Unlimited software warranties
Jeff Liebermann
jeffl at comix.UUCP
Wed Mar 20 21:46:15 AEST 1991
In article <1991Mar19.184548.11056 at ico.isc.com> rcd at ico.isc.com (Dick Dunn) writes:
> it's slow--memory is cheap and CPUs keep getting faster. I think
> Peter's idea of "UNIX Classic" is neat, but I doubt you could give it
> away to more than a handful of people.
You would have no trouble selling Unix Classic to me. I keep small
Xenix installations (cash registers, point of sale, hospital ER,
telemarketing, acctg, fax servers, email servers) alive. These
machines run 3 major programs: the application software, uucico,
and mail. I dont need most of the new and wonderful Unix features.
My customers pay me for speed and reliability. Features that are
not needed are suppose to be purchased as required. I still have
some retail stores running Xenix 286 (NOT 386) with 2Mb ram and
a 40Mb slow drive on ancient terminals.
Most of my customers have asked what it would cost to get "real"
Unix. No problem, just add:
6 Mb more ram
80 Mb more disk space
a larger tape backup device
a runtime upgrade cost equal to twice what they paid for Xenix.
For no extra charge, one also gets:
A 20% overall performance drop (my estimate).
A large (80%) reliablity drop measured in service hours per month.
These are not serious for corporate America, but fatal for the
small business. The cost of the Unix runtime becomes a very large
part of the delivered system cost on small installations. Unix
is not going to show up in the small retail environment until a
cheap runtime (like Xenix) appears.
On the subject of money-back warrantys: I tend to be somewhat
suspicious of companies offering money-back guarantees. When a
company is unable to support a product, they sometimes offer money
back guarantees to reduce the 10% of the customers that make 90%
of the noise. It's simply expedient business. I don't believe
that Mt Xinu had this in mind when they offered their warranty.
With Unix, it's very difficult to evaluate a product within the
usual warranty periods. Suitability for re-sale takes even longer.
I don't base my business on a quick evaluation. It takes real
usage, experimentation, and lots of midnight oil to properly
determine if I can sell and support a program or Unix flavour.
I don't plan to partake in a kamakazi evaluation of Mt Xinu Unix.
It would take me about 6 months. This is well past a reasonable
warranty return period.
[Not associated with SCO, ISC, UHC, Mt XINU, IBM, UPORT, ad nausium]
--
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