Unix Isn't Dead 441
windows bios world writes: "Compaq, Sun, SGI, and IBM are releasing new machines running Unix. From cnet.com: 'Compaq has begun shipping test versions of a new line of AlphaServer Unix servers using the EV7 "Marvel" version of the company's Alpha processor. ... As expected, IBM released on Monday its p670, a 16-processor machine that's essentially a smaller version of Big Blue's top-end 32-processor p690 "Regatta" server introduced in late 2001.' Also, Sun teamed up with Sony to release video-on-demand servers." And of course, there's OS X.
How (Score:4, Informative)
news.com.com (Score:3, Funny)
3.com (Score:2)
too bad 3Com cannot get 3.com [3.com].
Unix servers breaking out all over (Score:2)
I think CNET chose that confusing tagline on purpose, to help spread FUD.
who ever said it was? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:who ever said it was? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:who ever said it was? (Score:2, Funny)
Anyone who did that would have to be clinically insane and would most likely not only hunt down the hacker but torture him in some as of yet unknown way involving ms bob and a chainsaw.
Re:who ever said it was? (Score:2, Funny)
Enemy Mine (Score:3, Interesting)
Funnier still, since the [non-]linked article never states Unix was dead or dying.
Re:who ever said it was? (Score:2)
Re:who ever said it was? (Score:2)
Here's a Link to the Actual Story (Score:4, Informative)
Blindingly obvious, bloke (Score:2)
Unix isn't dead, it just smells funny. (Score:3, Funny)
And in other news... (Score:2, Funny)
In Other News... (Score:2)
Honestly. Everyone who uses Linux knows that UNIX isn't dead: on the contrary, it seems to be on the upswing.
Re:In Other News... (Score:2)
Re:In Other News... (Score:2)
Sounds to me like... (Score:2)
Of course Unix isn't dead. OSX is a perfect example. It would seem that most of Apple's user base is well on its way to migrating over to OSX, as I see more and more posts on various sites where people are deleting their OS9 install.
Re:Sounds to me like... (Score:2)
/brian
But linux is killing unix..for better or for worse (Score:3, Insightful)
That said, both linux and Win2k are set to completely consume the server markets. Solaris, AIX and True64 simply won't be in use in ten years. On that I will bet.
Re:But linux is killing unix..for better or for wo (Score:2)
Re:But linux is killing unix..for better or for wo (Score:2)
Re:But linux is killing unix..for better or for wo (Score:3, Informative)
For example, there's LOTS of people using VMS. Is VMS a viable platform anymore? Probably not, it's just easier for people to buy a newer faster Alpha for their apps then trying to port an app built around VMS features to Unix or Windows.
What you will likely see is that, as Linux gets better, Solaris/AIX/Irix/etc will get pushed to platforms where Linux isn't yet viable.
For a company who makes higher-end servers, Linux makes perfect business sense. The OS doesn't sell the hardware, the hardware forces you to use a particular OS, unless it's Windows. Thus, if you can lay off 25% of your OS development staff and put the other 75% to making Linux work on your platform, you save money and get geek points. Your only risk is that nobody else will make the gamble and you will be left holding the bag. Or that your hardware innately sucks and people are buying it because they got locked into your OS many many years ago.
The Big Iron (Score:2)
I am sure that there were better software solutions for them to try and all but IBM looked too good for them. Now they are running a tru Unix OS and are sooo pleased with the performance of the IBM main.
One thing you have to give to IBM is their stability. Just cant be beat. I know that a linux clustered could prolly do the same but most dont have the admins to even try to pull that off.
I dont think Unix will ever die. It might turn into a speciality market type thing but will never die.
Just my rambling
Stating the obvious... (Score:2)
The internet runs on Unix based OSes for the most part. The majority of major system services had their origin and are mostly installed on Unix based systems. The homogenous Windows NT datacenter server farm idea is flawed and has IMHO failed.
Unix is alive and well and if it was not Mickeysoft would never bother putting up sites bashing it. Micro$oft does not need to beat the dead horses (ever see them run ads today bashing OS/2?).
_______________________________________________
Re:Stating the obvious... (Score:2)
Am I falling for a Troll? Oh well, here goes...
BZZZT! Wrong!
Here's a short list of commercially available OSs that are not based at their core with Unix:
Thanks for playing, though!
Re:Stating the obvious... (Score:2)
"NonStop-UX, the operating system for Compaq's fault-tolerant Integrity S-series servers, is the industry's most reliable implementation of UNIX System V."
come out as not based on Unix? Did I read it wrong?
Re:Stating the obvious... (Score:2)
Re:Stating the obvious... (Score:2)
How about MacOS 1.0 through 9.2?
Am I falling for a Troll?
I beleive it does look that way...
Re:Stating the obvious... (Score:2)
VMS
OS/390
PalmOS
Perhaps you meant consumer desktop OS? Even then, neither AtheOS nor QNX is Unix based. Neither is GNU/Hurd nor GNU/Linux, if you want to be pedantic about the meaning of UNIX.
I wish it would die (Score:2, Interesting)
Better operating systems are not getting a chance, e.g. plan9, hurd (I am not sure about this myself).
You could argue that unix can assimilate things, but that can only go so far. Some time we have to break out of the mindset.
Linux is nice but has not advanced the state of the art.
Even though Unix is not profit-making like windows it has the same power as microsoft in stiffling innovation (to some degree).
Re:I wish it would die (Score:3, Insightful)
The unix mindset has become too pervasive in the midrange computers. Nobody is implementing new ideas because everything has to be `posix compliant'.
What do you mean by midrange? Workstations? Small servers? Big appliances?
What do you call new ideas? What do ideas have to do with posix compliance, or lack of compliance?
Linux is nice but has not advanced the state of the art.
Then you mention Linux, and state of the art. Does that mean OS X is fair game for me to mention?
OS X adds displayPDF and vectorized resolution independent displays. It adds FireWire, Bluetooth, 802.11b, and gigabit ethernet to the hardware mix; it's pushing LCD displays (and the accompanying trend of color managment and color profiling of digital display technologies), DVD-R as a video content creation tool, and high end video, film, and TV creation tools on 'low end' hardware.
That's not even mentioning future enhancements to the OS itself now that it has caught up to bar, in terms of memory protection, multitasking, multiprocessing, and stability.
Can you tell I like Macs and OS X?
Re:New ideas != Good ideas (Score:2)
OS X rules... (Score:2)
I was pretty blown away when I went into the "sharing" control panel, clicked on web sharing, and apache started up, all ready configured and eager to go. Then there's "remote terminal login" which fired up sshd (and not telnetd thank god).
Next stop, the fink [sourceforge.net] site so I can install a rootless X server and all the GNU and other tools which are missing from it.
Basically, the best of all worlds. Unix, the slick Apple GUI, and even IE and Microsoft Office.
Re:OS X rules... (Score:2)
Apple's pushing a good security model (I didn't say it was a perfect implementation) - don't ever use root, just use sudo and Authentication Manager to do various things as root.
hey, at least I'm not going to deliver my rant against linux kiddiez thinking it's l33t to do everything as root on their box, get mail as "root@mybox", and then end up hosing the system inadvertently... or am I?
Re:OS X rules... (Score:2)
Linux distributions include an already configured Apache (yes, with Perl, PHP & stuff) for years.
But when Apple does it, people are "blown away". I think it doesn't matter what Apple does, no matter what it is, people will say that it's 1) easy 2) user-friendly and 3) innovative.
The power of marketing.
If you actually want to run applications (gasp) on a computer, setting up a Linux-workstation is already a lot faster and easier than setting up any other OS and install every measly app afterwards. - Even if the OS itself is preinstalled....
Re:OS X rules... (Score:2)
I've ridiculed the Mac for years, and as head of IT at my organization, led the effort to ban them at our place as "unsupported." I now believe I've been part of a horrible conspiracy. Now that I have a Mac in my home with my linux and windows boxes along with a w2k server, I'll take the opportunity to learn how to integrate them and possibly support them again.
btw, on that note, I can tell you right now that SMB support SUCKS WIND. It works, but no browsing. You have to enter an address like smb://domain.name;machine.name/share. Hopefully that will get fixed in a future release.
Re:Missing X tools... (Score:3, Informative)
X can be easily installed (from what I've been told, I intend to try it tonight). Go to fink.sourceforge.net. Their stuff is pre-compiled and packaged using dpkg.
The one thing about OS X from user viewpoint is that you just don't see Unix or can even tell it's there... I had to hunt in the app folder to find the terminal app to open up a shell. Not that that was difficult, but the box I saw in the store had terminal in the dock.
Re:Missing X tools... (Score:2)
Re:Missing X tools... (Score:2)
Even better would be running MacOSX apps under KDE.
Is that possible?
Re:Missing X tools... (Score:2)
Sure, there's a rootless X server you can install via fink. The integration is excellent, copy and paste works across environments and the X windows even cast the same drop shadows that regular Aqua windows do.
Even better would be running MacOSX apps under KDE.
No, although I think people are trying to port KDE to Mac OS X. Another cross platform possibility is using GNUstep to port OS X Cocoa apps.
Re:OS X rules... (Score:2)
Goofier than the default cartoony interface that XP comes with?
The only negatives I see so far is the lack of right button and scroll wheel (easily fixed with a usb mouse which I will get if I can find one as cool looking as the shipped mouse), and the fact I paniced it once mucking with smb_util mounting several volumes on my w2k server in the basement.
I got the DVD-R drive and intend to play with that soon. I have a PVR on my 2 GHZ Dell and it re-encodes mpeg a/v at about 2X real time, so I'm curious to see how this 800 MHz G4 does with something like that...
On that topic, anyone know of any decent mpeg editing tools and something like Nero on the Mac? (Don't mention Toaster, I hate roxio due to headaches experienced with their crap under XP.) If not, I'll have to wait for Nero for the Mac, which according to their home page [ahead.de] should be sometime in Q2 (read: June 30).
Re:OS X rules... (Score:2)
Firewire/iMovie: import footage to HD, edit clips into full video stream with titles, transitions, effects, etc.
iDVD or DVD Studio Pro: Author DVD content with menus, encode video stream.
Toast: Master (burn) DVD content onto disk.
IMO - it's still not as easy as it could be.
The Question Isn't Whether UNIX is dead... (Score:5, Funny)
Windows is a teenager--and a rude, aggressive, unpredictable one at that--compared to the various Unixen out there.
To paraphrase "Dark Paladin" in a recent article about his Mac OS X conversion: Microsoft Windows is like your class president that didn't do shit. Linux is like a super-smart, sexy redhead girlfriend that's also a bit insane. Mac OS X is like the geeky girl at school who shed her braces and became a total hottie--and still wants to spend all her time hanging around with you.
Re:The Question Isn't Whether UNIX is dead... (Score:2)
Re:The Question Isn't Whether UNIX is dead... (Score:4, Funny)
BeOS was the super smart, sexy girl you lusted over, never asked out when you had the chance, and has disappeared from the Earth (probably married, likely dead).
OS/2 was that beautiful college associate professor that killed herself before you asked her out because she was a crazy recluse whose professors told her she would be passed over for promotion yet again.
Windows 3.1 was like that talking Barbie doll of your sister's whose hair you cut off after hearing it say "Math is hard" for the 3,000th time.
That would have made MUCH more sence... (Score:4, Informative)
Unix is soooo hard... (Score:5, Funny)
FUD through "positive assertions" (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, UNIX isn't dead. A large part of our business and government infrastructure runs on it. Even more software is written using UNIX APIs, and this includes a lot of Windows software. UNIX isn't at risk: there is just too much of it, supported by too many vendors and on too many platforms.
The operating system perpetually at risk is Windows, which is a single vendor solution and stands and falls with Microsoft. When Microsoft abandons Windows, there won't be any more. If you want to know what the future of Windows holds, just look at VMS.
For now, let's ask the opposite question: how much of the supposed success of Windows is really hype? How many IT managers think that their infrastructure is running on Windows when it's kept together by UNIX machines? How many Windows-licenses does Microsoft double and triple count for machines that are running Linux or BSD?
Re:FUD through "positive assertions" (Score:2)
It isn't? (Score:2)
Re:It isn't? (Score:2)
Silly people *tsk,tsk,tsk* (Score:5, Insightful)
/powerlinekid
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Silly people *tsk,tsk,tsk* (Score:2)
Re:Silly people *tsk,tsk,tsk* (Score:2)
Re:Silly people *tsk,tsk,tsk* (Score:4, Informative)
Take good old colorview from SGI machines. It was a X-server color profile viewer, but it was suid. Guess what.... it didnt even look to see if it was a valid color profile. You could read people's mailboxes with this one, or the shadow passwd file. My personal opinion of older SGI boxes were that SGI didnt care a rat's ass about thier software. They just whipped crapplications up and gave them all root access.
Or next in the list, is the
Bugs have always existed and will always exist. Just saying it really sucked then but now is ok is just a cop out. It sucked at first, cause software is revamped by developers. That doesn't just happen immediately.
I thought BSD != Unix (Score:2)
Not dead, just unstable and insecure.... (Score:2)
"Windows NT was redesigned from the ground up to have reliability, scalability, and security. Windows 2000 builds on the Windows NT base, not the Windows 95/98/ME base. It should be no surprise, then, that Windows 2000 has proven itself to be much more reliable than either Unix or Windows 95/98/ME."
"In short, the Windows 9X [95/98/ME] operating system was not designed for today's networking environments... Unix, which was developed by and for scientific researchers and computer scientists, was not designed with security in mind either..."
No, I don't believe this FUD, I just can't believe some of the crap that people say...
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Not dead, just unstable and insecure.... (Score:2)
"The competitive choice to Windows 2000, back when ARGO was choosing an operating system platform, would have been Unix. The Unix platform has more recently morphed into the Linux platform, Linux being the "industry standard" version of Unix, so we can compare Windows 2000 to Unix/Linux."
He is very careful not to lump together all versions of windows, yet he lumps together all versions of unix. If he really intended to only be talking about a single version of unix, he should have made that clear. But he didn't. Isn't it nice how he says "back when" they were choosing competition for windows 2000 there was only unix. And it has "more recently morphed into the Linux platform". Doesn't it sound like way back when windows 2000 came out, there was no linux. Or that linux JUST came out recently.
Re: (Score:2)
From the article (Score:3, Funny)
I can't imagine asking my boss to drop 150 large on a Starkitty.
"Well sir, we can either go with the IBM p670 or the Sun Starkitty."
"The IBM or WHAT!?"
Re:From the article (Score:2)
Unix isn't dead out of necessity (Score:2)
Why? Microsoft, HP and Oracle's license schemes and pricing are completely out of control and unpredictable. FreeBSD affords us the opportunity to move into a very familar and comfortable environment while still maintaining the stability and robustness of a "real" UNIX.
Microsoft is not the only priniciple behind this move. While it'll be great to get Windows NT completely off out network, it'll be even more beneficial to our company's bottom line to rid ourselves of Oracle's and HP's constant intrusions and high pricing as well!
UNIX was never dying in the first place (Score:3, Interesting)
But there is a caveat with using UNIX. The people who can successfully design, architect, administer, and maintain UNIX servers are a tight knit bunch, and as a result of its longevity, they don't tend to move around very often because a given server may be alive far longer than the average Windows server. Additionally, it's been my experience that the longer an individual concentrates on a given subject, such as a single UNIX server, that the more in-depth knowledge they begin to amass about that OS and therefore, they become even more valuable/pigeon-holed into a given organization's IT plans.
This combination of longevity and expertise results in a decreased pool of available personnel available for UNIX projects to organizations at any given time, compared to what I perceive as a larger pool of available Windows talent at any given time. Does this necessarily lead to new projects being run on Windows because the only available talent is Windows? Perhaps...
My vision of UNIX's biggest fear, is that it won't necessarily die, but be bred out of existence because new projects tend to be addressed by whatever resources are available at that time, and if there aren't any available UNIX experts, then nature abhors a vacuum and the projects will be filled with whomever is available at that time.
I'm not dead yet! (Score:3, Funny)
I'm not!
I'm getting better!
I don't want to go on the cart!
I feel fine!
I think I'll go for a walk.
[singing] I feel happy. I feel happy.
(etc. Credit due the fine fellows of Python)
Unix isn't dead? (Score:2)
or else I'll be all alone in the office.
Outright stupidity on the front page is nothing new, but somedays it's hard to believe the editors don't know better.
cheers,
mike
Meanwhile, in a parallel universe near you: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Meanwhile, in a parallel universe near you: (Score:4, Funny)
Yes, but they're still cleaning up problems with Freud, because quite often, child processes will become attached to the processes that spawned them.
The question isn't whether Unix is dead... (Score:5, Insightful)
The Flanders test (Score:3, Funny)
[Rod shows Todd a headline: "Playtime Is Fun"]
Todd: [gives thumbs-up] Go with it!
If your headline can be substituted for "Playtime Is Fun" in the above, and it is still funny, then the story has failed the Flanders test.
Funny headline (Score:2)
Is this a troll or something? Seems like an editorial troll to me. Of course I don't have to mention that each and every person on this board knows that unix alive and kicking. Why the silly headline???? Is this the first Slashvertisement or something?
It most certainly isn't dead and never was. (Score:2)
I'm sure John Cleese would back me up on this one.
OSF Mach (Score:5, Interesting)
Apple's OSX is based on Mach 1.0 I believe so there's a sort of kinship there.
And now for some stuff I'm less sure of:
1. MSFT Windows NT used to run on Alpha CPUs albeit not using the full 64-bits of addressing those CPUs can do. Rumor has it that DEC got a real sweetheart deal on NT licensing because the NT source code was (illegally!) based on "Micah" the operating system that Dave Cutler was working on at DEC before he moved to MSFT in 1988. Comments in the NT source code in the mid-90s confirmed this allowing DEC to get a bit of leverage when dealing with MSFT.
2. Sort of in contrast the first edition of "Inside Windows NT" described an operating system that just could have been Mach 1.0. A lot of the original NT was very reminiscent of Mach 1.0 except less rigorously done. I don't imagine there was any real similarity between the OS described in Helen Custer's book and the real NT though. Mach and Unix were scrupulously ignored in the bibliography and index of "Inside Windows NT" 1st edition. At the time MSFT clearly wanted to emphasize the "N" in NT as "new" even though it wasn't.
Re:OSF Mach (Score:3, Informative)
See? [apple.com]
Re:OSF Mach (Score:3, Informative)
Re:OSF Mach (Score:2, Insightful)
from The setiathome platforms list [berkeley.edu]:
47) alpha-compaq-T64Uv4.0d/EV67 87171 9.952 years 1 hr 00 min 00.4 sec
from the setiathome cpus list [berkeley.edu]
15) Alpha EV67 31882 3.701 years 1 hr 01 min 00.5 sec
The format is platform/cpu, number of units completed, total cpu time contributed, average cpu time/unit completed. It's mor readable in setiathome,s tables.
All the best performers on that list are Alphas, running Tru64. Those suckers have been in the Ghz range for many years, long before Intel or AMD. Are Sun, IBM, or HP there even yet? I know they're getting close.
Re:OSF Mach (Score:2)
True. But Tru64 is just a Digital Unix renamed which was Digital OSF/1.
DEC did used to sell an OS called Ultrix, which ran on DEC's line of MIPS machines and on VAXen. Ultrix was based on BSD 4.2 (IIRC).
Re:OSF Mach (Score:2)
Re:OSF Mach (Score:3, Insightful)
the NT source code was (illegally!) based on "Micah" the operating system that Dave Cutler was working on at DEC before he moved to MSFT in 1988
Cutler was working on a new hardware system called Prism and its new object-oriented operating system was called Mica (not "Micah"). The following article has more details, plus some "startling" comparisons of VMS and NT implementation details.
Windows NT and VMS: The Rest of the Story: Is NT really new technology? [win2000mag.com]
Re:OSF Mach (Score:2)
Re:OSF Mach (Score:2)
Some cool info on stuff like that here [osdata.com].
Re:bsd (Score:2, Informative)
Irix (Score:2)
Re:64-bit life? (Score:2, Informative)
A lot of (C/C++) programs which assume things about how large a int is is going to break spectacularly when compiled to native 64-bit code. I would guess this will be a bigger problem in the proprietary (windows) world, since a lot of open source software is routinely compiled to, packaged for, and tested on Alpha and/or UltraSPARC, so a lot of it is 64-bit clean.
Re:64-bit life? (Score:5, Informative)
"SGI Fifth Generation 64-Bit UNIX Operating System"
http://www.sgi.com/software/irix6.5/
AIX 5.1
"AIX is fully integrated to support existing 32- and 64-bit hardware..."
http://www-1.ibm.com/servers/aix/os
Solaris 8
"Designed for multiprocessing and 64-bit computing..."
http://www.sun.com/software/solari
Tru64 UNIX
With a name like that, do you have to ask?
http://www.tru64unix.compaq.com/index.html
Any questions?
Not to mention GNU/Linux for several years (Score:3, Insightful)
I believe most of the *BSD variants are 64-bit capable as well these days.
Indeed, AFAIK the only 'mainstream' OS that is struggling with 64-bit and so late to the game is
But with their propogandists to convince everyone who'll listen that 64-bit computing didn't exist before their johnny-come-lately (and johnny-can't-do-it-quite-right-for-several-more-i
Re:64-bit life? (Score:2)
Re:64-bit life? (Score:2)
What's sort of funny is that Itanium-based servers cannot be cheaper than comparably configured UNIX/RISC servers. The market says so. For example, once Microsoft and Intel start shipping their 64-bit servers, Sun, IBM, SGI, etc. will simply start changing their pricing strategies. The only way Microsoft and Intel can compete on price, then, is to start clipping features and switching to cheaper components. The result: the same as it was ten years ago, where UNIX/RISC was high on features and price, but Windows/Intel was just the sometimes-good-enough commodity solution.
I just don't see the 64-bit world being any different than the 32-bit one was.
Re:64-bit life? (Score:2)
Re:64-bit life? (Score:2)
When running 64bit Linux, I have a 275Mhz Alpha that can out cruch (SSL calculations) a 500Mhz Athlon.
Re:64-bit life? (Score:2)
Yeah, I kept an eye on those articles. The problem is that MS sales people only have to impress the money spenders, not the engineers. If MS can put together a good PowerPoint Presentation, Unix has something to fear. It's not MS's technology, it's the knowledge of the decision makers.
It'd be interesting if somebody put together a website touting the benefits of Unix over MS in response to it. I'd hate MS to win by default because Unix isn't getting enough publicity.
Don't measure intelligence by spelling (Score:2)
It's really rude to correct somebody when they are perfectly understandable. I certainly have no intention of judging anybody's intelligence by the way they spell.
BTW, if you're going to use the TM symbol, do it right: (TM) -- see, not too hard is it?
Re:Actually, the UNIX market share is going down.. (Score:2)
Unless you include the second hand systems being bought at auction from defunct dot-coms (or telecoms or energy trading firms, etc.). Honestly, why do pointy-haired folk think that short term statistics have any meaning whatsoever, especially when taken without any kind of context?
I'll worry about Sun and IBM if they can't increase their market share over a five year span. Pardon me if I don't get upset when their market share falls during a recession. (I'm perfectly happy, however, to proclaim the doom of SGI, whose market share has been falling for over half a decade)
Re:Actually, the UNIX market share is going down.. (Score:2)
(Yes I do know that it's a rewrite and not the same codebase. So? Why should anybody care? Is every car other than Mercedes no car, just because they were designed independently from the first design?)
Unix and Linux run the same applications, look the same, feel the same, have the same philosophy and are run by the same people which the same skillset. I even use the ~/.alias file from an very old SunOS (yes, the OS before Solaris) on my Linux boxes right now.
(Try using any Win3.11 file on WinXP. Good luck. Linux and Unix are closer than the Windows variants, actually.)
Why anybody should artificially seperate Linux from the other Unix-flavours is beoynd me. It's the same in all respects that matter.
Re:OS X (Score:2)
The fact that OS X is commercially created and funded, for profit, like the other mentioned (IBM, Sun, Comcrap).
Re:Since when was unix dead? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Does this mean ... (Score:3, Funny)
PHB: Bring out your dead!
MS: Here's one.
Unix: I'm not dead.
PHB: What!?
MS: Nothing.
Unix: I'm not dead!
PHB: Ere', he says he's not dead.
MS: Yes he is!
Unix: I'm not!
PHB: He isn't?
MS: Well, he will be soon. He's very ill.
Unix: I'm getting better!
MS: No, you're not. You'll be stone dead in a moment.