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Unix Operating Systems Software The Almighty Buck

Windows vs. Unix Revisited 435

dubious9 writes "Linuxworld has another TCO (Total Cost of Ownership) comparison of Windows vs. Unix. Note that is it not a Linux comparison or a specific Unix comparison at all. The comparison here is the Windows client/server model vs. the terminal/server Unix model. It discusses the needs of a school/university and considers such facts as what the students will have to run at home. It's written by a self proclaimed Unix evangelist, so don't expect it to be unbiased, but he makes points that are hard to argue with. All in all, it is a refreshing TCO comparison."
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Windows vs. Unix Revisited

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  • by govtcheez ( 524087 ) <govtcheez03@hotmail.com> on Thursday February 27, 2003 @01:57PM (#5397718) Homepage
    It's written by a self proclaimed Unix evangelist, so don't expect it to be unbiased

    I am shocked and appalled that Slashdot would ever report something from a source biased towards *NIX!
    • That is so witty. I never get tired of seeing someone write *nix. It never ceases to amuse me. I just love it ever so much. Please continue doing this. Thank you.

      p.s. please also include a fake ^H or two in your post next time. I love seeing that refreshing, original joke.

      p.p.s you forgot to use M$ or Micro$oft in your post. Please do so next time.
      • Re:Being biased (Score:5, Informative)

        by nil_null ( 412200 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:32PM (#5398159) Homepage
        That is so witty. I never get tired of seeing someone write *nix. It never ceases to amuse me. I just love it ever so much. Please continue doing this. Thank you.

        I've always used *NIX to mean every OS that is UNIX related (as in * is a wildcard). Since Linux is not UNIX, but is UNIX-like, a lot of people will flame you for implying Linux is UNIX. So *NIX includes Linux. It includes *BSD (notice the wildcard) and OS X. It might even include Minix if you wanted it to. IIRC, UN*X [astrian.net] was used to avoid the trademark issue. However, *NIX just means UNIX-like, and may or may not have anything to do with the trademark issue.
  • by TerryAtWork ( 598364 ) <research@aceretail.com> on Thursday February 27, 2003 @01:57PM (#5397721)
    That with Linux the software is cheap but the people are expensive and with Windows its the other way around.

    • by kmac06 ( 608921 )
      There was a /. article about this recently, pointing out that the average Unix sysadmin costs more than the average Windows guy, but he can also manage more. So two windows experts do the same work as one Unix guy, but the Unix one costs more.

      (I don't remember the final ratio of cost/work done for the two different guys, but I think they were fairly close).
      • by Steveftoth ( 78419 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:18PM (#5397995) Homepage
        average windows guy costs less is because they are simply not worth it.

        Not to insult you top end Windows admins, but lets face it. The ability of Windows admins has a larger varience then that of Unix admins. The learning curve is much higher and they don't have quite the popularity. I think the reason that Windows techs are cheaper on average is because, on average, the Windows techs don't know as much and don't deserve the high salary.

        If you want a good, professional Windows admin, then you are going to pay as much as the same quality of Unix admin.
        • by gmack ( 197796 ) <gmack@noSpAM.innerfire.net> on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:24PM (#5398070) Homepage Journal
          If only that were true. Unfortunatly Unix admins have the same variance. I've had several jobs where at first much of my time was spent cleaning up after the incompetant who had the job before me.

          The advantage of a Unix admin is that (s)he can make much more efficiant use of their time.
          • by frankthechicken ( 607647 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:31PM (#5398145) Journal
            I've always wondered about this, I mean could it be that most of the time you are cleaning up a previous admin's work simply because they have a different style of work practice, i.e it's neither better nor worse, just different?
            • While I freely admit to having my own perfered style I also prefer not waste time fixing what's already working.

              That's why when I arrive at a new jobsite I prefer not to make drastic changes for the first coupple of weeks while I get a feel for what is already there. By not reformatting everything right away I have a chance to learn how things were working, and will know what sucks and more importantly if they did anything I can learn from and adopt into my way of doing things.

              Drastic changes for no reason(and even for a lot of good reasons) will not make my boss happy. Downtime is bad.

              It's also been completely unavoidable in some cases. A mark of a good sysadmin is to know how his/her setup will handle growth. example: At one workplace I found a system that was with small / and /var partitions. After some time he ran out of space in /tmp so he moved it to /var/tmp and symlinked. He again ran out of space so he moved tmp to /usr/local/tmp and added a symlink from /var/tmp giving it a symlink to a symlink. Then from the looks of it /var filled up again .. so he created a /usr/local/var and created the required symlinks. So now I get the system and find that we now have a mostly unused partition and a tangle of symlinks. The sad thing is that he never learned from this. I again found a setup like that when taking over one of his systems at a later jobsite. The real laugh came at the second jobsite where he had moved to programming and refused to do a new project until I reformatted a machine he had setup in the past.

              Thanks to people like that I tend to look good.. both jobsites went from weekly unplanned outages to rock solid.
        • by stratjakt ( 596332 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:29PM (#5398120) Journal
          >> If you want a good, professional Windows admin, then you are going to pay as much as the same quality of Unix admin.

          In such cases, you're getting a good IT professional, period.

          From an administrative POV, they aren't that dissimilar.

          A good auto mechanic should be able to work on foreign and domestic vehicles. A good admin should be able to administrate, regardless of the operating system.

          Where I am, we have a mixed bag of windows and unix software. We also routinely interface with big old-timey mainframes of all shapes and sizes. We dont hire based on "I know visual basic or I know perl", we hire based on "I know how to program, languages are just syntax to me."
          • A good auto mechanic should be able to work on foreign and domestic vehicles

            Except in this case, the cars are quite disimilar. One is petrol based internal combustion engine, the other is an electric car. They both do the same job, the internals will probably require different kind of mechanics.
          • Where do you work? Everywhere I go its the exact opposite: "you don't have version A of XYZ on your resume, there were at least 2 changes between version B and A".
        • by Anonvmous Coward ( 589068 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:45PM (#5398317)
          "Not to insult you top end Windows admins, but lets face it. The ability of Windows admins has a larger varience then that of Unix admins. "

          As a former Windows admin I am not offended by this comment. I think you're right. Windows does a lot of automatic stuff to get things running. As long as you play by MS's rules, you end up not having to worry about a lot of stuff.

          There are pros and cons here. The obvious con is that when a real problem occurs, sometimes it's really difficult to find out why without the knowledge of how the underlying system works. The pro here, though, is that your employees don't have far to climb to fix their own problems. Windows exposes enough of the functionaltiy through the UI that you get hints on where to look. Most of the time I've been asked for help, my coworker's already taken some troubleshooting steps. That leaves you with a lot of free time on your hands!

          I can honestly say that after working with Linux servers and in assisting the setup of a network that my Windows administration experience does not make me feel qualified to be a sysadmin. Fortunately, that's not my choice in profession.

      • by Anonvmous Coward ( 589068 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:35PM (#5398197)
        "There was a /. article about this recently, pointing out that the average Unix sysadmin costs more than the average Windows guy, but he can also manage more. So two windows experts do the same work as one Unix guy, but the Unix one costs more."

        My company of about 20 people has always been mainly a Windows shop. A couple of years ago, our sysadmin left. I absorbed his responsibilities, adding to my full-time job. Funny thing is, I've been able to keep up with it. I had to fix a server once in a while. But I really haven't had to spend a whole lot of time helping people with Windows/Office issues. We certainly were never interested in hiring a full-time sysadmin as a result of that.

        That was until a couple of weeks ago. We recently migrated the servers over to Linux. Since then we've had all kinds of issues that have needed attention. Unfortunately I'm a newb to the Linux world so I haven't been able to handle that. So now we have a full-time admin. (Just as a note: Part of the reason we hired him was for a future project he'll be able to help us with, but right now he's running around cleaning up this mess.)

        Is this post about saying Windows is great and Linux isn't? No, not at all. If you're to take away any meaning from my post here it's that you should use the right tool for the job. Just about everybody who's worked here has a computer at home that they use a lot. You can probably guess, they use Windows at home. That was coupled with a policy at work along the lines of "Treat the computer as if it's your own", meaning that there were no policies about what you can/can't install etc. The result? Not only were people familiar with their tools, but they also didn't have a crippling fear that they were going to commit some great offense that'd incur the wrath of the sysadmin.

        So, for us, the Windows NT line has been wonderful. (Note: 9X and ME were HORRIBLE, I'm not defending those OS's under any condition.) The switch to Linux just for the servers has been painful, and I do not look forward to the day that we switch over to Linux. (If that ever happens.) My main concern, though, isn't that Linux isn't ready for us. It's that we're so used to Windows that Linux will be that much harder.

        I'm not really worried about it though. Windows 2k and even XP is doing wonderful over here. Nobody's itching to change, and frankly a "Unix Evangelist" isn't going to change our minds when we've got experience backing us up.
        • by cornjones ( 33009 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @03:29PM (#5398893) Homepage
          Migrating to a new system (any system) w/o somebody who has done it a thousand times is just silly. You didn't have a sysadmin, why would you change your platform? You had a sysadmin set up your last platform and that was stable. you were able to keep it up from that point. that is VERY different from putting together a platform yourself and expecting it to Just work like the other one.

          That being said...... I do agree w/ your point about people being more comfortable w/ win machines b/c they have them at home.

          I just think your expectations were unrealistic.

          ej
        • by rseuhs ( 322520 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @03:42PM (#5399058)
          Well, that's what I really don't get. Why is nobody able to distinguish long-term and short-term effects?

          In the short term, of course changing systems never makes sense. Never. Doesn't matter what you are running, if you think i "couple of weeks" time periods and always come up with "but we are used to it" excuses, stay with whatever you are running now.

          However, in the long term, that all is irrelevant. It may take a month (if you have a very inflexible staff) to get used to the new system, but in 2 years, the "we are used to xy" argument is pretty worthless.

          In the long term you get something from Linux that is very hard to understand for Windows-fans:

          Freedom

          From a business point of view, freedom means first of all, freedom to choose your supplier. Less than a year ago, Microsoft changed the license scheme which doubled costs for most business customers. What makes you think that that doesn't happen again? What will you do against it? Bitch around a bit, but in the end you will swallow whatever Microsoft wants. The same is with crazy anti-piracy schemes. WPA is just the beginning and not-so-important companies will probably soon have to accept WPA or even some "improved" new version, too. - Not with Linux, if your distributor makes you unhappy, just switch to another.

          Microsoft introduces a single point of failure. Linux on the other hand is a very safe investment that nobody can take away from you.

          This is much more important than some short-term license savings.

    • I would have to agree here. The Linux vs. Windows religious war will continue, but it just comes down to the bottom line.

      If we could think objectively (little penguin on shoulder crys) they are both probably the same cost when you account for training, salary of sysadmin/support personnel, maintenance costs, etc.

      • So if the cost is the same*, then we are left comparing the reliability, performance, scalability, and security of the OSes. All of which actually equate in TCO anyway. Too bad popularity seems to be winning instead right now.

        * I think the cost is not the same if you do an in-depth analysis. Unfortuantely nobody has done one which can be considered impartial. Personally, most of my expertise is as a Windows admin, but I think linux is cheaper mainly because of the costs of doing the extra work that a 'doze shop requires. Examples: Extra patching (yes, *nix requires patching as does everything, I just feel the frequency is higher with Win), researching cryptic BSODs and reimaging, and most of all doing extensive audits for the Bastard Software Alliance et al. Those are just to name a few but I am sure someone can argue the other side of my claims too... and on and on we go!
      • They probably aren't the same costs. When you start evaluating the variances between the number of available Unix admins vs. Windows admins you will find that the more numerous of the two will typically come at a cheaper price. These are basic economic principles at work. Evaluating the other details is a lot harder, but there probably are some significant differances in costs in other places as well. Add it all together and there may or may not be a "significant" differance between the two, but there will be differances. Of course the differances may or may not be significant based on your interpretation of what a significant differance is as well. A small company may consider a differance in TCO of $2-10k significant where a large company may not.
    • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:25PM (#5398081) Homepage Journal
      Unix types have to know more but fewer of them have certifications (traditionally) -- they rely on their experience and their resume. An already-Unix shop will understand that no number of certifications prepare you for disaster like experience will. Anyway I know of plenty of complete bozos out there with M$ Certifications who don't really know anything yet, they've just learned by rote. Those people tend to be making (if they have a job) just as much as the more hardened Unix types, usually more. I know of one know-nothing "Exchange admin" (this is his only job, in a company of only 500 people or so) who makes $75k/year even now and spends half his day gaming. (Obviously this is not a technically-oriented company.)
      • by edremy ( 36408 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @03:17PM (#5398757) Journal

        I know of one know-nothing "Exchange admin" (this is his only job, in a company of only 500 people or so) who makes $75k/year even now and spends half his day gaming.

        Obviously not a very competent admin. He should be able to spend all of his time gaming.

        Seriously, the sign of a really good IT person (Windows, Unix, etc) is that they can spend a good part of their time goofing off. Why? Because they designed the systems right in the first place and then fix any problems at the base rather than adding layers of ad-hoc patches. Thus, there are very few problem calls and a lot of UT2003.

    • by bstadil ( 7110 )
      That with Linux the software is cheap but the people are expensive and with Windows its the other way around

      Long term (I know, we are all dead) you always want to place your bet on the solution with the lowest human cost measured in Hours not Dollars.

      That is how countries / Companies / organizations get to be and stay rich. Using lower labor rates is only an option in the beginning and is becoming less so at a rapid rate. Migration of manufacturing to the Far-East has more to do with efficient infrastructure as far as component availability is concerned than $/Hour.

      Microsoft , SUN , IBM etc. knows this and this is where the OS / Middleware software batttle is heading.

      Where does that leave Windows / *nix / Linux? Compare Germany with UK. Much stricter rules for adjusting workforce and higher labor cost in Germany is forcing a more rapid uptake of Linux than in the UK. Second I will venture that *Nix penetration is higher in Germany than UK, but I do not know for sure.

    • by theonetruekeebler ( 60888 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @03:03PM (#5398571) Homepage Journal
      The TCO charts in the article quote the employement cost of one Unix admin (for the ~500 campus-based machines) at $120,000/year against the cost of five Windows admins at $75,000/year. This seems about the right ratio in staff and pay.

      That's probably $100k/year in salary and $20k/year in coffee, but hey.

  • by intermodal ( 534361 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @01:58PM (#5397727) Homepage Journal
    isn't that slashdot every day?
  • I'm looking forward to the insightful and unbiased discussion we will have about the relative merits of Windows and *nix.
    • I'm looking forward to the insightful and unbiased discussion we will have about the relative merits of Windows and *nix.

      Good thing Linuxworld is here to tell us *nix is better than Windows! I was just reading an equally unbiased comparison on MSDN the other day and I was getting worried that I was wasting my time with this whole Linux thing!
  • by MilitaryIntel ( 623307 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:03PM (#5397798)
    Fox News reports a liberal story, NPR takes a true conservative stance, and Slashdot publishes an unbiased story, all this and more at 11.
  • Shoe on other foot (Score:3, Insightful)

    by egg troll ( 515396 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:03PM (#5397801) Homepage Journal
    Had it been written by a Windows supported, would Slashdot be as rational and objective?
    • Well, if you read the comments, many of us are saying that it is a biased source, and to be objective and keep that in mind. I am not treating it, nor anytjing like it, with complete credibility.

      Just because it is about Linux an dnot windows, does not mean it is instantly credible. Let the readers decide for themselves, understanding the sources and it's possible bias.

      But I think most of the posts are logical and realize this already.
  • by GreatOgre ( 75402 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:03PM (#5397802)
    I find this (printer friendly) [linuxworld.com] to be a much easier way to read the story.
    • Printer friendly can be easier to read. Certainly it doesn't have extra navigation content. Sometimes it doesn't have the ad content. From a bandwidth and less crap standpoint it as always preferable. Printer friendly is not always easier to read.

      One of the factors for easy reading on my PC is how wide the column of text is. Two inches is too narrow, but 8 inches is too wide. I prefer 3 to 6 inches. Most articles meant for reading on the screen put side bars on the screen that cut down on the width of the text quite a bit. Most printer friendly versions do not. If I go to the printer friendly version I usually have to make my browsing window narrower. There is a reason that magazines and newspapers divide their text up into columns.

      Wouldn't it be nice if html had a column display mode? You would specify the height of the columns (say height="100%") and a width for each column (say colwidth="4in") and it would format the page into 4 width columns with a horizontal scroll bar at the bottom. Text would flow between the bottom of one column and the top of the next.

  • by Lxy ( 80823 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:03PM (#5397806) Journal
    TCO studies are useless. It all breaks down to what is the right tool for the job.

    My company is a Windows shop. We have so much proprietary software that a switch to linux corporate wide would be far more costly than getting raped by M$. In our case, Windows is cheaper. The OS comes with the PC, so we're paying the OEM license cost rather than the shelf cost for the OS. I've done a TCO study. The cost in software and time would cost more than Windows, not to mention the increased headache of pissed off users who can't use their downloaded programs any more.

    Another shop I consult for is ready for linux. They use an NT server as a file/print server, and MS Office is their primary application. I'm in the process of working with them to migrate to linux, because they have $0 for software upgades and hgave run out of NT licenses. My consultant time will be cheaper than the MS license. The software they need exists, is easy to use, and free. They will be happy with linux.

    So, before you start reading all these TCOs by computer magazines, do one yourself, and figure out what the RIGHT TOOL FOR THE JOB is.
    • by kafka93 ( 243640 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:12PM (#5397930)
      You seem to be determining what "the right tool for the job" is after the job is already complete.

      The point of these studies (which are, admittedly, of marginal usefulness) is to help people make the decision as to what OS to plump for *before* they get to the point where the time, money and other resources have already been spent on developing proprietary software on proprietary software. And the fact that your company would find it "far more costly" to switch to Linux is an indication of the hidden costs inherent in proprietary development.
      • You seem to be determining what "the right tool for the job" is after the job is already complete.

        Looks more like he's considering the costs of switching, which can be large when you're heavily invested in Windows and have little in-house competence in Linux. Of course, this also works the other way around. The TCO thing is still valuable - if you hit an upgrade cycle, you can weigh the cost of upgrading vs. switching and amortize it over the expected upgrades for the next 3 years.

    • We have so much proprietary software that a switch to linux corporate wide would be far more costly than getting raped by M$. In our case, Windows is cheaper.

      Maybe today. Maybe not. But keep in mind, M$ hasn't stopped. They will continue to jack up their prices, lock you into expensive long-term "support" contracts, force you to upgrade hardware/software on their schedule, not yours. They do it because they can and that's who they are.

      Comes a time when you have to stop the abuse and fight back. Short term pain for long term peace of mind.

      • by The Bungi ( 221687 ) <thebungi@gmail.com> on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:27PM (#5398106) Homepage
        They will continue to jack up their prices, lock you into expensive long-term "support" contracts, force you to upgrade hardware/software on their schedule, not yours. They do it because they can and that's who they are.

        Right, because nobody else does that [slashdot.org], sure.

        • You're paying Red Hat for support, not software. If you don't like their prices, find someone else for support. The software is still GPL.

          Oh, and Red Hat and the other Linux distributors aren't Convicted Monopolists (tm).

    • I'll agree, right tool for the job.

      I don't care how much people love samba, it cannot be a real domain controler, and even if it could, I really don't think it would be worth the effort. Why would you settle for 99% compatability? I work for a university and that is pretty much what windows servers do. (I've always called them password checkers :)

      I prefer UNIX/Linux, its what I do. And I just think that its better for big "enterprise" kinds of apps like busy web servers, databases, number crunching, etc. Windows doesn't really run on a 64bit platform, which can be a showstopper.

      As far as my personal computing, I use linux on an HP laptop. However, the TCO is the same because the laptop came with XP already on it, but I don't have office or any other $$ apps. And if I were to use office products daily, I surely would not use OpenOffice on Linux. Again, why settle for 99% compatability.
      • by Jason Earl ( 1894 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @03:36PM (#5398980) Homepage Journal

        The article in question had squat to do with Samba. He was suggesting replacing PCs with X terminals. If the software available on Linux is "good enough" for your purposes then there is no cheaper way to provide functional desktops than X terminals and a fat Linux box. Not only do you completely remove client-side hardware support from the equation, but you drastically reduce client-side software issues as well. Not to mention the fact that software rollouts become a piece of cake, and hardware upgrades consist of upgrading a handful of servers instead of hundreds of client PCs. Even ignoring the fact that most software (and most software upgrades) are free such a setup has huge advantages for both the short and long term.

        Basically Linux and X terminals is a winning combination, provided, of course, that your needs fit within the basic needs provided by the current crop of Linux software. That's a pretty hefty "if" for most folks. I know that I certainly wouldn't want to be the guy in charge of telling the professors that they were going to give up their Windows boxes and Macintoshes and that they were going to be replaced with an X terminals.

    • How about servers? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by siskbc ( 598067 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:24PM (#5398067) Homepage
      While it is possible that you poor bastards can't completely escape windows, there's nothing wrong with a heterogeneous system, either. At work, we have a mixed client setup (windows, mac, linux), and we use linux file, print, and email servers. Seems to work OK, and much more stable - no IIS around here. Use linux for the gateways, and then let people use whatever they want for desktop.

      Nothing says you have to completely migrate to linux - it doesn't really matter if the client/server run similar OS's. These days, samba does a better job at emulating windows than windows does anyway.

    • TCO studies are useless. It all breaks down to what is the right tool for the job.

      I disagree. The most important point I think the author made in the study is the case for 1 (with redundancy) big iron server doing everything as opposed to several small servers each doing one thing. Sure, you'd have to read between the lines to get that, but the story does point out the case for big iron.

      I especially liked his illustration of how PCs are akin to a millipede with 1000 autonomous legs. I can also see how serving with many small computers is more labor intensive than serving with big iron. But I don't think anyone would want to do his university setup with just one system admin.

    • My company is a Windows shop. We have so much proprietary software that a switch to linux corporate wide would be far more costly than getting raped by M$. In our case, Windows is cheaper.

      Well, other than that "the right tool for the job" is not by definition "the tool with path of least resistance", have you considered using WineLib?

      Ok, maybe you're not sure what that entails. I'm assuming these proprietary programs are fairly run of the mill business type apps. Porting them to WineLib is pretty easy (simply altering the build system). Once they are running via WineLib, they have been made independant of Microsoft, and you are free to run them on Linux.

      Now, WineLib isn't perfect. It's possible that along the way, you may need to improve it. That should be factored into the costs. However, I think you'd find the sums favorable.

      There are a few things Wine can't do. Apps based on ActiveX/Internet Explorer combos for one. There isn't a full replacement for IE. Luckily, you don't need one, IE itself can be run under Wine.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:04PM (#5397817)
    Usually, I'd try to make some witty comment here about Unix/Windows, etc, etc. But, we've already seen this story a few dozen times, and I'm all out of original material.
  • by notque ( 636838 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:05PM (#5397828) Homepage Journal
    I've seen several of these on slashdot. The only cost comparison I need to know is.

    Windows costs me money.

    Linux doesn't.

    • Windows costs me money.

      Linux doesn't.

      Everything costs you money. You need to hire people to support the stuff, whatever you buy. Just because you're saving $150/seat on the OS license doesn't mean you're done. Anyway, a lot of proprietary software is being ported to Linux. That stuff sure as hell won't be free. What it comes down to is which platform lets you do you work best. Cost is somewhat secondary if your work generates revenue.

  • by u38cg ( 607297 ) <calum@callingthetune.co.uk> on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:06PM (#5397832) Homepage
    What I find interesting is the way Linux at my uni is slowly consuming the entire back-end of the network - email, file space, the print system, network control, all these are running off Linux and the system seems the stabler for it. On the desktop, however, Windows remains king (in fact it's going backwards; the last Linux cluster in my engineering school went late last year).

    I don't know what it's done TCO wise, but I do know the helpdesk are a lot more helpful now and seem to have more time than they did a couple of years ago. Roll on the desktop, say I.

    • Windows on the desktop is still easier. Once they solve the usability (and SPEED!) issues of doing things which are trivial on windows XP (like sorting through your files using the GUI) then there will be no reasons left to use Windows on the academic desktop, save for a handful of scientific applications which the developers have not had the foresight to bring to a more reasonable platform.
  • Unbiased (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Flamesplash ( 469287 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:07PM (#5397856) Homepage Journal
    It's written by a self proclaimed Unix evangelist, so don't expect it to be unbiased

    I really think that anything that comes from a *nix or windows outfit is not worth printing if you want an actual objective review. It may give objective reviewers something to base their reviews on if they survey stories from all sides, but to the average person these sided arguements are just marketing. I'm not going to believe MS or <insert *nix outfit here> on this issue.
    • Right. With things like OSes, it is nearly impossible to give unbiased reviews. It's not like CPU chips where we can run the same exact benchmarks to two different chips, and nearly everything else is the same. OSes are just different enough that of course results can be scewed and biases, on heavily concentrated on thigns one OS does better than the other.

      I just know it is a biased source, and read it as such. Just like reading left-wing or right-wing news sources. Just know what you are reading and let the reader think it out for themselves.
  • by dildatron ( 611498 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:07PM (#5397857)
    Articles like this from a technical source are kind of pointless. Us Unix guys like unix better and see it as a better solution to many problems, and vice versa with the Windows camp.

    There are lots of frothing-at-the-mouth microsoft people that are jsut as big as a zealot as some hardcore linux people.

    I think the bottom line is still to determine your problem, then determine your solution. For many problems, Linux is the better and cheaper solution.

    Example: say all you want to do is store and serve static web pages: I think it would be hard to argue that Windows would have a lower TCO than linux, and linux is trivial to set up these days to perform these tasks.

    Another Example: For groupware, one may look at all the software out there, and then go with Windows because it runs Outlook. This is fine - if they need those features and Outlook is a better solution, then that's what they should go with. In another few years, linux will likely be veyr easy to set up like windows is, to do many common tasks. With this will come cheaper admins, and more linux. And at this point, the TCO of linux will have dropped even further, and Microsoft will have to continually adjust their strategy to compete.
  • Schools? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by The Bungi ( 221687 ) <thebungi@gmail.com> on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:07PM (#5397863) Homepage
    I realize schools are sorta like businesses and all, but this is yet another TCO "study" that ignores the cold hard facts prevalent in the real world. "Think of the students" is not the most insightful way to make a point about how everyone should be using Unix instead of Windows, sorry.
  • Fair Review? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by ShwAsasin ( 120187 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:08PM (#5397868) Journal
    I find it hard to believe any of the Win vs. Unix articles. There is always some sort of bias when comparing the two. It's interesting to note that when microsoft commissions the study, there is an outcry about them fixing the results, yet if a unix guru/evanglist writes and article about unix it's okay...

    I use Win2k and Red Hat 8 in equal amounts. There are good points about both, and bad points about both.
  • YABTCOC (Score:5, Insightful)

    by binaryDigit ( 557647 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:13PM (#5397933)
    Yet Another Bogus Total Cost of Ownership Comparison.

    This one has sooooo many problems it's hard to know where to start. Heck even from a "basics" point of view, he has the "Microsoft" clients have printers but the "Unix" systems not. Whatever happened to comparing apples to apples? This is just plain bad and rotten reporting. Every student "needs" a 2.8ghz Dell, err, not.

    But the most egregious thing is the setup for the whole comparison. xterms vs full fledged clients. How is this somehow Microsoft vs Unix? You can adopt either topology for either OS. The very premise is absolutely flawed. That the article poster somehow considers this "refreshing" is laughable.
    • Damn right. Universities that run Unix will almost certainly be running a fat-client model, that is, a full Unix system on each desktop. If a Sun workstation in 1989 had enough power to run as a standalone machine, why should it be necessary to resort to X terminals now? A full Unix box is not that much more difficult to administer than an X terminal (well, not if you do it right and have a single configuration pushed to every one of the desktops) and the hardware is not any more expensive (I'm pretty sure the biggest cost of a system nowadays is getting a decent monitor).
    • Whatever happened to comparing apples to apples?
      Hum.. as far as I know.. Apple was not even a part of the TCO... sorry


      Every student "needs" a 2.8ghz Dell, err, not.

      Totally agree on this point. Still, it might be cheaper go get your hands on those than older P3's.. especially if you intend to run the systems for 3-4 years, by the time a P3 will feel as slow as an old Pentium (Still usable, but breaking...). I mean.. if i in four years could choose between a P4 2.8 Ghz and a P3 500 Mhz.. im quite sure which I would choose.


      Still I think the author misses the point totally. Has s/he ever heard the word "ergonomy?". Ever worked in a room with 25 P4 2.8 Ghz PCs ? Ever worked in a room with 25 SunRay 1 ?
      Seriously.. i dont care about how fast [MS Word|Star Office|Open Office] runs, but i do care about the ambient temperature, atleast when its rising above 25C :-) Is it getting hot in here or is it just my 2.8Ghz powered Satan-the-Paperclip undressing ?

      In an educational environment, ergonomy is everything and performance is quite meaningless.

    • Agreed. You cannot compare an X terminal to a PC. The PC has a number of benefits that no Unix system I am aware of currently has, save perhaps for a big IBM system running a bunch of virtual Linux processes.

      First of all, there is still no good way to stop a single user from monopolizing computing resources.

      Second, you don't want users actually logging into machines that too many other users depend on, because there are more local root exploits (and more potential bugs leading to kernel panics, though that is a seriously minor issue even with Linux today) and thus one person can take down all the users. I mean, maybe YOU do, but I don't.

      Third, each user consumes a certain amount of memory. Everyone running mozilla on the same system would quickly crater that box simply through using up all its memory :P Sure you can put more ram in the server, but in most cases, seriously high-density ram costs more than a cheap PC filled with lower-density ram, especially when you're comparing standard PC133 or PC2100 to whatever big wide DIMMs are used in high-end Sun servers now. I haven't looked so maybe I'm off base, but last time I priced memory for Sun systems (for SS20s and Ultra 1s and 2s) it was several times the cost of PC memory.

      Anyway I do agree that xterms to PCs is silly. We stopped using xterms for many of the reasons I detailed above, even in Unixland. Most Unix shops I know use Unix workstations, not X-terminals. This was true when I got my first sysadmin job at Silicon Engineering (formerly Sequoia Semiconductor; Now Creative Silicon, a division of Creative Labs) as they had only one SS20, one SS10, and a couple SS5s as servers, with users sitting at servers (without crashing them or making them unusable!) and other users sitting at SS1, SS1+, SS2, IPC, and IPXen. No X-Terminals, and almost no use of remote X sessions. On the other hand, every sparc was used in a more or less clustered environment (via DQS) to spread circuit analysis jobs out across the network.

      • Re:YABTCOC (Score:3, Insightful)

        by illumin8 ( 148082 )
        Did you read the article? (I know stupid question, this is Slashdot)

        One thing you might notice if you read the article is that on the Unix side he quotes 2x Sun Fire V1280s, each with 12 processors and 32 GB of RAM. That is plenty of horsepower to have 500 users simultaneously running Mozilla, OpenOffice, KDE or Gnome, and whatever other applications they want to run.

        In other words, he's already budgeted the RAM and processing power you would need for this scenario.
    • Re:YABTCOC (Score:4, Funny)

      by Lxy ( 80823 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @03:42PM (#5399050) Journal
      Whatever happened to comparing apples to apples?

      Jobs and Wozniak actually invented them, so Apple vs Apple TCO studies kept coming back with the same conclusion, "yes".
  • Hmmm (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Mr_Silver ( 213637 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:15PM (#5397958)
    First off, you might as well tell them up-front that you're a Unix evangelist. It isn't likely to be a secret, and there is always someone who'll chalk up a point or two for honesty.

    Well to be perfectly honest, I wouldn't employ a Unix evangelist.

    Or a Windows evangelist.

    I'd far rather an Best-Tool-For-The-Job evangelist. Evangelism is all very nice and well, but most of the Windows and Linux evangelists I know tend to completely fail to look at something objectivily because of their biasedness towards a particular platform.

    If you're totally impartial, you come to an impartial decision, you haven't got clouded vision, you actually do make a difference, you don't waste money going down pointless changes but rather migrate because there are solid facts that tell you that you should and, best of all, you do actually save money for the company.

  • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:17PM (#5397984)
    Unfortunatly when told of the Terminal/Server method most people get in their minds a DEC VT100 terminal or a Wyse terminal hooked up to some huge slow mainframe. Todays Terminals are "Smarter" then the old Dumbterminals. And support an enviroment that is nearly undestinguishable to working on a workstation. (with Graphics and Mouse support!). But the problem lies with the PHB who dont want to go back to the terminals because it seems like a step in the wrong direction (not realizing that IT Design goes in cycles). Centralized processing is defently a lot cheaper then Distributed Processing because of the amount of Labor is reduced. But PHB have a great fear of going "backwards" in technology because they dont feel confortable about it. And unfotunatly all the Tech Impovements and Cost advantage wont help a Boss that dosent feel confortable about the product. The trick is to get them confortable about the Terminal Server method then you can get them to switch
  • by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:20PM (#5398010) Homepage
    I have a great 10 user - 1 server Xterminal+linux server combination here. so I am 100% legal with the software thought police. I even have 11 licenses for Win4lin to run the few windows vertical apps that do not exist in linux/unix land.

    WE spent less than 20% of what it would cost for the SAME Thing but using Windows instead.

    NCD terminals + server Linux is spend the money and you're done.

    Windows?? I had to buy 2 licenses per workstation, plus licenses for all the MS apps per workstation. AND the server. it was horribly overpriced and then we add the cost of the citrix.

    It's much cheaper to buy seperate computers and avoid any terminal server with windows. Buy $850.00 dells and call it done... peer to peer networking and hire 2 ms drones..

    If you have talented sysadmins that actually know their job you can save massive amounts of cash using unix... even more if you didnt get fancy-smanchy NCD X terminals but used your old pc's as diskless terminals.... but we wanted the invisible PC+ sleek lcd on everyone's desk.

    I no longer listen to the zealots (Either side) I know what is cheaper and better because I did it. Until someone SHOWS me a legal and working Windows example I'll ignore them as someone who has no clue.

    Linux (not Unix) has the lowest TCO on the planet. and you CAN hire a linux expert for the same as a windows expert.

    • NCD terminals + server Linux is spend the money and you're done.

      I think that the practicality of Xterminals is lost with many Linux users and almost all of Windows users. When people understand the efficiency of X over tcp/ip, it is like a big light turns on in their head.

      Windows Terminal Server-Citrix/Metaframe environment is relatively slow and the licenses are so expensive that it really hasn't taken off as well as it could. TCO for that environment exceeds that of standalone Windows PCs.

      There once was a time when Xterminals were more expensive than standalone PCs too. And old-line commercial UNIX software was/is always more expensive [adobe.com] than Windows apps on a per-seat basis.

      It seems like the current generation of IT greybeards were the early risk-takers of the generation that replaced the mainframe with standalone PCs. Now they are the ones stuck in their old ways.

      If you have talented sysadmins that actually know their job you can save massive amounts of cash using unix... even more if you didnt get fancy-smanchy NCD X terminals but used your old pc's as diskless terminals.... but we wanted the invisible PC+ sleek lcd on everyone's desk.

      We white-boxed ours from a local clone maker. Micro-ATX Nforce boards, Durons, 128mb of memory. No CDROM, no hard disk, no floppy. Even in a real Micro ATX case, they are big, but they sure are fast! Many a time I've shocked an onlooker by telling them I was working on a terminal!

  • Because this is a similar question. I think a truly unbiased review would bind that both camps can solve similar sets of problems similarly. While there may be some fringe applications (LOTR's rendering farm) that lend themselves to one solution over the other, both camps are suitably developed and robust to handle most tasks...in business. But this is a University environent. They have a continual revolving door full of new CS students willing to admin for cheap or free. The labor costs alone might sway them towards the Unix camps. To paraphrase: "Linux is free, but only if your time is valueless".
  • by Repugnant_Shit ( 263651 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:24PM (#5398076)
    I think having an all eunuchs campus is a bad idea. You'd be missing an essential part of the college experience.
  • There are a number of problems with this article, general TCO reports like this usually don't apply to larger businesses. Obviously if you can't use unix terminals then Windows PCs or terminals are your best option. Which brings me to another problem in that.. why would they choose to compare Unix terminal services/thin clients with traditional Windows PCs at every desk? There are too many variables to make any kind of informed decision if you ask me, why not start with comparing Sun architectures with that of Citrix/Windows 2000 if you are interested in Unix vs. Windows cost differences? On the other hand, if you want to do traditional PCs at every desk comparisons of Unix vs. Windows, take Redhat vs. Windows 2000 Pro.

    Also, where are they getting prices on Dell GX260s? Working for an academic institution that adopts the Windows PC model, we buy GX260s with CRT monitors and no printer for about $1,000.00, their cost should only be a couple hundred dollars over that per unit. And if they buy in bulk it will go down quite a bit. I don't think I would want 510 Canon bubblejet printers to feed/support either.
  • Okay, so yet another "biased" report. There should be another on the Windows side somewhere for thsi guy's audience. Lets dig it up.

    Most of us have used both setups, and from the looks of this article, the author's audience is not as comptuer saavy as the typical /. reader.

    We know that fun difference of logging into the "server" and joining the users in the group. In the MS world, there is still that "my machine" thinking. Perhaps this is biggest difference I take from this report.

    I must say, I agree here. The "my machine" aspect has caught quite a few of my users defending their files and setup much more earnestly than they should (we swipe their box and give them a new one - "network drive is your personal space, lowly user"). "Roaming profile" is an ugly add-on in the MS world.

    I would be EXTREMELY happy to admin a *nix user group rather than an MS group. The endless capability for users to junk their machines, or for our own applications to crowd the machines is a bit of a hurdle to learn for each MS os release.

    It's been posted, but more interesting to me are the admin/software maint. specifics between the two.

    Interestingly, MS argues almost the SAME THING as the reason their process is more productive. They sell with the slogan that independence of machines overcomes the bottlenecks that centralized OS's can create. They say for those "down" numbers, that 1 or 2 crashes for a Unix box kill EVERYONE logged in, not just the single person who is hosing Access from...well, using it.

    mug
  • by gosand ( 234100 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:30PM (#5398132)
    I have noticed that all of the TCO reports always deal will 100% MS vs 100% *nix. Has anyone calculated what it would take to run a hybrid of the two? But I guess that would completely depend on what you wanted it to do.

    In this particular case, it is client/server, so I don't think there could be too much crossover, but I am sure in other applications it could. Of course, that integration would be much easier if MS played well with others. But what about setting up an infrastructure so that the client side could be anything? (Linux, Windows, Mac) In reality they usually aren't pure client/server but some kind of bastard stepchild.

  • Question (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Quill_28 ( 553921 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:31PM (#5398147) Journal
    I have worked as a NT admin, for about 1000 nodes. Taking care of these systems was a nightmare in my humble opinion. Software updates(SMS usually works), people screwing up their system(No, I didn't install AOL after you said not too). But I love Bonzai Buddy!, virus updates, back-ups, etc.

    I then went to work at a Unix shop, it took me awhile to get used to certain aspects(throwing windows, the process is running on the server), etc. Things that seems so obvious now. Quick note, ask a Windows user to bring up a share and run a program from the share, does the program run a the share or locally.) Windows users don't think like this everything runs runs locally.

    No, I understand why my mother wants to use Windows, and most other lay folks. I think Windows does certain things very well(besides crashing ;-) )

    What I don't understand if why big business
    and many colleges don't use a system with x-terminals and beefy servers in the back. Most students/workers only need e-mail, internet, word processing on lab computers. Those departments that have to have program that only run on Windows could get Windows machines.

    It would seem to save alot of time and money. But I may also be naive.

    So why isn't this more common(or is it and I just havn't noticed)?

    Please don't answer that MS has brainwashed everyone, or everyone is just stupid, etc.

  • by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:35PM (#5398192) Homepage
    Hi numbers are very ficticious...

    5 full time staff members for $75,000.00 while 1 Unix staff full time $120,000.00??

    he is on some really good drugs...

    Unix/Linux staff can be had for $45,000.00 to $60,000.00 in the midwest... more if you live in the la-la-land called california. while Windows drones are not that cheap.... About the same price for good skilled windows admins. $45,000.00 to $60,000.00 less ($28,000.00 to $35,000.00)if you are a MCSE without a IT work histroy. (lesson for kiddies... expierience means LOTS more than that stupid cert.)

    maybe the $120,000.00 is accurate for wages+ overhead. but the MS number is so far off it stinks horribly.
  • Of course the dumb terminal model is going to be cheaper, especially when combined with free software.

    But what happens when you have to support 200 people living off campus? What happens when you have to explain to Dad who just bought his kid a $2000 portable that he can't use all that software? What happens when you have to explain to the professors that they have to convert all their files?

    The knowledge people have of how to use the tools they have is extrordinarily valuable. I've had people tell me "tell me to use Windows" and I quit. I've had people tell me "Linux and I quit". They have extraordinary loyalty to the tools. Sure it is emotional and not rational, but you sure better understand the politics when you advocate change. And figure in the education and lost productivity costs while people regain their comfort level.
  • I don't understand. They're comparing a bunch of X Servers versus a bunch of Dell PC's?

    What about the guy who's playing MP3's at his desk?

    What about the guy who wants to sync to his Palm Pilot?

    What about the guy who's using Messenger?

    What about the guy who *NEEDS* a specific piece of software to communicate with his peers?

    What about the guy who's burning DVD's of classroom presentations?

    What about the guy who wants to run mid-priced shrink wrapped applications like Mathematica or MATLAB or IDL (all probably less than $10,000 for a single user license, but could get expensive for a big machine).

    What about the guy who runs small simulations -- the kind of thing a reasonable desktop could do in an evening or a weekend? People who run computer centers often complain about 40 hours of computer time on the big boxes.

    In short, what about all the flexibility that the Personal Computer gives the user? Why ins't that included in their "TCO" at all?
    • Re:I don't get it. (Score:4, Informative)

      by josh crawley ( 537561 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @03:12PM (#5398702)
      ---I don't understand. They're comparing a bunch of X Servers versus a bunch of Dell PC's?

      That's what it seems. Yeah, I know. The compairison sucks.

      ---What about the guy who's playing MP3's at his desk?

      What? Lopster and XMMS arent good enough for him?

      ---What about the guy who wants to sync to his Palm Pilot?

      There's already good sync software for Linux. Just un-endorsed. Hell, They might actually make a "legit" tool if stuff like this happens.

      ---What about the guy who's using Messenger?

      There's buttloads of tools for IM on Linux.

      ---What about the guy who *NEEDS* a specific piece of software to communicate with his peers?

      In limited cases, WIndows is the only answer for now. But as sysad, you could put heavy pressure on a company who does such.

      ---What about the guy who's burning DVD's of classroom presentations?

      Get him a Mac. Most unix dudes could get one working.

      ---What about the guy who wants to run mid-priced shrink wrapped applications like Mathematica or MATLAB or IDL (all probably less than $10,000 for a single user license, but could get expensive for a big machine).

      OK... Your [wolfram.com] point [mathworks.com] ? [rsinc.com]

      ---What about the guy who runs small simulations -- the kind of thing a reasonable desktop could do in an evening or a weekend? People who run computer centers often complain about 40 hours of computer time on the big boxes.

      Help his department build a small cluster for job crunching. COuld even be a "beowulf" cluster if his apps support it. Then he could 'job' out time to other departments. That'll avoid cpu munchers on the main system.

      ---In short, what about all the flexibility that the Personal Computer gives the user? Why ins't that included in their "TCO" at all?

      How about the flexibility of "use the tool that works for the job"? Trust me, you really dont NEED windows anymore.Look at all 3 links at your Math program question.
  • by tepp ( 131345 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @02:49PM (#5398370)
    This article is correct about Linux being, by the numbers, cheaper than windows... but it ignores things that, ultimately, will cost the university even more money.

    Specifically, TCODI... Total Cost Of Dealing with Idiots.

    Now I mean idiots in the nicest possible sense. Sometimes, computer idiots are just people who don't have the time, effort, or motivation to bother with computers, and view them as a magical source of evil powers which they must fight with on a daily basis.

    In the article, he goes on to discuss how a student could easily translate a word document for use in Konquerer, or StarOffice, and back again. Yes, if the student possesses more than a mild understanding of computers. If that student has only a limited experience of using Microsoft Office, in a very limited manner, the cost and the effort to teach this user how to convert their documents to and fro before their 5 minute deadline passes will strain even the most patient of your student lab aides.

    Most college students aren't computer enthusiasts. Some, like, I am ashamed to admit, my own sister, view the computer as little more than a calculator. When things go wrong, she promptly turns on her charm on the nearest nerd and thrusts the laptop into their hands... fix it! Make it work like it did before!

    As a former network administrator, I think most of the university's students and professors fit this description. I used to administer the computers for the University of M----'s department of Zoology. Most - there were a few tech junkies and I treasured them - just wanted their computers to spit out the data it spat out last week, work exactly like it did last week, and most importantly, look exactly like it did last week. Anything different overwhelms them and gets in the way of doing what is important - to them - their research.

    I got constantly called to fix non-working PC's (floppies left in drive), to revive dead hard drives, to find out why the printer wasn't responding. I had students hand me floppy disks with the only surviving copy of their thesis on it... after they had run in and out of the library's magnetic sensors with it in their backpacks.

    When we finally did upgrade the administrative department's computers to Windows 95 after years of Windows 3.1 - in 1999, no less - I spent weeks explaining the basics, over and over, to frightened secretaries who were afraid of damaging their computer by clicking the wrong button! I had to explain what a double-click was to a mac user, not once, but three times.

    And as for my sister... she's not stupid. She just doesn't want to bother with her computer, so she finds some geek to do it for her. If you try to force her into using Linux, with Konquerer, she'll only turn around and force some poor geek to translate all her papers for her prior to her deadline.

    It's easy to get excited about computers. But ultimately, the computer is a tool, and as my father said, you use the best tool for the job. If a professor is getting along fine using a Apple 2 to do his data collection, then my job is to support his Apple 2. Forcing him into Linux, or Windows, or OS2 warp, just wastes his valuable time which could be better spent analyzing the brain chemicals in frozen mice (no, not making that up). Or the guy who analyzed mice breasts in petri dishes. I never did get around to asking him why....

    This is why unviersities will continue to be a hodge podge of different operating systems. It works. Mostly. And it gets the job done. And when it doesn't, that's where the IT department is there for. Not to evangilize. But to make it work just like it did before, and get that thesis back, by the time they're done installing wires in that monkey's brain, preferably.

  • Blatent shameless plug: I just added a link to this linuxworld article from my new site - MS Versus [webhop.net]. I'm putting together a very broad comparison, covering as many bases as possible, of MS and alternatives. Contributions are welcome.
  • Terminal Server (Score:5, Informative)

    by AKAImBatman ( 238306 ) <akaimbatman@gmaYEATSil.com minus poet> on Thursday February 27, 2003 @03:01PM (#5398538) Homepage Journal
    As someone who was once an Admin for a 40 user Citrix machine, I'm going to address everyone's statements about comparing Terminal Server.

    What I found when we used Citrix is that support cost dropped dramatically. The majority of the problems were either "I have my numlock on" type of problems or from the PCs in the marketing department. (They didn't like Citrix very much and had the political clout not to use it.) In general, users were happier and more productive since they couldn't mess up the system or access any software except the ones we put in their list of icons. If they did something stupid like moved all their icons off the screen, they'd simply log off and log back in and everything would be fixed. If they wanted a permanent change, a quick phonecall to IT would take care of it.

    Now, the problem with Citrix/Terminal Server is scale. 40 users was about all you could handle on the machine before you went beyond the architectural limits of Intel hardware (i.e. 4 gigs of RAM). This meant that shops larger than we were, had to spread their users across multiple Citrix machines. Not too bad, but every machine increases support costs substantially. With hundreds of users, you'd be supporting tens of machines. Not good. On top of that, it was still a windows machine. Every time we needed to upgrade software, patch the system, or change just about any setting, the machine had to be rebooted. The system would also crash on occasion and have to be rebooted. Processes would run away and couldn't be killed and we'd have to reboot. As you can imagine, our users didn't like it much when halfway through the day they had to save their work and sit around until the machine was back up.

    Before I left, we had several projects underway to look at the viability of using Unix to replace Citrix as a more stable, lower cost alternative to Microsoft's forced upgrade to Terminal Server. (Terminal Server, BTW, was over 3 times the cost of Citrix. And we couldn't go with a Citrix upgrade because the new version was an add-on to Terminal Server!) This was especially viable for us since our NeoWare thin clients supported the X protocol as well as the Citrix protocol. Although, that was not a huge problem since Citrix for Unix was looking to be a good alternative to the X protocol.

    So what was the number one problem in our way? Office? Nope, StarOffice was fine. Email? Nope, we used low-cost POP3 mail. Proprietary software? We didn't use much and the stuff we did use could be relagated to the old Citrix machine and run as "Citrix Applications". No, the real problem was the web browser. We were using Netscape 4, but it was showing its age and we were beginning to have problems with sites that required IE (which we were unable to install correctly). So our choices were looking pretty thin. The best solution on the horizon was Mozilla/Netscape 6. Unfortunately, it really wasn't ready for prime-time.

    If I was to do the study again today, I don't think there would be a single point against Unix that I could find. Netscape 7.2 is strong and stable, OpenOffice 1.0 is a decent MsOffice replacement, and more and more software is being ported to Unix. Initial costs can even be mitigated by buying used E3500s+ from companies like AnySystem [anysystem.com]. And I can just keep going with that system for years without worrying about the next major OS update.

    So in closing... Die Terminal Server, Die! :-)
  • by Yankovic ( 97540 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @03:06PM (#5398607)
    Uh, i'm going to have to disagree with that. Glaring errors:

    1) 2.8 GHz on every desktop? Ack. Cut that down to 1 Ghz and now you're talking. 1/2 the cost of a smart display.

    2) Why is there a 36 month HW refresh for the Windows side and not the Unix side? 1.4 Ghz on the desktop seems like it would last a long time.

    3) Why are there TWO refreshes for software in 4 years and zero for Unix? (Even solaris needs updating) Plus, i'm running just fine on W2k and it's 3 years old. I probably won't upgrade until the version after win 2003.

    4) Why is staffing so much more? That seems just absurd. You could buy a management tool like SMS or Tivoli and manage every desktop remotely. Both numbers and cost of skill. And despite what the author says, maintaining 500 smart displays connecting to a server takes man power.

    5) 4 dual proc machines doing what for 500 people? You can do plenty with half as many machines.

    Why would anyone say these are hard to argue with? Oh wait, it's michael...
  • I will bite (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Billly Gates ( 198444 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @03:26PM (#5398856) Journal
    First off this guy is a Unix evangelist. No bias here. Second in the article the author makes a point that each new school desktop cost $2100 plus $213 with the software for office at bulk discount rates.

    Does this seem a bit pricey for a school considering for $499 you can buy a
    2.2 ghz dell? [dell.com]Schools are on a budget and its cheaper in the long run to just buy the cheapest now and upgrade every 2 1/2 years then buy the latest and greatest and upgrade every 4 years.

    Also Linux lacks major software for students like games and MS Word and Excel. Yes openoffice can open some of the file formats but MS Word can check not only spelling but sentence structure, readability and Flecsh grade level, and ole ability to drop in an excel chart into a word document for example. Word 2003 even has Encarta integrated into it so you can highlight a word and research a topic. It's pretty nice when you're writing a paper.

    Excel can do polynomial math while OpenOffice cannot which blows if you're doing anything accounting or scientific oriented.

    Each operating has its strengths and weaknesses and is not better or worse then the other. As a basic operating system Windows blows goatballs. It's insecure, unreliable and not as programmable as Unix or Linux.

    But for average joe users Windows is still king until openoffice catches up, Linux has a reliable package manager that's as easy to use as a Windows setup.exe program, and when we have more software ported. Also alot of gnu apps have been ported to Windows. I use Windows2k with perl, gvim, mozilla, apache, mysql, gcc with devc++ [bloodshed.net] and openoffice. Windows users can gradually get use to the idea of free software and switch when Linux is ready or when palladium comes out.

    Last but not least Dennis Ritchie himself uses WindowsNT as his main desktop operating sytem. He just logs into plan9 and inferno servers from a client on his desktop. I agree on the idea of terminals and vnc clients on Windows boxes. I think unless the school is really cash stripped that Windows with vnc software for the occasional unix app is more appropriate and would lower support costs since students prefer Windows. Go to any college NT/Linux lab and NT is always loaded.
  • by erroneus ( 253617 ) on Thursday February 27, 2003 @05:32PM (#5400265) Homepage
    I would like to see a completely unbiased study and it seems to me that the only way this is possible is to create it using opposing sides.

    Each side should demonstrate their costs based on a standardized set of criteria. Then each set of statistical information can be plugged into a format that allows some very clear side-by-side comparison of raw information.

    This approach will help keep the playing field level and honest as there would be a minimum of the pro-side dissing the opposing side.

    I believe this process would take a long time even to agree on what criteria is relevant and important, but I believe in the end, these facts will begin to spell out in clear and obvious ways where current strengths and weaknesses exist in the various platforms.

Understanding is always the understanding of a smaller problem in relation to a bigger problem. -- P.D. Ouspensky

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