights to achieve the full effect.

    --
    Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  55. Great to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's good to see these success stories surface. GNU/Linux "just works", as those that have actually used it along with Windows already know. I waste a huge amount of time troubleshooting Windows than I do for GNU/Linux. GNU/Linux allows everybody to get back to work, rather than troubleshooting Windows problems all of the time. I've not only migrated myself and every PC in my house to GNU/Linux, but other relatives as well. A huge sigh of relief from all of us, not having to deal with constant problems, issues, malware, and every other Windows problem that arises.

  56. Re:what an incredibly expensive way to not sav emo by SuperQ · · Score: 1

    See, you're completely ignoring the point of my question to crow about how good you are at supporting 250 users all by your lonesome.

    At a 10,000 employee company you don't have a single support person. Do you count the internal portal developer's time spent debugging a firefox on linux issue with a vendor provided app? Do you count them as well spending time fixing IE on windows? Or is that just part of the job of supporting the vendor provided app. When your're talking about accounting "desktop support" in a large network there are many non-obvious or partial admin tasks.

    Even in your tiny research lab I'm sure there are a dozen people who are self sufficient in some way and possibly even help other people in their group. Do you count them?