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Technology Stocks : How high will Microsoft fly? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: keithsha who wrote (11245)10/9/1998 3:57:00 PM
From: ToySoldier  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74651
 
kiethsha,

Good try in trying to get me going. Its too bad NT has to mark its specs in transactions per minute.

NT is the slowest platform in the market. The only thing that makes NT attain any resaonable numbers is a TON of HARDWARE!!

If NT is such a powerful system, why is The Chicago Mercantile Exchange dumping them and OS/2 and switching to NW5? I know why.

As for NetWare benchmarks, maybe try looking past the stats after you see the word NT. I know Compaq, Dell, Oracle, and others have provided TPC stats on NetWare platforms. In fact they even outperform unix platforms - which always outperform NT platforms.

But - nice try getting me going. :)))

ahhh - simple minds I guess.

Have a great weekend keithsha - go back to your MSFT programming job.

Toy



To: keithsha who wrote (11245)10/9/1998 4:06:00 PM
From: ToySoldier  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74651
 
Keithsha,

NT is soo good they are dumping it for NetWare 5!

computerworld.com

Chicago Merc trades OS/2, NT for NetWare

Sharon Gaudin

<<

"NetWare 4.0 would support more users than NT 4.0, and NetWare 5.0 will support
even more and be quite a bit faster than that," Miller said.

He also said the switch in operating systems should slash the time IT spends on
support calls. Right now, Miller said, he has six technicians who spend 100% of their
time on service and support. He expects that to drop to 30%.

Furthermore, the exchange's eight IT executives spend about 70% of their time
picking up support calls that are too complicated for technicians. That should drop to
10% or less, leaving them much more time for application development, Miller said.
Salvador and Miller said their support headaches will be eased by implementing Novell
Directory Services (NDS), which was designed to track various client operating system
components from one central server, and Zenworks, a remote administration tool that
lets IT workers do diagnostics, maintenance and software distribution from their own
desks.

The CME probably also will use Novell's NDS for NT 2.0 tool, which replaces NT's
domain system with NDS. Miller is interested in checking out NDS for Solaris as well.

NDS automatically updates the central database of all clients' settings across the
network, whereas NT's domains must be manually managed on each server. With
NDS on most of its servers, the CME will have an umbrella directory to manage much
of its system from a central point, Miller said.

Miller said he also expects to save time in desktop setup.

"With Zenworks and NDS, we could push all the software down and do most of the
configurations from one place. ... We wouldn't be running all over. That could save ...
easily months and months of work time," Miller said, referring to the 950 new PCs that
will be coming in. >>

Better update your list of references...

Toy