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At last some clever remarks from you! About time.
"Unfortunately, they're always at risk when companies ask themselves questions like "Do we need to spend money on this?" and "Why are we buying that expensive stuff when we have something cheaper elsewhere that performs a more than adequate job here?""
And then the conclusion is simple: SUN provides far better throughput at a fraction of the price on some work loads, compared to IBM and HP-UX Unix machines. Not to mention x86 servers.
Also, Solaris Enterprise support is cheaper than RedHat Linux Enterprise support. Again the conclusion is simple: Use Solaris.
Good to see some sane reasoning from you, at last. I agree, you must ask yourself the question if you can optimize and consider the alternatives. You should not only consider a subset of possible solutions, that could lead to sub optimization, and you dont want that.




Member since:
2005-07-06
Who would have considered saying that at one time? It was always going to be risky staying with one set of customers regardless.
Sun are relying on big businesses, many of them financial, buying into large, high-end systems with an enterprise price tag to match. This is Sun's market, it's their culture, it's the way they have always been and they don't want to diversify to anything else. Sun, collectively and individually, simply do not comprehend anything else. Unfortunately, they're always at risk when companies ask themselves questions like "Do we need to spend money on this?" and "Why are we buying that expensive stuff when we have something cheaper elsewhere that performs a more than adequate job here?"
Sun has had many years and the cash to diversify and mitigate this risk, but they either don't understand this at all, or as I think, they went into a spiral of denial and believed that they could tweak their existing stuff here and there, hype some technical stuff few care about, continue selling big machines at big prices to markets that had moved on and everything would be OK. It was never going to be.
What's missing from this headline is that Sun have made a $1.68 billion dollar loss this quarter alone - hence the job losses.