DDJ article / UNIX vs BS/2
Bob Burch
bob at imspw6.UUCP
Fri Dec 23 23:08:15 AEST 1988
>From Ted Holden, HTE:
...........................
From: John Hardin, HP Information Networks, Cupertino, CA
>> ... the idea of allowing DEC, HP, Perkin Elmer,
>>IBM etc. to each continue selling their own little proprietary OSs for minis
>>is simply no longer acceptable to the US government as of right now, and will
>>obviously not be acceptable to most corporations either.
>>
>>Ted Holden
>>----------
>I'd like to reply to this, but first let me make it clear that although I
>work for HP, I am not representing them here and any opinions I post here
>are my own. Now that that's out of the way...
>Obviously your addition of the word "little" above shows a disdain of the
>other operating systems you mention. While I agree with your prediction of
>the role of Unix in the next few years, I can also see why there continue
>to be propietary OSs. One reason is the inefficiencies of Unix. I am no
>Unix kernel expert, so I don't pretend to know why, but I have seen that
>a propietary OS can support many more time-sharing users than Unix when
>both are run on the same hardware. Perhaps it's the granualarity of locks
>available or the extra disk accesses to support the multi-level directory
>structure. Often this extra overhead is more cost for more features, but
>these extra features are usually of most use to software developers, not
>the accounting department in a commerial environment. Hopefully, we are
>entering an age when the efficient use of the human is of more importance
>than the efficient use of the machine, but in the meantime Unix may not
>be the best answer for everyone.
There is a simple and deadly counter-argument to any and all of this and,
again, you don't need to be Albert Einstein to figure it out:
At any point in time, you will buy yourself some gain in performance
going with a proprietary OS versus UNIX for a given piece of hardware
which, presumably, wasn't specifically built to run UNIX (something like
one of the Gould "firebreathers" which WAS specifically blueprinted for
UNIX is a different story). I don't know exactly what the performance
gain is for a typical VAX or HP mini but, for the sake of argument, let's
assume it is 50 percent, which I suspect is being generous. So you and I
each buy one such computer at the same time, mine with UNIX, yours with
the proprietary OS, and you've got me by 50%.
In less than two years guaranteed, and in probably less than one year,
there will be somebody out there selling a machine which is 300% faster
and stronger and sells for 1/3 the price we paid. No problem for me; I
just go out and buy one and, one week later, I'm back rolling, 250%
faster than you can roll, and all you can do is think, wistfully, "Gee,
if I only hadn't bought this ____ed-up lemon with this non-portable
operating system........."
Ted Holden
HTE
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