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To: rudedog who wrote (39211)12/8/1998 6:59:00 PM
From: John Koligman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
Rudedog or anyone - As posted earlier by a gentleman on the thread, it looks like Unisys got the NASDAQ business. Anyone familiar with their server products and why they might have gotten in the door? As Reichers mentioned, it sure seems like this was CPQ's to lose as they were entrenched in the account. Possibly price? Or do the Unisys servers have features not available with CPQ. The article mentions a 10 way system. Nice rebound in the stock today.

John

Nasdaq giving Windows NT a chance
By Randy Weston
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
December 7, 1998, 8:25 a.m. PT

Windows NT will finally get its chance to bat in the major leagues.

The Nasdaq Stock Exchange is implementing Microsoft's Windows NT operating system
for its new stock monitoring system, an application that has to handle huge daily
transaction volumes.

The Nasdaq recently commissioned consulting firm Micro Modeling Associates and
Unisys to test whether NT could handle the exchange's new Surveillance Delivery
Real-Time application. The software monitors the market's billions of transactions and
alerts Nasdaq officials to any unusual activity.

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"Billion-share days are becoming increasingly common, stressing our existing surveillance
system," said Gregor Bailar, chief information officer of the Nasdaq's parent company, the
National Association of Securities Dealers. "Any new system also will need to be able to
support a $2 billion day with the capacity to scale up to support a 4 billion-share day."

So far, NT is passing the tests. Questions and concerns in the marketplace about NT's
ability to handle large loads as well as its reputation for
instability have kept Microsoft from conquering the Unix
market, a much more reliable system but often more difficult
to use.

Microsoft recently held a "scalability days" event to prove to
the world, or at least potential corporate buyers and skeptical
industry watchers, that its product could play in the major
leagues.

But few companies were willing to bet their businesses on
NT--until now.

Nasdaq does, however, have a personal stake in seeing Microsoft succeed. The Nasdaq's
chief rival, the New York Stock Exchange, has reserved the symbol "M" in hopes of one
day luring the world's largest software company to its trading board.

But that's not to say the Nasdaq is willing to blindly invest in the marquee name on its
market roster without proof that Microsoft's product can handle the job. The study was
conducted using actual daily trading with two parallel systems processing the same data.
The test involved running 800 transactions per second continuously for an equivalent of
eight trading days.

The results showed that NT running on clustered Unisys servers could "support peak
conditions over an extended period," according to executives involved in the test. "It also
"provided analysts with alerts within 200 to 700 milliseconds, well within the 2-second
requirement; showed that the system could remain 100 percent available even under
stress, and demonstrated instant recovery from all failure tests with no data loss and
immediate availability of the backup system."

Software for the test included Windows NT 4.0 Server Enterprise Edition, Microsoft
Messaging Queue Server 1.0, Microsoft Transaction Server 2.0, and Microsoft SQL Server
6.5. Hardware consisted of Unisys XR/6 servers with 10 processors and 2 gigabytes of
memory, running parallel.

With the test complete, the Nasdaq has charged Micro Modeling with the job of designing
the new MarketWatch software system around the NT platform, which is to be fully
implemented in the year 2000.