Microsoft-Backed Firm Says IBM Is Anticompetitive 174
BBCWatcher writes "Microsoft has long claimed that the mainframe is dead, slain by the company's Windows monopoly. Yet, apparently without any mirror nearby, Microsoft is now complaining through the Microsoft-funded Computer & Communications Industry Association that not only are mainframes not dead, but IBM is so anticompetitive that governments should intervene in the hyper-competitive server market. The Wall Street Journal reports that Microsoft is worried that the trend toward cloud computing is introducing competition to the Windows franchise, favoring better-positioned companies including IBM and Cisco. HP now talks about almost nothing but the IBM mainframe, with no Tukwila CPUs to sell until 2010. The global recession is encouraging more mainframe adoption as businesses slash IT costs, dominated by labor costs, and improve business execution. In 2008, IBM mainframe revenues rose 12.5% even whilst mainframe prices fell. (IBM shipped 25% more mainframe capacity than in 2007. Other server sales reports are not so good.) IBM mainframes can run multiple operating systems concurrently, including Linux and, more recently, OpenSolaris."
Microsoft...the model of competitiveness (Score:5, Insightful)
Talk about the pot calling the kettle black!
Clever advertisement (Score:4, Insightful)
A huge IBM add posted on slashdot that looks like MS bashing. Really clever.
Try reading the articles you linked to... (Score:5, Insightful)
...and not just the titles. The HP one is talking about HP pushing for people to migrate off mainframes. Onto HP servers. Running Windows Server 2003.
Hyper-competetive? (Score:5, Insightful)
They could be right even when they're doing wrong (Score:5, Insightful)
Talk about the pot calling the kettle black!
Yeah, but you know... they could be right.
Say I'm littering in your front yard. Then you start playing obnoxiously loud music in the middle of the night.
Should I be barred from suing you for being a nuisance, just because I'm a nuisance myself?
If you argue yes, I think the reasoning becomes even thinner than I think it has to be for that case when we're talking about this:
One party does something bad towards not any one particular party but society as a whole. Then, another party points to the first party and says "they're doing it, so we can do it to" and go on to do something bad against society.
True, Microsoft isn't on the moral high ground, but that doesn't excuse IBM. And it doesn't make it incorrect for Microsoft to point it out. Just... the weird kind of funny.
disclaimer: I don't know the facts of the case. I don't know whether IBM is being anticompetitive. I'm not well-enough informed to hold an informed opinion, so I won't state one. I'm just saying that if IBM is being anticompetitive...
IBM is more than that (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Buh buh but.... (Score:2, Insightful)
no no, not at all 'nothing more' -- the Z series is designed to have "zero down time" - you can replace the cpu, memory, power supply without interrupting service. The mainframe has much better engineering than our lousy home computers. In addition the I/O capacity is much much higher.
In fact the mainframe, which is now represented by the Z series is what our home computers should be.
Re:Microsoft...the model of competitiveness (Score:3, Insightful)
It's OK when then other companies compete with each other, but if they start to compete with Microsoft then it's unfair...
Their business model is not built upon competition, it's built upon killing competitors.
Details on the complaint? (Score:5, Insightful)
We need more details about what anti-competitive things IBM is doing. OK, it sells machines that seem to give customers more value for money, in their perception, while still making massive profits. Lucky IBM, but isn't that what business is all about? What have they been doing to stop others competing with them - if they can? Have they been saying that you cannot connect Windows machines to their mainframes? Have they been refusing to run Microsoft software (if you can get the appropriate license) on their virtual machines? Or what else?
Re:They could be right even when they're doing wro (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:They could be right even when they're doing wro (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:They could be right even when they're doing wro (Score:4, Insightful)
Say I'm littering in your front yard. Then you start playing obnoxiously loud music in the middle of the night.
Should I be barred from suing you for being a nuisance, just because I'm a nuisance myself?
Yeah, but I'm not sure it's really like that. AFAICT it's almost more like if you were littering and the trash blew over into your neighbor's yard, and then you complained to the neighborhood association that your neighbor wasn't taking good enough care of their yard, because it was covered in trash.
If IBM is dominant, it seems like it's at least partially because they're the one left standing after Microsoft leveraged their monopoly to drag the whole market in a different direction.
Re:They could be right even when they're doing wro (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:They could be right even when they're doing wro (Score:3, Insightful)
Well... I take it you weren't around back in the days when IBM was every bit as vile a monopolist as Microsoft is now. Look up some of the writings of Rex Malik (in England) or Nancy Foy (in the US), and read about the history of IBM. I personally would have loved it had Burroughs prevailed.
Re:They could be right even when they're doing wro (Score:3, Insightful)
Should I be barred from suing you for being a nuisance, just because I'm a nuisance myself?
Yes. It is called "unclean hands" (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unclean_hands).
You being a jackass undermines your suit against me being a jackass.
Microsoft calling anyone anti-competitive should result in the court bursting out in raucous laughter.
Re:They could be right even when they're doing wro (Score:3, Insightful)
The interesting part here is that Microsoft used a sock-puppet company for those statements.
Has MS come out and say it themselves it wouldn't be quite the news it is.
Re:Microsoft...the model of competitiveness (Score:5, Insightful)
Microsoft's previous history means that just about any thing they say is likely
a self-serving LIE. That's what their history has to do with this. It might be
nice to actually mention by what method IBM is being anti-competitive here.
You don't just scream "monopoly" and leave it at that.
Are they abusing a current dominant position that occured organically?
Are they engaging in some sort of sabotage through agressive head hunting?
Is there some sort of natural market barrier (compatability) they are abusing?
Are they engaging in some sort of consumer fraud (vaporware, FUD)?
Re:They could be right even when they're doing wro (Score:2, Insightful)
It seems that You assume that the only, or only successfully, way to compete with IBM is to use the same machine architecure and operating system.
You could really compete with Your own software and hardware. Yes, it's not as easy but there have been several such competitors. And it should be easier now when the bigger part of the customer applications is in 3:rd or higher level programming languages (e g COBOL).
There is of course a tough task to build up the whole hardware infrastructure to be able to deliver high mainframe reliability. OTOH, if You skip support of IBM legacy assembler You can skip all the backward compatibility mess that IBM have to deal with in every new version of the OS (and also hardware).
Re:I Don't Quite Understand (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm not a huge fan of mainframes. But you are right on the money -- "buy the right tool for the right purpose." Unfortunately many companies get rid of mainframes, Unix, etc to follow the dollar. Then they are scrambling to write applications to do the same thing. Seeing more and more companies jumping on the Linux band-wagon. I like Linux, but it is not always the answer. Guess I am getting old and cranky. :)
Re:They could be right even when they're doing wro (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:BFD...mac, windows, and linux can run multiple (Score:4, Insightful)
> Why would anyone spend huge sums of $ on a mainframe and the scarce mainframe
> programmers to keep it running, just to run a virtualized copy of linux?
So that you can run ten thousand copies of linux. Virtualized at the hardware level.
Re:They could be right even when they're doing wro (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes but mission critical wintel deployment it's probably a lot more expansive in terms of redudancy and support cost then the older mainframes. when they grow to the scale where mainframes used to live.
Windows biggest drawback stability wise was always that it had none and now only week self protection features, a renegade application will take a wintel host down while a mainframe will remain mostly unaffected by bad application code. With properly tested application code you can make a wintel stable, but thats not all that common in the cloud world where almost everything is perpertual beta and to keep that stable you need a underlying platform who can protect itself the way windows can't. especially if your going to rent out the hardware on a timeshare basis, to almost anyone. Unix/Linux remains as always the middle ground it runs on any hardware(now even clasical mainframes) and gets a lot closer to mainframe like behavior then windows.
When microsoft claims that most windows crashes are due to 3rd party code they are actually right, the only problem is that Windows is the making it damn easy for 3rd party code to take the entire system down.
Microsoft SHOULD be worried... (Score:4, Insightful)
The Microsoft approach with all of the desktop computers networked together is becoming fabulously expensive for support, maintenance, installation, and security. The 'mainframe' computer still connects the desktops but the good stuff (apps and data) is on the 'mainframe' rather than the local desktops so most of the support, maintenance, installation, and security is done on a few of the 'mainframes' rather than the thousands of desktops. The cost advantages of that are so enormous that Microsoft should be attempting to find a way to play in that space by buying companies rather than bellyaching about the anti-competitiveness of IBM. Microsoft has never figured out what they want to do, anyway...video games, corporate computing, home multimedia centers, small business computing, or what? Microsoft wants to do everything but they don't do anything very well.
Re:The whole premise of this is off-base (Score:2, Insightful)
Because IBM and Cisco are known for their highly scalable frameworks to deal with high-traffic, high-computational applications.
Microsoft has never had a foothold in the enterprise or computational intensive market, ever. Having worked my entire career in high science and industry, I have never seen a mission critical, highly stable and scalable application written on the MS platform (not that they don't exist I'm sure).
Do you think banks use
MS frameworks do not have a history of reliability and scalability for supporting high-traffic mission critical and highly computational applications.
Most MS framework apps I've seen are un-scalable, monotonic desktop apps. Great for spreadsheets, but not so great for running a bank.
The problem is that MS has been way behind for so long, it'll be difficult for them to catch up. You look at
Really, MS is at a dis-advantage because of a history of poor enterprise products.