Thor, after I joined SI I discovered that one can meet people of good and decent character as judged by what I hold as values.
The just mentioned I found to be worth more than the initial quest to make money from these investments, and thru the wonderful posts of Jack Smith on this thread I believe most of us here have captured the important link between a person's investment into a company, and that company treating with respect our investment.
This connection allows me to present an idea of action that seems to replace a person to person relationship with that of cold money.
For I now say one objective should be of focus, and that is to have this GPGI company deliver of its promise and return to investors an increase in share value, hopefully big time.
Because of this I am willing to "... climb any mountain, swim an ocean, cross any valley, and even eat a little chit" if it will allow this company to become successful for us shareholders.
If the sag has a flow of communication with GPGI, and the information that sag has can be trusted, then it is up to us to identify a threader on this thread whom we can trust, and have this threader contact the sag and report back to this thread not details, but a yes or no, as in Wait & Trust.
(off topic - In a nut shell, the onion peeling Linux is doing.) Easy to read article Linux OS.
Note: I have none=zero business or monetary connections with Ziff-Davis Inc., and it for me simply represents a web site to obtain news and software for FREE, after you do a simple join that requires the same as other types web sites needing your e-mail address.
The following is where the home page is. zdnet.com
My only direct contact is a request for permission to post a specific article, or two.
Note: Do not copy or reference this SI Doug A K post, per see below.
Copyright (c) 1999 ZDNet. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of ZDNet is prohibited. ZDNet and the ZDNet logo are trademarks of Ziff-Davis Inc.
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SPECIAL REPORT MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1999
Is Linux a Legitimate Network OS? Michael J. Miller, Editor-In-Chief PC Magazine
Does Linux bring both savings and increased reliability to your server room as it takes over a range of tasks from a more costly OS, such as Windows NT, NetWare and popular Unix variants? Does it actually deliver enough to make it worth the retraining investment? PC Magazine Labs set up a host of services from scratch using Linux and its associated utilities to find out.
The conclusion: Linux is a good solution for a range of server needs. It should certainly be on the radar screens of most medium- and large-business IS professionals. Linux works especially well as a platform for Internet-standard services, such as DNS, HTTP, FTP and email, where its low cost, open-source utilities and relative ease of deployment are big draws. It also works well as a development platform for those who want to deploy a customized vertical application. You might want to think twice, however, with applications that demand the best performance or the best reliability; Linux offers no clustering support and has immature SMP support and limited file-system support and RAID functionality.
Also note that for the near term at least, Linux is mostly restricted to server applications. Software developers, engineers and designers have found it a good foundation for workstations as well, but true desktop-productivity applications are scarce. (One exception is Corel WordPerfect 8 for Linux; the complete WordPerfect Office suite for Linux is due in early 2000.)
The big difference between Linux and a proprietary network operating system is that Linux is open-source, so it can be seen, used, modified, or augmented by anyone. You can download the code in pieces free from the Internet or buy a package of the operating system, tools, shells and utilities (in Linux lingo, a distribution) for about $50 to $80 from industry leaders such as Red Hat, Caldera and SuSE.
You pay no licensing fee -- even if you use Linux to serve a thousand users. Compare that with a Windows NT Server license -- $1,999 for 5 clients, $3,999 for 25 clients -- and you'll see it's little wonder an entire community has sprung up to support Linux. The IS departments of major corporations are beginning to test, use, and embrace it as a complement (or even alternative) to NetWare, Windows NT, or one of the Unix variants.
Even if your IS team is new to Linux and Unix, Linux is still worth considering. The amount of free support for Linux is staggering: Nearly every part of Linux and its add-ons -- shells, editors, interfaces -- has a Web site devoted to it. Moreover, the manufacturers of the PCs examined here have adopted wide-ranging support strategies. To learn much more about PC Labs? findings, be sure to read our full evaluation.
BUILDING A BIGGER LINUX CLUSTER
New work from the Linux Cluster Cabal (LCC) could move the alternative OS to a data center near you. The LCC looks to bring clustering capabilities to Linux. Clustering allows users to link multiple servers together to make a single high-performance server. The group believes it can build a Linux cluster that would support up to 1,024 systems, more cheaply than existing Unix clusters.
Linux heads for the data center
The Linux Cluster Cabal has a plan that could see Linux handling the heaviest of heavy-duty applications. By Andrew Orlowski, ZDNet (UK) September 24, 1999 2:27 PM PT
Linux could be on its way to the data center if an ambitious new project comes to fruition.
The project, being worked on by the Linux Cluster Cabal, aims to bring clustering to Linux. Clustering technology lets users harness multiple servers together to make one high-performance server. Originally created by Digital Equipment Corp. (NYSE:DEC) to give minicomputers the power of mainframes, it has extended into other arenas, including Unix.
The LCC is drafting a clustering architecture aimed at breaking the performance ceiling of today's commercial Unix-based clusters. The group aims to build a Linux cluster that could support up to 1,024 systems, or nodes, and do it much more cheaply than current high-end Unix clusters.
While there are other Linux clustering efforts underway, the LCC project will seek to match Digital's VMS-style clustering -- now marketed as Compaq TruClusters -- on a grand scale.
Movers and shakers
"There's no point working for clustering that stops at 100 nodes," said Cabal member Larry McVoy, who led Sun Microsystems Inc.'s first clustering initiative and is now president of BitMover Inc. "In eighteen months to two years, the dozen or so clustering initiatives on Linux will be dead," he predicted.
In addition to McVoy, the Cabal includes Linux heavy hitters Stephen Tweedie, who heads Linux file system development, and Peter Braam of Stelia Computing and leader of the group that built Carnegie Mellon University's Coda distributed file system.
They first met in secret in August to devise a clustering architecture that satisfies both commercial data processing and HPC (high-performance computing) requirements.
Although Linux has proved successful with the latter -- the Beowulf technical supercomputing project scales to several hundred nodes -- it has lacked the high availability features sought by corporate IT departments.
The Cabal takes advantage of the lack of kernel locks in Linux -- a virtue of its relative youth -- as the basis of its design. "Solaris has over 3,000 kernel locks. Whenever an OS gets that multi-threaded, you've made a pact with the devil," McVoy said.
Kernel locks are safety checks that ensure exclusive use of a computer's resources to one process. While this hurts performance, it prevents two users from, say, working in the same file at the same time. Systems designers employ artful measure to minimize the disruptive effects of the locks on performance.
The power of Linux
One analyst agrees with McVoy that Linux may have advantages in clustering.
"The Linux kernel is simple and that is part of its strength," agrees Dan Kusnetzky, server analyst at International Data Corp. (IDC). "It's very fast and there's very little to go wrong with it in terms of functional capability. The developer can develop pretty much what he wants to."
At the same time, he says "it sounds like a very difficult thing to do."
Kusnetzky says that clustering has fallen in two religious camps: "shared nothing" adopted by NCR, Tandem, and Microsoft, and "shared everything", which relies on lock-management, and is the technology adopted by Compaq and Oracle. Finding a middle ground has eluded many architects, he said.
"If these people have come up with that scales to shared-nothing, but with the ease of development and configuration that you see in shared-everything, then they really have something. This would put Linux leading the single-vendor-creator operating systems."
But only, he noted, if the new architecture doesn't require application vendors to do major code rewrites.
Although scalable, such designs top out at 64 or 128 nodes, he says. The LCC design seeks to avoid such a ceiling by levering memory access capabilities used in symmetric multiprocessing (SMP).
The LCC architecture should minimize lock traffic in the region of common, or 'global' memory shared between machines on the cluster. One instance of the operating system is shared in a smaller unit, or "domain," of 2 to 8 CPUs.
The Cabal's design will accommodate multiple users on multiple operating systems all on the same cluster.
The design includes a VMS-style distributed lock manager, fail-over and recovery, and load-balancing. The group is also working with object-based storage vendors to incorporate advanced distributed file system technology.
Potential market
The project has won approval from power users worried by SGI's decision to sideline its Cray business.
"We in the high-performance computing community are very concerned about the future," said Robert Lucas, a scientist at the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Livermore laboratory.
"While peak performance is going up, as is memory volume, by most other measures, we're going backwards right now," he said. SGI (NYSE:SGI) spent five years re-engineering the T3E [Cray], and is walking away from it, he added.
Lucas said though an open-source solution was viable: "Checkpoint [stopping a process and restarting it] and restart isn't going to be high on Linus [Torvalds, Linux kernel administrator] agenda, but it's top of ours."
But the Linux group must take heed of manageability features, warned IDC's Kusnetzky. For typical commercial users, "hardware and software costs combined are between 15 and 20 percent of the overall cost." The rest is the cost of employing administrators.
Public documents from the LCC are expected before the end of 1999.
zdnet.com
Killer Downloads MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1999 Don't Miss the Latest and Greatest Screen Savers Jon C.A. DeKeles, Technical Director ZDNet AnchorDesk
Sailors Life Screen Saver would be the perfect screen saver for Nicci -- if it had sailors in it. My mistake. But you might enjoy this screensaver featuring various vessels cruising the Caribbean. Includes lots of customization options. (Shareware/Win95-98-NT) Click for more.
The Monet: The Magic of Light Screen Saver features 20 great pieces from the father of Impressionism. Including cityscapes, seascapes and gardens. Just right for Jesse, AnchorDesk's resident art snob. (Shareware/Win95-98-NT) Click for more.
Psychedelic Screen Saver will take Liz back to her college days with its colorful whirls and swirls. Lots of options will keep you enthralled with its mesmerizing patterns for hours. Also lets you synch music with patterns. (Shareware/Win95-98-NT) Click for more. |