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GM ponders Linux for 7,500 Dealers

Hedonick writes "Seems like a combination of maturity on Linux behalf and bloat on Microsofts part has prompted GM to investigate the possibility of replacing their NT based solution with a Linux based for it's dealerships according to ComputerWorld The whole plan seems to be a bit tentative at the moment but the guy they interviewed, David E. Hutka, is the operations manager for GM:s dealership network and makes some good points on why Linux would be a good (and bad) choice." Unfortunately, it looks like they have a lot of legacy code that may require porting, but it's still good news.

136 comments

  1. Re:Solution to downsizing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    Bingo, but they'll fire people first.

    We did budgeting, and they cut pretty deep this year. Eventually, they started telling the managers that they cut, period. Take jobs if you have to.

    This in the same week I was told to ditch 3 linux/postgres/apache servers that cost $700 ea and replace them with Sun/Oracle/Netscape servers that cost $7000 ea. 500 days uptime, flawless performance... Dump 'em. Dump 'em now. Then, off to another meeting where we find that "we expect" to "pay a little more" because we have to get ready for W2K. Actually, it was alot more once they got to the numbers.

  2. 5year conversion so far by crablouie · · Score: 2

    "But a mission-critical application like this really has to work the first time, and there
    can't be any conversion issues. "

    They've been converting from text based applications you could use from any client provided by any vendor to win95 clients for 5 years now and it's still not done. And if the satellite uplink is down at the end of the month when you are required to transmit Info, the backup is fax and voice.

    So it'll take 10 years to turn back.

    --
    I think so, Brain. But where will we get a duck and a rubber hose at this time of night? --Pinky
  3. adp by The+Queen · · Score: 1

    My question is how do they (or do they even NEED to?) convert their ADP machines? My company has been dealing with a large dealership out here and we've been trying to convince them to have their own inventory server in the dealership, but we run into a brick wall when trying to convert the ADP stuff...although I think that has more to do with the actual code conversion than the hardware/software/OS...
    The Divine Creatrix in a Mortal Shell that stays Crunchy in Milk

    --

    The House Between - Original Sci-Fi Series
  4. Re:Gee, I didn't realize Linux was fragmented! by TummyX · · Score: 1

    Explain to me how

    3.1/OLE/95/ActiveX/95.b/Office97/IE4/98/IE5/

    means fragmentation? It's technology moving along. And OLE2==ActiveX.

    You're an idiot.

  5. Re:The right thing for the wrong reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uhh...how do you explain the 386/4MB stated minimum requirements for Win95?

  6. Reasons for vehicle choice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow! You're going to base your next vehicle purchase on which operating system the dealer ordering applications use?!!?

    I feel sorry for the marketing departments...which is a first for anyone working at Ford like me!

    ac.uk

  7. Re:...and Microsoft sends out the account calvary by MaggieL · · Score: 1
    It was a traditional IBM sales tactic. One reason you never let the IBM rep know what you were up to, back in the mainframe days.

    And I'm sure that's where the Microsofties learned it, too..

    --
    -=Maggie Leber=-
  8. Can Linuxcare handle 7500 car dealers? by florin · · Score: 2

    The article is very tentative, the guy hasn't even passed on the idea to his boss let alone received positive feedback on it. Frankly I have a feeling this idea is going to strand somewhere in the higher echelons of GM.

    It would be a shame. Linux itself is surely up to the task, even if the support structure has yet to be tested. By thinking this over thoroughly now and doing it properly, in the long run this can save tons of money. You will need to invest massively in training your own people and you will need to secure commitment from the support company that they will be up to the task. There are bound to be a great many non technical users among 7500 car dealerships, you can bet Linuxcare or whichever support they'll get is going to have to hire a lot of people to be able to deal with a customer like that.

    It's going to cost a lot of money to do this properly, but not having to pay for 7500 dealerships worth of Win 2000 licenses gives you some spare change to start out with. Of course switching to Linux is a little harder than to another Windows, initially, but eventually the whole thing will be in place and then you start to win. No more paying an OS upgrade license for every employee every 3 years, instead, indefinite upgrades for nothing but the cost of the work of your own IT dept. And then all the other benefits like having the source, reliability, security, etc.

  9. Low cost...? by Moxen · · Score: 2

    I'd like to know just exactly how "low cost" Linux _is_ in terms of maintenance. I've set up NT and Linux boxes, and every time, it was quicker to prop up... er... set up NT. Of course, flexibility is a minimum, and so on.

    But how to they propose having someone with enough of a clue in every dealership to get/keep this running? Office personnel that use computers daily don't even know what directories are anymore. And they expect that car salesman will do this without a problem...?

    Face it, NT has more people to whine to, setup geared toward the complete idiot and little dancing paperclips that explain, in monosyllabic words, exactly what you should be doing.

    GM might just need a big enough kick to get their asses moving into a constructive direction (i.e. Linux), but I seriously doubt that they'll be getting it from upper management.

    Still, it's fantastic that Linux is getting this kind of press-- even if they're only considering it, it makes smaller non-legacy companies look toward it very favourably.

    char *death_knell = "If we could change over quickly, if might make sense";

    1. Re:Low cost...? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The NT systems are probably just turnkey systems where the guys in the dealerships don't have to know anything about the OS to actually use it. The IT staff at headquarters have it set up so the only options available are to run the programs that they want the guys in the dealerships to get at. The same would be true for a Linux deployment. Do you think the guys in retail chains that use SCO servers know Unix commands?

    2. Re:Low cost...? by Bombcar · · Score: 1

      Another question .... how much does 10,000 copies of windows NT cost....... That there be an awful lot of maintenance....
      http://www.bombcar.com It's where it is at.

  10. Re:...and Microsoft sends out the account calvary by DaveHowe · · Score: 1

    I think Microsoft knows that once a single IT manager at a Fortune 500 company proves that Linux is far faster/cheaper/better than Windows then it's all down hill for Windows from there, so I'm sure Microsoft is sending the FUD calvary to GM as you read this.
    I suspect the Vanguard are already there - note the standard "If you don't have one huge Vendor in control, it will fragment" FUDdishment in the article as an example.

    --
    -=DaveHowe=-
  11. Sounds like a clueless wannabe to me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Intelligence, knowledge and intuition have nothing to do with the job requirements of an executive. You just have to have a brown nose and a degree from a big school.

    Words that only an envious, er, ah, non-executive could speak so cheerily.

    1. Re:Sounds like a clueless wannabe to me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you dont have anything intelligent to contribute, please just keep your mouth shut. someone with Intelligence, Knowledge and intuition would know better than make blanket judgements about someone you dont even know.

    2. Re:Sounds like a clueless wannabe to me. by blazer1024 · · Score: 1

      Wannabe? Hah. I think not. I want to be a programmer. I am a programmer. I am an artist. I live to create. I make computer games. What do you do?

  12. Re:Uh, DOES Linux Support Visual Basic? by mgreenwood · · Score: 1

    I thought I remember downloading a VB Tool for Linux (perhaps a look alike). But that was about 2 years ago. At that point in time it had just come out... Does this ring a bell with anyone else?

  13. Linux stability will drop... =( by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You see, there are trillions of drivers out there for Windows -- and a LOT of them are buggy. Obviously Linux is more stable now because there are less drivers and most are Open Source (preventing buginess). But as more and more proprietary (and buggy) drivers arrive on the shores of Linux, stability will start to wane... Not nice to hear, but still true...

  14. Re:The revolution has begun. by angelo · · Score: 1

    Last time I KP'ed was when I changed kernels and forgot to run lilo to update my boot map. I laughed at myself, rebooted, held left shift, and typed in "old"

    Then I ran lilo and rebooted.

    I've had sig11's in the past, but one was due to CAS latency in my ram (during compiles no less - mem intensive...) which was set wrong by the mobo dealer (it came placed in the motherboard, they should have tested everything, but that is an easy one to miss) The only other time I get sig11's is running buggy code, so I guess that's not the fault of linux, nor is it a KP, since it is caught.

  15. It Never Ends by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The thing you seem to miss is this: with M$ "solutions" it never ends!

    Fine for you to say "but switching OS' will be much more expensive", but
    that kind of thinking is very short-sighted. (Common of typical U.S.
    managers, btw.)

    Here's a mind-boggling thought: how about fixing the problem (which
    is, after all, M$ itself) once and being done with it?

    Or does that make too much sense?

  16. Re:...and Microsoft sends out the account calvary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "If you don't have one huge Vendor in control, it will fragment"

    Heh heh.. funny how the car industry manages to continue without one company dominating 90+% of the market.

  17. Re:Uh, DOES Linux Support Visual Basic? by angelo · · Score: 1

    Their backend is going to be web-based, and they were planning on using linux to run the office, and not as a desktop system. The interface was user-side.

  18. The revolution has begun. by CocaCola · · Score: 1

    The advantages for bigger shops to switch to Linux is simply too huge to be ignored. Even if they have promotional agreements with Microsoft which buys them license discounts up to 60%, NT is still way too expensive - both the license and maintainance. The artificial Microsoft application barrier has now been destroyed by Linux in the server and NOS market, and now it's time for Linux to wash NT out of the landscape.

    --
    --Coke
    1. Re:The revolution has begun. by raffe · · Score: 1

      If you donnt watch what you are doing you can have HUGE maintainance costs with linux as well. A kernel panic at the wrong time is NOt nice...trust me on that!

    2. Re:The revolution has begun. by smartin · · Score: 1

      I've never had a kernel panic in 4 years of running Linux on many machines, both intel and sparc. I don't think this is an issue.

      --
      The difference between Canada and the USA is that in Canada healthcare is a right and gun ownership is a privilege.
    3. Re:The revolution has begun. by moelester · · Score: 1

      I recently went into the parts department in my local gm dealer, and they were using an ultra 5 running solaris. De ja vu?

    4. Re:The revolution has begun. by PigleT · · Score: 1

      Nor is a BSOD...
      ~Tim
      --

      --
      ~Tim
      --
      .|` Clouds cross the black moonlight,
      Rushing on down to the circle of the turn
    5. Re:The revolution has begun. by Uart · · Score: 1

      In the past year, since I have switched to using Linux 60% of the time and Windblows 40% of the time I have seen many many BSODs and not one Kernel Panic, EVER.

      --

      Opinionated Law Student Strikes Again!
  19. Uh, DOES Linux Support Visual Basic? by g1dlc · · Score: 1

    It sounds like this is the primary issue for them. If they can easily port their apps, it becomes a no brainer.

    1. Re:Uh, DOES Linux Support Visual Basic? by esh · · Score: 1
      Yes indeed there was Visual Basic support about 2 years ago. It was by a company called VBIX and they used to advertise in Linux Journal.

      On their web page they say, they have discontinued support for VBIX but the provide something called Instant Converter

      I have no experience with either of them and can't comment on how well they work.

      --
      -- ESH
    2. Re:Uh, DOES Linux Support Visual Basic? by DaveHowe · · Score: 2

      It sounds like this is the primary issue for them. If they can easily port their apps, it becomes a no brainer.
      I don't know of any easy port path from VB to any of the Linux compilers - presumably a major point in this decision is the work involved.
      However, I DO note that they say that their future applications are "web based". If the suit really means Java or CGI, the platform becomes less important.
      Unfortunately, this being true, there is more chance they will stick with something like a Windows 9x machine (or keep the existing machines) and go for a large backend app server with thin-client stuff on the dealer's machines.
      I am naturally suspicious of this sort of press; it always looks to me like a big company trying to lever more concessions from MS than genuine interest in the platform....

      --
      -=DaveHowe=-
  20. Open minds... just what we need by rde · · Score: 3

    In the long term, pretty much everyone's better of using Linux over NT, and while most people here know it, it's good to see the Fortune One taking an interest.
    The point I found interesting is that one of the things that makes this evaluation possible is the fact that GM is going web-based.
    <prediction>
    this is going to happen more and more as people realise that they need to go the web route, and while they're on the way, they might as well try out an OS that won't cost them anything and won't fall over
    </prediction>

    1. Re:Open minds... just what we need by raffe · · Score: 1

      If they go web it doesnt matter what clients they have...thats the point of the web. So they can use linux and thats what you wrote....so what the hell am i writing this for....ehhh...(sigh)

  21. Sounds like a clueless suit to me. by yorkie · · Score: 1

    Some of his comments seem to indicate he does not know what he is talking about.

    How come so many large companies hire ignorant executives??

    1. Re:Sounds like a clueless suit to me. by Fish+Man · · Score: 1

      How come so many large companies hire ignorant executives??

      Some of us were discussing this on lunch break the other day.

      I came up with a theory, which I also feel helps explain the huge gap in pay-scale between upper execs and workers.

      It has to do with why and how Upper executives are hired.

      In the vast majority of companies, the founder (and first CEO) tend to be smart and know what they are doing, if they weren't, they wouldn't have been able to build a sucessfull company.

      However, how do they usually decide who to hire for other upper level positions? They hire their friends, relatives, old school mates, the guy who is lucky enough to marry the CEO's daughter/sister, or whatever. These decisions are made based on friendships and relationships, not ability, competence or merit. This is what is known as the "good-ole-boy network". Put another way, "It's not what you know, it's who you know."

      Once the original founder of a company retires or dies, he will likely be replaced via the promotion of one of his relitives or buddies that he hired for an executive position, or by one of his children. This replacement may or may not be adequately qualified.

      Lower level positions, OTOH, are filled based on actual job qualifications, by people the upper level suits never knew, and therefore, are usually genuinely qualified for their job.

      Now, to get this post back ON TOPIC: :-)

      I wouldn't be so quick to call David Hutka a "clueless suit". After all, he's looking at Linux, as opposed to just automatically worshiping at the alter of Bill Gates!

    2. Re:Sounds like a clueless suit to me. by blazer1024 · · Score: 1

      That is a very good question. My guess would be that they are rich in the first place, and their mommies and daddies paid to send them to Harvard. They get their MBA's and such, and the guys who are already up there see those guys, and automatically like them because they went to Harvard as well, so they hire them simply because they are from the same soil. Intelligence, knowledge and intuition have nothing to do with the job requirements of an executive. You just have to have a brown nose and a degree from a big school.

  22. Unreliable? buggy? what ditchweed are you smoking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmmm. Why are you even lurking at /. ? The linux servers I have setup have been unbelievably stable. Could you be more specific?

  23. Big Deal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2
    "At this point, we haven't committed any resources, and I haven't taken the next step of convincing upper management that that's the way to go yet."

    I mean, it's nice the guy is the operations manager for their dealer network, but this is really a non-story. Or maybe the story is that a year ago this would have been a huge story, but now, I think it's hohum because I'm only interested when linux gets actually deployed in the Real World[tm].

    1. Re:Big Deal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      This is a big deal. Six months ago, would this guy have even *heard* of Linux, let alone be stating *in public* that they're thinking of going that way?

      This is what's known as "generating leverage". He sends this to the press, then sees what he gets back from MS by way of conversion help.

      Long story short, GM won't go Linux, but that's just because they're morons and MS will do the conversion for 'em.

  24. I work for A BIG AUTO COMPANY by imneuromancer · · Score: 1

    And beleive me, this is a big thing. For the stupid suits to even CONSIDER linux is a big deal. No really, I mean it. The current thinking is that NT is the NEXT BEST THING even thought they have a lot of UNIX infrastructure. idiots.

    So yeah, this IS a big story.

  25. Re:GM is familiar with Unix based solutions by crablouie · · Score: 1

    THose solutions are provided by Bell & Howell and Reynolds & Reynolds. And they work great. GM's inhouse solutions are lousy and slow (windows).

    --
    I think so, Brain. But where will we get a duck and a rubber hose at this time of night? --Pinky
  26. Re:Obviously no by Aaron · · Score: 1

    Yes, Office for Mac supports VBA in Excel and Word. How well it works, i dont know...

  27. I have good and bad feelings about this by Hollins · · Score: 2

    I really like to see large-scale Linux deployments, like Burlington is doing and GM is pondering. It strengthens the OS by moving it toward critical mass, but I fear it could hurt Linux, also. Companies may now start developing distros with programs added in that were developed in-house and which are not GPL. Ultimately, this could ultimately fragment Linux. Of course, there's no real alternative to advocating the adoption of Linux, it's a great platform and a terrific object lesson of the advantages to free, open-source software.

    If more of these big deployments take place, I am in the minority of those who wouldn't be surprised if Microsoft comes out with its own Linux distribution, one that will gradually become incompatible with all the others. Corporate execs who used to believe 'no one ever got fired for buying IBM' now think the same of Microsoft, which is in a position to force proprietary standards (what an oxymoron) on the market. MS may make Linux its next assimilation target.

    However, in spite of what we'd like to think, I don't think Linux is scaring the Redmond crowd yet, but that will change quickly if they starting losing chunks of business.

    I keep thinking of a penguin waddling up to a sleeping, 800 pound gorilla and nudging it in the stomach. At that point, the gorilla wakes long enough to roll over and smother the bird before falling back asleep.

    1. Re:I have good and bad feelings about this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The big issue that this post doesn't address is that, because the linux kernel is GPL, nobody can release a linux variant that's proprietary. *Any* code that's based on the current kernel code *must* be GPL. A commercial interest would be foolhardy to test the legality of their own closed-source version of a linux kernel against the GPL.

      So, the kernel (and, likely, the base apps) probably wouldn't fragment a whole lot. (At least, not a whole lot more than distributions already have fragmented....)

  28. Re:Switch to Linux - save $2,000,000 by Thomas+Charron · · Score: 1

    They do NOT pay that. Bulk licences bring the cost for them to like 500,000$.

    --
    -- I'm the root of all that's evil, but you can call me cookie..
  29. Re:Hard drive space!?! by llywrch · · Score: 2

    >Geez... "We don't have enough hard drive space"? ..."We don't have enough memory"? Go buy a couple of 27gig drives for each machine, up them to
    >512 megs of memory.

    You're kidding, right? What you're specing out are resources more appropriate for a server than a client. (Then maybe we all need Crays to read our email! ;-)

    In case you're serious, GM has in the neighborhood of 40,000 dealers across the US. A 27 gig drive would set you back maybe $700 each. 512MB of memory maybe $500. That comes to 48 million dollars; say GM gets a 15% discount for buying volume, it's still more than $40 million.

    If someone could walk in with an alternative OS & application, using the same existing hardware & drop a new solution for 4 or 5 million, that's a big win. Careers have been made on stuff like that.


    Geoff

    --
    I think I see a trend here. Maybe for them it really would be easier to muzzle the entire internet than to produce p
  30. Re:The right thing for the wrong reason by Thomas+Charron · · Score: 1

    Not only that, but newer updates TO a distro won't automagically require a newer machine. What's Win2k's minimum, a PII350 with like 128 megs and 8 meg video? And yet even the newest of Linux distro's will still run perfectly fine (albiet slower) on a 386/25.. ;-P

    --
    -- I'm the root of all that's evil, but you can call me cookie..
  31. Don't forget the office apps by BooRadley · · Score: 1

    + ~$200 to $2500 for various MicroSoft Applications per machine.

    Office
    Publisher
    Outlook
    Exchange
    Proxy
    SQL Server

    --

    -- lk t lv ll th vwls t f wrds. T svs lts f tm t wrt bt ts pn n th ss t rd nd mks m lk lk cmplt dpsht.

    1. Re:Don't forget the office apps by Grotz · · Score: 1

      Keep in mind that bulk licenses from MS are a little less than half of what you'd pay retail. Still, it's a lot of money.

  32. Re:The right thing for the wrong reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    > he seems to feel sympathy for Linux and be making up the reasons afterwards.

    Really? That's not the way I read it at all. I believe he's got some learning
    ahead of him, but I think he's also identified a problem and a possible solution.

    GM ought to give the guy a bonus just for having the courage to think
    outside the box like this, IMO.

  33. Good thing Microsoft is preventing fragmentation! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2


    Otherwise, you'd have things like one operating system supporting Unicode only, one system supporting both, and one system supporting Ansi. You'd have to code with special macros and compile for different operating systems! Plus people might accidentally save a file in Unicode and discover that their system doesn't understand it!

    Plus, you would have programs that only work on one flavor of windows (I'm sure glad my Hasbro Scrabble game works on Win 95/98 only!). You might even get situations where you buy Windows off-the-shelf and get a different version than what you'd get if you bought a new PC with Windows installed from the very same store.

    I feel so cozy knowing that Microsoft is there to prevent stuff like that happening.

  34. Re:thats business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think its good business to wine and dine your clients...This is something Red Hat needs to learn.

  35. Re:VB apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    rewrite the server part in java. Yesterday we finished a VB win client +Linux w/java server works like a charm.

    hire _good_ consultants following yesterday's discussion, the good ones will get the porting done in record time and train the GM people to web based (alright intranet based) app deployment.

    I see BIG savings in the future for GM by moving java + linux on the server (and consulting fees for me;-)

    AC

  36. Instant Basic for Java, VBIX etc.. by mgreenwood · · Score: 1

    VBIX is what I was thinking of. Unfortunately VBIX is a discontinued product...

    http://www.vbix.com/prods/discontinued.h tm

  37. Re:complacency by Rupert · · Score: 1

    They have tried. It's called Embedded NT and it is really, really horrible.

    Actually, I lied. They didn't try at all. They just bought it from VenturCom, who had broken NT into bits to avoid loading all the irrelevant stuff that standard NT brings with it.

    My experience is that it runs in exactly the same memory footprint at about half the speed. But it takes much less disk space.

    Rupert

    --

    --
    E_NOSIG
  38. Re:That old chestnut ? by bmetzler · · Score: 2
    A: It's not controlled by one company, and fragmentation can occur. Why do they keep coming out with this one ? Surely GM, of all people, would understand the advantages and even necessity of not being tied to a single vendor ?

    Exactly. That's the first thing I noticed too. GM gets their parts from a number of different manufacturers, they should realize they strength of being able to swap parts without being dependent on a single manufacturer. Whether it's spark plugs, or it's an OS. Look at the problems they are going to have now because they used VB.

    And although the Linux platform is arguably fragmented, that only affects desktop applications where a company sells a product that could go on dozens of different configurations. Used in a server environment, fragmantation is not a problem. What they need to do is to evaluate a few distributions and determine which one meets their needs best. Say for instance they decide it's Red Hat. Now all they do is make sure that their app continues to run on Red Hat. It doesn't matter if all the other distributions decide to do something completely different because that won't affect how it runs on Red Hat. All they need to be concerned about is what Red Hat does with their distribution. And even if Red Hat changes it a bit so that GM has to make some modifications to keep their app running, I'm sure it won't nearly be the upgrade path that Microsoft has forced on us with DOS -> Windows 3.x -> Windows 95 -> Windows NT -> Windows 2000 -> 64 bit Windows.

    Another thing that I hate is the claim that the Server OS platform was fragmented. It was less fragmented the Windows is, IMHO. If I wanted to develop an app for Solaris, it ran fine on Solaris, no matter what AIX was like. However, is my customers wanted to run the app on another platform, which do you think was easier to port my app too? NT or AIX? Which do you think I would consider doing first?

    I wrote an essay on the fragmentation in OS's. It might fit well in here.

    -Brent
    --
  39. Uphill struggle for applications by Bozdune · · Score: 5

    I've looked hard at porting applications to Linux from Microsoft platforms, mostly VB apps. It's a bitch. There's no VB equivalent for Linux (I know there's some activity on this front), and I'm not aware of an easy porting path (if anyone knows one, comment, please).

    There is no question that Linux is a more stable platform than any Microsoft platform. We've been installing Linux machines for our clients whenever we can -- Linux is much easier to work with. However, for GM to convert all those machines over to Linux doesn't make much sense to me. Not only do all of the VB apps have to be rewritten, but also most of the third-party software packages that this guy *thinks* he'd like to add are probably written for Windows (WINE advocates: I can't see my local GM dealer putting up with an "80% working" application under WINE, can you?).

    Finally, are this guy's motivations (running out of disk space) silly, or is it just me? He could solve his problem by spending $200 at each store to upgrade to a larger hard drive and maybe to install more memory (DriveCopy does a very nice job of cloning hard drives, small --> large). It would probably cost him another $200 per store to hire a nationwide third-party service organization to visit all his dealerships and perform the upgrade. But at the end of it, he'd have what he needs: working systems with plenty of elbow room to grow.

    (Yes, he could take the $400 and probably buy a better PC than he has right now. But I'm assuming he'd rather not IPL them all, install software on them all, burn them in, and so on, which will cost at least another $400 per machine to stage, not including shipping and installation at the dealer.)

    If he converts to Linux, he has a huge problem on his hand: not only does he need to rewrite all his applications and do all that expensive staging above, but then at the end of the whole process (assuming it all works) he'll have to explain on a daily basis to his bonehead management how come the XYZ Inventory Control System doesn't run on his machines (his boss spots the XYZ ad in Useless American Cars Weekly, for example).

    Ouch.

    1. Re:Uphill struggle for applications by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      We face smiilar issues, not so much because
      the "mission critical" applications don't run on linux (they do quite well thank you), but because almost all the paperwork we have to generate is expected in word format (yes i know about applix, starr-office word perfect etc, but things like embedded equations and forms don't transform very well). The solution we're examining is to have one or two of our linux boxes run VMware with windoze on that. I think we'll get the best of both worlds -linux reliability and running windoz only when we absolutely need it without reboots.
      Has anyone done something like this?

      rob
      robert.harrison@acm.org

    2. Re:Uphill struggle for applications by AT · · Score: 2

      I've looked hard at porting applications to Linux from Microsoft platforms, mostly VB apps. It's a bitch. There's no VB equivalent for Linux (I know there's some activity on this front), and I'm not aware of an easy porting path (if anyone knows one, comment, please).

      That is the price you pay for developing with a platform specific tool like VB. Unfortunately, no good cross-platform VB-like RAD tool has acheived wide use. Delphi has potential if Borland/Inprise ports it. I'd also recommend looking at Visual TCL.

  40. Linux is new? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux is a new product? Compared to what? Windows 95? No, Windows 95 is significantly newer than Linux. Compared to Windows NT? When did NT come out?

    Compared to DOS, the kernel that Windows runs under? Well, Linux is based on Unix and Unix has been around since 1969.

    Still, the guy is right, Linux does not yet have a substantial long-term track record.

    1. Re:Linux is new? by jtn · · Score: 1

      Linux is not based on Unix. Linux is a Unix clone, taking elements from both BSD and System V. Don't make a huge senseless leap of logic to presume that Linux has been around since 1969.

    2. Re:Linux is new? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read the dude's comment first before flaming him. He didn't say Linux had been around since 1969. Also, if Linux is not based on Unix, WTF is it based on -- CP/M?

  41. Ploy on GMs part? by JordanH · · Score: 1

    You don't usually see things in the press about such nebulous possibilities this far in advance.

    I wouldn't be at all surprised if this wasn't a ploy on GMs part to get serious concessions from MS on licensing and possibly even support.

    Ultimately, one of the really great benefits to Linux will be providing MS serious competition. This can only serve to make MS more responsive.

  42. Just replace the NT Server by crablouie · · Score: 1

    All those VB apps run on a win95 client. The server just has databases and communication. The apps won't even run a NT client.

    --
    I think so, Brain. But where will we get a duck and a rubber hose at this time of night? --Pinky
  43. Re:I agree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think that if linux gets as big as NT it will start getting unstable.

  44. Samba the Server by crablouie · · Score: 2

    The VB apps are all on win95 clients with data and communications on the server.

    GM's Access project has huge problems on their hands now because it just doesn't work now. They've spent five years rolliing it out and it's still a joke compared to the way the dealers communcated with them before.

    --
    I think so, Brain. But where will we get a duck and a rubber hose at this time of night? --Pinky
  45. Re:Hard drive space!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you think you can rewrite all of their VB apps for 4-5 million, then bid the job. As for the prices: 27.3GB IBM DeskStar GXP 7200rpm 9ms w/3yr (IBM31L9058) $395.00 (owcomputing.com) The memory I would suspect, for 512MB, would cost more than $500, more like $800. As for the total cost, I don't know where you get 40,000 dealers. The article mentions 7500 dealers. If it's 1PC per dealer - that comes to about $9 million. If they just care about disks, it's less than half than. The point is, don't just swithch OS's if it's the hardware that's the problem. As for MS forcing you to upgrade to win2k - don't let them. If it works now, don't fix it. If linux is a better solution, then use it. But don't do it because your cheap on the hardware.

  46. Chrysler and Win, Unix, etc... by Superfreak · · Score: 4

    I work for a group of DaimlerChrysler dealerships, and I find this development *potentially* interesting. For years, Chrysler has had a SCO based server in every dealership. Apart from some application bugginess on their side, the servers are reliable and stable.

    However - They went with NT Workstation clients for the MDSII diagnostic system. I suspect a lack of beta testing and a few other items have contributed to continual problems with the things. They went web-based (using Java), and the stability just is not there. The clients crash as a matter of routine, and it took 6 months (here at least) to even get the machines to run the training software without crashing on lesson 3. I would *really* like to see someone give this a try for several reasons:

    Longer hardware cycles - without NT crippling the machine, a *nix based client could last longer between upgrade/replacement.

    Of course, Linux (*nix in general) has the advantage of being a lot more robust typically. We use a Linux proxy (squid) for web connect and other things, and it basically only gets rebooted with power outages. It's more or less the same with the other Non windows/*nix boxes around here (Irix, SCO, Solaris)

    Yes, there are a lot of relatively computer illiterate people out in the dealerships, but I see this as *more* of a reason to go with Linux. If the OS is rock solid, support primarily consists of application issues. That throws a lot of tech support calls out right there.

    Finally, to those saying "buy more hard drives" and calculating $250 savings on Windows licenses, don't forget that it takes a lot less server (IMHO) to do the work with Linux. Add to that that Linux is better at multiple tasks, and you may very well wind up saving the cost of extra servers too. Where you might need 3 $10k Win servers to run web, database, e-mail, proxy, blah blah blah...one solid $5k Linux machine will probably do.


    Finally, I expect dealerships to become *very* interested in systems that are more open than traditional proprietary solutions. Getting information between the in-house system, the manufacturers system, and the dealership's internal network should be easier...and it can be.
    Oops...sorry - that got a bit long winded.

    1. Re:Chrysler and Win, Unix, etc... by mgscheue · · Score: 1

      I work for DaimlerChrysler's Technical Computer Center and it's clear that the value of Open Source is becoming apparent to more and more people. Big companies are conservative by nature, but I only need to compare the reaction I got several years ago when I suggested that we offer a Perl class (that's non-standard!) to the very positive response I got this year, and the great turnout we had. I see that Learning Perl is number two for the company on Amazon's "buying circle" (or whatever it's called). We also have some Apache servers internally and Linux boxen here and there.

      Granted, there is still a great deal of resistance, confusion, and FUD (I heard one manager from a different part of the company say we don't use "freeware", as he incorrectly called it, because we'd be hosed if the author got hit by a truck), but the tide is turning and a lot of people are becoming very interested.

  47. That's what I said! by Greyfox · · Score: 1

    And it got all the MS Employees who read /. up in arms. Yes sir, many an anonymous coward flamed me for spreading FUD. Apparently MS can't take it nearly as well as they dish it out. Happens to be true though ;-)

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  48. Wine, VBRUNxxx.DLL and Linux by Sleepy · · Score: 1

    Wine is an application that really, really interests me. I haven't used it much at all, I'm sad to say. I've had some difficulty determining if apps fail because of something I did not configure correctly (the right switches for example), or if the app just can't run. I admit I'm a bit lazy and busy and haven't spent enough time on trial and error either...

    What was I saying now..? Oh yeah, from a layman's perspective, it would seem like vbrun.dll compatability would be a major milestone for the project. I used to program in Visual Basic (and before that another cool gui builder called GFA BASIC on the Atari ST). VB was great in it's early days.. it went downhill FAST after version 4, and I know many agree.

    Still, VB is used to create a lot of applications, especially in the corporate arena. Many commercial applications are written in VB, including some customer and call-tracking software, etc. The Massachusettes Department of Revenue has downloadable software for electronic filing of your taxes that's built with VB, which I managed to get running under Virtual PC because they don't support Mac or Linux.

    I know vbrun.dll is really just a runtime and an interface to the bigger 0win16 and win32 API and so there are bigger issues than "just 1 .dll", but it's be nice to know say vbrun400.dll is 97% compliant, vbrun600.dll is 45% compliant, etc. If people can easily research where they stand conversion is easier to consider or truly does become a no-brainer..

    1. Re:Wine, VBRUNxxx.DLL and Linux by aUser · · Score: 1

      I've posted comments pointing to that problem several times already, and I'm happy that at least one person seems to see it too.

      VB, as much as quite a number slashdotters may despise it, hate it, belittle it, seems to be the method of choice for corporations around the world to develop their "automated custom office procedures".

      I'm saying "method" and not "programming language". The idea that you can keep everything as simple as possible by visually painting control on a form or a report, and to bind them against a data source, or an object model, is most popular approach to developing these "automated procedures". Furthermore, the code that you then end up to write is syntax coloured, code completion-aided and visually debuggeable.

      In my impression, too many slashdotters think that the whole world should enjoy typing stuff like: gcc -aL89 -kMjs2389 -oInstall.o -la.out -kMyProgram.cpp -vi -1 -2 -pALL ...

      As long as people with that kind of attitude continue to dominate the linux comunity, most people out there, including myself, will refuse to use linux, not even for free, regardless the fact that I'm truly sold on the idea of open source.

  49. MS Can't afford to lose the Windows franchise by Greyfox · · Score: 1
    I would be rather surprised if they came up with a Linux dist. They don't seem to like to compete on a level playing field and a lot of people pay them a lot of money so they can put that little flying windows logo on their products. It would probably leave a bitter taste in Bill Gates' mouth to have to lose the flying windows logo and go with a pudgey little penguin who just had some "really great sex" (According to Linus.)

    Also, everyone is a little wary of Microsoft. Corporate America is well aware of the games they play. They only reason we've put up with them this long is because they were really the only game in town (And they made sure of that.) They've waited way too long to move on Linux and have painted themselves into a corner. If they'd released a dist a year and a half ago, they might have been able to advance the plan you suggest. Today I think it would go over like a lead balloon.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  50. Best line from GM manager by Nemesys · · Score: 1
    Linux has "the benefit of the hindsight of Unix"

    I like that one; I think I'll use it.

  51. Because by slain · · Score: 1

    They play golf well and to be a manager you don't always have to know the technology being used to do the job.

  52. Hell will freeze over first by Greyfox · · Score: 1
    Lotus does not like Linux. They're porting Domino server over, probably because it's getting hard to ignore all the companies moving their servers to UNIX/Linux.

    That's OK. Linux doesn't like Lotus either. Their apps are ugly, dumb and awkward. If you read the interface hall of shame on Iarchitect you'll note that they have a whole section dedicated to "Bloated Goats."

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  53. Ooops Re:Chrysler and Win, Unix, etc... by Superfreak · · Score: 1

    Should've looked closer at the preview. I have 2 finallys there. Sorry, I was taking phone calls at the same time. That came out less coherent than I thought, too.

    Oh well

  54. One question remains..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Will they start making better cars now? I mean, it took a Scandinavian to develop the best operating system, to date.

  55. Re:...and Microsoft sends out the account calvary by jimshep · · Score: 1

    This is quite a common practice. I was responsible for evaluating and selecting a CAD package for our department a few years back. Once PTC (makers of Pro/Engineer) got wind that I was leaning towards another package, their sales managers contacted my boss to let them know what a mistake we were making. Luckily I had my boss's respect and he practically through the slaes reps out.

  56. not the only reason by ch-chuck · · Score: 1

    Linux has no licensing issues.

    A big outfit like GM is wise to remember, they're not 'buying' M$ products, they are simple buying permission to use it, M$ retains all rights, it's still M$ property, M$ can do what they want with it. It really scares me to think a business would entrust so much to a single company which has amply demononstrated their ruthlessness and willingness to trample anyone who gets in the way of the M$ revenue stream. Hopefully GM has emough gumption to pick up the ball and regain control over their IT destiny, and not just blindly follow a crowd of M$ enchanted brain-dead zombies.

    Chuck
    official "slashdot discussion contributor".

    --
    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
  57. Re:complacency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, and get rid of those damn easter eggs, and what the hell do I need 5,000 printer drivers built-in for?

  58. Re:Burlington Coat Factory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yup, much larger scale too. When's the last time you saw a cash register when buying your new Camaro? :)

  59. </I> by ch-chuck · · Score: 1

    darn it.

    --
    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
  60. Re:complacency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think WinCE is about putting 32 megs of ram in a little palm-top, running the os in half of it, and storing 2 addresses.

  61. Re:Gee, I didn't realize Linux was fragmented! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you're developing a web based solution under Linux then Apache, perl, C, C++, HTML, maybe some Java, and your SQL server are going .

    I just finished porting a major app for my client from * (Ms only) to VB+Apache+Java, a natural move and the easy one was me rewriting the server in java. The hard part is always the software and if you solve the software part the hw falls into place. Java is the key that makes corporate linux a very viable solution.
    tom

  62. Hmm. by Bartleby · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure I follow you're argument. Are you saying Windows is unstable because it supports more hardware (i.e., has more drivers)? If so, how come machines with dual boot will run great under Linux (all the hardware pinging along just fine) but crash daily under Windows? I've had this experience time and again, as I know many others have.

    1. Re:Hmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not the amount of hardware, it's the amount of badly written drivers out there. Drivers are almost an extension of the kernel and if they're buggy you're in trouble. Windows obviously has tons more drivers and thus tons more buggy ones too.

  63. Re:...and Microsoft sends out the account calvary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a Detroit automaker here. Of course they aren't going to wine & dine him. The MS boys will treat him to an all expense paid trip to one of the many strip clubs near GM headquarters. I've read an article or two that deals in the Motor City are made in the nudie bars and not the golf course.

  64. Re:...and Microsoft sends out the account calvary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    er... i think GM has about 65% of the world wide auto market

  65. Drivers, stability, hardware companies... by Extremist · · Score: 1

    The few bugs (some severe) that I've run into with linux drivers tend to lead to one result: that piece of hardware does not work as it should. Not to say there wouldn't be kernel panics and other major failures, it's just that I've not seen them. I even have a couple old SCSI drives that are really flakey, and tend to restart themselves from time to time. The only one that's a problem is my swap partition, or a drive I'm currently reading from/writing to. The OS just doesn't respond until the drive has returned to a sane state, then it carries on as if nothing happened. OTOH, Win (NT and 95) vomits instantly if ANY drive becomes unavailable for even a few seconds while using Explorer. Sometimes this means a reinstall (damn the registry and it's wonders.)

    IMHO that speaks alot about the core design of the kernels/OS.

    But, as you said, if we were to see more closed source drivers we probably would tend to see more problems. There is a very good solution to that, however. Don't buy hardware from manufacturers that do not provide or at least support Free drivers for thier hardware. The users have more control with Linux. Use this (marginal?) power wisely. They do listen sometimes, and will have to more and more if trends continue. On this point, I feel it is very important that linux newbies (including large corporations) are educated as to why source DOES matter to them, even if they are not programmers.

  66. Re:The right thing for the wrong reason by sinator · · Score: 1

    Win2K advanced Server requires a p166 with 32 megs of RAM. I've had it working no problem in a p133 with 96 megs of RAM.

    The secret, you forget, to putting liberal hardware requirements is to save Microsoft tech support from supporting problems with older hardware being blamed on Windows. Why toe the line and say "it PROBABLY will run on a p100, but not all will, here's our number, waste our time if it doesn't work." Is that economical? Yes. Is it moral? No. I'm glad Red Hat will support 386+ hardware (think corporate support, not usenet).

    --
    Three Step Plan:
    1. Take over the world.
    2. Get a lot of cookies.
    3. Eat the cookies.
  67. Tiny Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope they aren't planning to use X-Windows...

  68. According to Gartner (was:Solution to downsizing? by coats · · Score: 2

    According to a Gartner Group study reported this morning on CNet (http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1003-2 02-114579.html) upgrading from NT4 to WIN2K can be expected to cost a business $2050/machine; Win98-Win2K $3100/machine. At 7500+ machines, that will add up! $15M can do rather a bit of development.

    --
    "My opinions are my own, and I've got *lots* of them!"
  69. Publicity Stunt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is one big publicity stunt for GM. Why would my company announce a change to its internal structure? How a company runs itself and what software it uses IMHO is there own business. So announcing the possibility of using linux EVEN if it is a possible solution is nothing more than a publicity stunt. You didnt hear on the news this week that my company started using 3 or 4 linux servers? ehh. You didnt hear about Gateway installng a buncha new computers for Lockheed martin and becoming there IT people.. No but it happens. Tsk Tsk Tsk. And most people are all cooing at how neat it is people take notice.. Is this take notice? Or take addvantage? Does anyone even care.. Oh well just an errant thought.
    Jeremy Allen
    jallen@idminc.com

    1. Re:Publicity Stunt... by dadams · · Score: 1

      I'm going to agree with this AC, esp in GMs case. They're trying to make themselves seem like a new, exciting, dynamic comapany. Their new ads portray the chairman of the board as wearing jeans and chuck taylors. I think this may be part of some huge plan to look like a geek friendly company.

      --
      --"In dreams begin responsibilities" - Delmore Schwartz
  70. Who is the real ignorant one here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here's something to keep in mind. Having been quoted dozens of times in the computer trade press, they're not always great about getting the technical aspects of one's comments right, or even the perspective sometimes. Also, if the guy from GM only wants to give the Computerworld reporter 5-10 minutes of his time, don't be surprised if his two-sentence responses gloss over a lot of issues. True, it could be the GM guy being clueless, but it also could be the press guy; you just can't tell unless you read remarks of the GM guy (or journalist) in multiple circumstances.

    (And beware being too arrogant: what do you know about GM's internal requirements or politics? You might be the clueless one. For example, you don't seem to know the difference between an operations manager and an executive. Clue: An operations manager is not an executive-level position.)

    P.S. This post is intended to provoke thought, not to label either Hutke (GM) or Orenstein (Computerworld) as clueless: I don't know either party.
    P.P.S. If you want to claim someone is clueless, you might attempt to convince others by citing one specific piece of clueless commentary that could actually be either persuasive or rebutted.

  71. Re:complacency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's because you are not the only person they are building the OS for...

  72. GM is familiar with Unix based solutions by smartin · · Score: 3

    Last time I was in a GM dealership to get parts was a couple of years ago, but at that time they were using NCD Xterminals. They could bring up all the parts books on the screen, zoom in and out and actually print you a schematic of how to assemlbe something. It was way cool.

    --
    The difference between Canada and the USA is that in Canada healthcare is a right and gun ownership is a privilege.
    1. Re:GM is familiar with Unix based solutions by rshane · · Score: 1

      My father works for a dealership in the parts department, and it is very cool. They use Suns and nice big touch screens. If I remember correctly, all of the info(pictures and all) for ALL GM vehicles 1986-present, are stored on 6 CD-ROMS. Very cool.

      --
      Shane
  73. Solution to downsizing? by avail · · Score: 4

    I think that besides the technological advantages to running a free OS such as Linux, there is a more human advantage, which is that with corporation struggling to increase shareholder value, reigning in on their IT costs by not having to pay for Microsoft OS's may save jobs. The money they trim there might have otherwise come from layoffs.

    I hope this is something which is actually going to happen, I live near a car plant (ford) and I know many people who have lost jobs due to "restructuring". It would nice to see Gates' billions get trimmed a little due to "restructuring" instead.

    --
    five fingers make a fist amalgamate and resist
  74. ...and Microsoft sends out the account calvary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4
    I suspect that Microso~1 will not sit quietly on this one but rather I bet they are sending a team of NT experts to David Hultka's office now to warm him up and take him out to lunch, wine and dine him and talk about the promise of Windows 2000 and scare him to death about Linux. I'm sure they will also offer a reduced rate on their Windows NT license just to warm them up some more.

    I think Microsoft knows that once a single IT manager at a Fortune 500 company proves that Linux is far faster/cheaper/better than Windows then it's all down hill for Windows from there, so I'm sure Microsoft is sending the FUD calvary to GM as you read this.

    1. Re:...and Microsoft sends out the account calvary by MaggieL · · Score: 1

      Wine and dine him? Unlikely...they'll just send a FUD hit squad to speak to the upper management he mentioned.

      --
      -=Maggie Leber=-
    2. Re:...and Microsoft sends out the account calvary by Ruds · · Score: 1

      Interesting fact about GM. Fairly recently (2-3 yrs ago, IIRC), GM created a new policy on that. It basically says that noone at GM can take gifts, dinner, nudie club visits, etc. from people who work for companies that do business with GM. I believe, however, that the sales dept. can still wine, dine, and nudie club clients. Integrity only goes so far :P.

  75. VB apps by thebrit · · Score: 0

    How does he expect to port the VB apps , ask M$ for VB Runtime for Linux ??? ;-)

    Would be perhaps the biggest plug for Linux in '99 if GM took it on board to show other copmanies what it has to offer.

  76. complacency by antizeus · · Score: 1
    If I were Microsoft, I would put some engineers into developing a lean, mean, and stable version of Windows to compete in specialized high-intensity systems. The normal (allegedly) bloated version would continue to be marketed to those with more general needs/desires.

    Obviously I'm not Microsoft, but if they did such a thing, it might do a lot to maintain their market dominance.

    --
    -- $SIGNATURE
    1. Re:complacency by WasterDave · · Score: 1

      And what, exactly, do you think Windows CE is all about.

      While I'm at it, Viva Psion7.

      Dave :)

      --
      I write a blog now, you should be afraid.
  77. I know how they are paying for the conversion... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    by cancelling the Camaro/Firebird (F-Body) line of cars... :( -k

  78. Re:Good thing Microsoft is preventing fragmentatio by Fish+Man · · Score: 1

    And don't forget...

    Microsoft surely cares enough about their customers to make sure that if my coworker saves a document in the native format of Word 97, I'll be able to open and read it with Word 95 or Word 6.0 right?

    Surely they would never make subsiquent releases of their "productivity" applications incompatible just to force everyone to upgrade to the new version when the old version worked fine would they?

    Not Microsoft!

  79. Do not get your hopes too high on this ... by Herschel+Cohen · · Score: 2

    Making the assumption that the Saturn dealerships use the same systems that GM proper employs their problems may go deeper than the OS.

    When I was closing the deal on a used Saturn in early 97, I learned their system allows anyone to overwrite an existing record (order). I was incredulous that such a poor design/implementation could exist. If this reflects the total dealer situation within GM, it will take more than Linux to correct its flaws. Moreover, a failure could be attributed to the new OS and not the existing stupidity already present in over abundance.

  80. TCL, Java, Python, your pick by oldman1080 · · Score: 1

    Unix has better and just as easy equivalents to Visual Basic. I don't know what's so great about VB, but I've seen some great programs using TCL (just search Freshmeat) and Java programming is great for whipping up quick applications.

    --
    Find and share links to celebrity profiles on MySpace! http://www.myspacecelebrities.com
    1. Re:TCL, Java, Python, your pick by aUser · · Score: 1

      I really like Python (not TCL or Perl, because of their bizarre syntax). Nonetheless, even Guido Van Rossum admits that python still has a long way to go.(see: http://www.python.org/doc/essays/cp4e.html) I don't particularly like or dislike Basic. I just like the tools. And believe me, I've tried Python, with tkinter, with wxWindows (wxPython), with pyFox, and so on; they all lack the tools necessary to speed things up. It just takes forever to manually program your controls in code, to use arcane functions to associate your controls to the event handling methods, and so on. I've got work to do!

  81. GM Access by Gill+Bates · · Score: 2
    A quick search from within the GM web (where I sit :o) found this reference:

    This hands-on course includes training on Lotus Notes, which replaces DCS as the two-way communication method between GM and GM dealerships.

    This suggests to me (I don't know, as I don't work with dealerships) that the applications are Notes-based, not VB-based as stated in the article.

    Now, wasn't there an announcement a while ago about IBM/Lotus porting Notes to Linux? That makes this infinitely more do-able.

  82. Better yet by jtseng · · Score: 1
    Perhaps they could get Mainsoft to port their app to Linux.

    "Microsoft is the epitome of innovation and product quality."

    --

    Sanity.html - Error 404 not found

  83. Re:Good thing Microsoft is preventing fragmentatio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here you go, problem solved:

    Office 97 Converter for Word 6 and Word 95

    I guess you can put off that upgrade now.

  84. Sun Ray, anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bet Sun hasn't taken this lying down. I can just see the
    GM admin' people trying to schedule Micro$oft appointments around
    the appointments made by Sun a half hour prior.

  85. Re:According to Gartner (was:Solution to downsizin by IntlHarvester · · Score: 2


    An interesting point is that those costs are only for workstation upgrades. W2K Server + ActiveDirectory will cost even more. (Although that's probably unquantifiable at this point because nobody really knows how AD works in a large scale environment.)

    --
    Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  86. Re:Hard drive space!?! by IntlHarvester · · Score: 1


    Don't even bother calculating the hardware costs, because the labor and management costs associated with doing in-case upgrades for a place like GM are going to be much higher than the parts.

    It's much easier for them to have their vendor (EDS I'd guess) preconfigure brand new machines and then airdrop them in place.

    --
    Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  87. I worked at a gm dealer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    They are refering to a system known as "GM Access" and the problem they have is that the specced out the hardware so long before it was put in the field it was ancient history before it started. The way it works is GM supplies an NT server for each site, this serves as a gateway to the satelite system and was supposed to be used only as a server. Many smaller dealerships balked and refused to by clients instead using the server directly. GM kept piling on the applications until the machines choked. These servers run lotus notes as well as a ton of propietary applications. Most of the people at GM have been aware for over a year that they are desperately in need of upgrades. I believe the real push now is that the lifespan of these computers was estimated at three years. We were assured the machine would be replaced at this point. Going to unix would cut out that expense.

  88. It would make sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linux can be ran on older/inexpensive hardware at the same performance to cost ratio. You get a lot more for your dollar. Also linux is more stable than NT, which has been proven time and agian in various studies and my personal experence. Also, if you want to use less disk space linux apps use Shared Objects and common libraries and have less bloat in general. Well got to go pick up my check. =)

  89. Sounds like a good move to me. by Manic+Miner · · Score: 1

    For Linux to gain major recognition from the corporate world (which it must do to replace Windows) then it has to be used my major corporations.
    IF GM went ahead with switching to Linux then other company's would see that Linux is viable, and that Microsoft can be replaced. For larger company's Linux makes a lot of sense, it is more reliable, as the advantage of very easily configured "roaming" profiles so that users can access their information, desktop layout etc. from ANY computer. Plus as stated in the article NO licence problems - for a company with thousands of users, and 10's of servers the cost of Micro$oft licences is significant in the IT budget.
    If GM decide to go ahead with a Linux solution, then it could be the final step in proving that Linux can directly compete against Microsoft to all those misguided people who think it can't
    Manic.

    --
    If you ever drop your keys into a river of molten lava, let'em go, because, man, they're gone.
  90. Burlington Coat Factory by garcia · · Score: 1

    I remember a post a ways back about Burlington moving everything to a Linux based system... Weren't they around 5k machines? A positive result there may give GM and other large corps the news they need to show that Linux can be deployed in a large system...

  91. Obviously no by Etyenne · · Score: 1

    And the question is not wether Linux supprt VB, it is if VB support Linux. The answer is that VB does not support anything beside MS-bred OS (no Mac, BeOS, Unix, etc.). Code written in VB is utterly non-portable, probably to lock you in MS OS. GM application would need to rewritten from scratch if they do switch.

    However, maybe the Mac version of MS Office support VBA. Any user of MS Office Mac edition to enlighten us on the question ?

    --
    :wq
  92. Switch to Linux - save $2,000,000 by Hard_Code · · Score: 1

    If they change all their 75,000 machines over to Linux, Microsoft will be losing @$2,000,000 in sales. And that's only using NT Workstation figures, not NT server (NT workstation = @$250, right?).

    --

    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  93. The right thing for the wrong reason by Markee · · Score: 2
    Of all advantages that Linux has over Windows NT, I feel that it's resource efficiency is the most neglectable. It may be great for a private user who can reuse his 486 with a decent OS -- but for companies, total cost of ownership is what counts. The price of some GB of hard disk space for 7,500 clients is peanuts compared to the cost of migrating the entire ordering system to a new platform. Imagine that each of the new servers will cost $250 less than the NT one, saving the money on the OS license and hard disk space. (And that's a generous estimate.) That would be $ 1,25 million saved in an investment. Peanuts.


    What we seem to have here is a mid-level manager evaluating Linux for his company, but he seems to feel sympathy for Linux and be making up the reasons afterwards. It's great he likes Linux, and I hope he will succeed. But I have a hard time believing he will.

    --
    Yes, you are right there. -- Another glass of champagne?
  94. Banner ad irony by RallyDriver · · Score: 1

    I can't be the only one who finds irony in the fact that the banner ad on ComputerWorld is, in over 25% of impressions, for NT Server?

    If it's targeted, maybe they're picking up my browser ident (Mozilla 4.51 Linux i686)?

    ;-)

  95. Kickass! Thanks GM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...for giving Linux a chance. I'm a programmer who loves Linux, although I work on SGI's during the day.

    I paid cash for my 1998 Sonoma. The dealer and salesmen were so much friendlier than other alternatives -- also more willing to deal.

    I'll be buying again in several months, and if GM gives Linux the nod, I'm buying a nice phat GM truck this time...I might even move up the purchase date.

    After two years programming NT, I swore I'd never use Microsoft products again, so anything you do to help Linux or Unix keeps me working.

    Thanks again,
    John

  96. That Penguin Has a sharp beak... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...At just the right height to do that gorilla some damage.

    I'll tell you this -- any time even *one* person drops M$ in favor of Linux, humanity moves forward. When a big company does it, so much the better.

    I programmed NT for 2.5 years, and left to work on SGI's a year ago. I've never regretted it, and would go back to school and learn a new trade before ever using a M$ product again.

    End of Story!

  97. VB to JAVA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    ...a couple years ago, there were a few products that converted VB to java, C++ or even delphi. Delphi for Linux will be out before long.

    They claimed 90% of the VB code goes over, and I saw better results for pure VB code.

    Against our flagship VB app, I estimated it would take 6 weeks and three programmers to translate the app over to Java. It had maybe two dozen forms, 3-4 custom components, and several custom objects we wrote.

    The pure VB translated fine, but the custom components needed some thought to meld them with the java components, which (in all honesty) were not very mature.

    VB has some phat third party controls, and Java can't really match them...as least not back then.

  98. What if we all helped the port? by Darby · · Score: 1
    Seriously folks.
    Since the open source movement is a gift culture what if we were to volunteer our help on major migrations like this?

    I see several HUGE reasons to do this.
    1. The savings on the cost of the migration to an open source platform might help convince them to go ahead with this
    2. The more that major corporations decide to go over to the light side the more benefits to the open source movement.

      1. More positive press
      2. More applications etc.


    3. The goodwill generated by a move like this could help erase any negative perceptions people have about "open source freaks"
    4. It looks Great on a resume.


    I think this could really work. Not only for this project, but if this gets off the ground we will develop many tools to aid similar migrations. If we as a community can make migrations easier, then one more obstacle will be removed.
    I have some good skills in PERL and C, and would be willing to volunteer some time. The only compensation I would request is that the tools we develop for the project would be open.

    If you are interested in attempting this or would like to arrange something for other similar projects let me know
    -Darby
  99. Does something look wrong here? by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1
    Our client/server apps are all Visual Basic, as far as I know. Future apps are all Web-based. If (porting to Linux) was something we could do tomorrow with the snapping of the fingers, it might not be so bad. But a mission-critical application like this really has to work the first time, and there can't be any conversion issues.


    Boy, if it is mission-critical, and written in VB, i worry about the the largest american company.

    But, if they hope to port VB to linux... i am really scared!

    Anyway, i guess that's what PHB's are for.
  100. I Doubt They'd Go Along... by Neuronix · · Score: 1

    I think I'd be willing to help, however major corporations like GM are ALWAYS paranoid about their legacy code.

    "Intellectual Property" *blah* *blah* *blah*

    I don't think they would let us anywhere near it...

  101. Re:I agree not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    > I think that if linux gets as big as NT it will start getting unstable.

    I think this is one time I won't ask someone to show us their code.

  102. Ignorant executives by ucblockhead · · Score: 1

    How come? Because "ignorant executive" is redundant.

    --
    The cake is a pie
  103. That old chestnut ? by artg · · Score: 1

    A: It's not controlled by one company, and fragmentation can occur. Why do they keep coming out with this one ? Surely GM, of all people, would understand the advantages and even necessity of not being tied to a single vendor ?

  104. Wheels Within Wheels . . . by llywrch · · Score: 2

    >I mean, it's nice the guy is the operations manager for their dealer network, but this is really a non-story.

    Or else he's sending up a trial balloon to see how
    a) The car dealer network reacts (e.g., ``No effin' way I want that Linnucks crap runnin' mah computers" or ``Give it a try -- cain't be any worse than that Microcrap on ourn computers"), or

    b) See how Microsoft reacts (e.g., ``We can offer you great terms on a nationwide license to Win2000 with the same level of support we offer Intel"), or

    c) Making an effort to demonstrate to someone just how hard he's looking at alternatives to their present computer system (e.g., ``I know that it crashes every day. But see how hard I'm studying alternatives? Now do you believe me when I say it's the best system we can buy? And will you authorize another business trip to Acapulco?")

    There's undoubtedly more to the story than meets the eye, much of which Slashdotters prolly don't want to know. Let's just focus our attention at making the code better.


    Geoff

    --
    I think I see a trend here. Maybe for them it really would be easier to muzzle the entire internet than to produce p
  105. Gee, I didn't realize Linux was fragmented! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Hey, does anyone have a Linux defragger so I can defragment my Linux box?

    Seriously, how can any Windows user who has been through the 3.1/OLE/95/ActiveX/95.b/Office97/IE4/98/IE5/ and countless other mood swings Microsoft drags Windows users through, how can any Windows user sit there with a straight face and say that they are concerned about another OS being "fragamented"? Windows is the ultimate fragmented platform there is!

    If you're developing a web based solution under Linux then Apache, perl, C, C++, HTML, maybe some Java, and your SQL server are going to be the only targets you'll worry about and those things are pretty damn stable and don't change often, unlike Visual Basic which is radically different with every new release and you never know what Microsoft has planned for it next.

  106. Re:Hard drive space!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would agree. If their app suite is written and works the way they want it to, why not keep running with things as they are??? The only issues to my mind would be avoiding forced upgrades to NT 5 with new licensing fees and possibly the ongoing software rental scheme M$ has trial ballooned.