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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] Unix's 40th Birthday
- Date: Fri, 21 Aug 2009 09:55:32 +0900
- From: Curt Sampson <cjs@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] Unix's 40th Birthday
- References: <5634e9210908200559g2e5b5eevd026cae70163f706@example.com> <4A8D530A.9020901@example.com> <873a7m611b.fsf@example.com> <20090820153054.GA30282@example.com> <871vn659mm.fsf@example.com>
- User-agent: Mutt/1.5.18 (2008-05-17)
On 2009-08-21 08:49 +0900 (Fri), Stephen J. Turnbull wrote: > Oh, I'll concede that I don't know what OS the big iron in the Maes > East and West run. And I suppose there's some big iron in the > basement of most big companies. The big iron is Cisco and similar. Unix-based systems just won't route at the speed that's necessary, for architectural reasons. (I speak as someone who's both run routers ranging from KA9Q to several full-blown Unices on workstation-type hardware, and who's used and is reasonably familiar with the internal architecture of "big iron routers." Incidently, that "big iron" is not so big in terms of processing power, it's just distributed and used in a very different way.) > But I know that an awful lot (by model count, can't say about sales) > of the consumer and SOHO routers run some embedded Unix (usually Linux > or NetBSD, I guess). By sales, too, I would imagine; it seems very likely that a lot more home routers are purchased than even low-end Cisco gear. > And when you count the other no-see-um at-the-perimeter boxen like > firewall gateways, mail filters, and other proxies, I bet most of > those run Unix variants except at the most well-heeled Microsoft > shops. True enough, though you might be suprised at the number of firewalls, VPN servers, and so on that run on Cisco-like gear. For home use, however, I'd expect that a lot of VPN connectivity, for example, is done by a Windows box. > In some sense, recent Windows doesn't run on commodity hardware > anymore....Windows's appetite for resources continues to increase > apparently uncontrollably. Maybe WinCE runs on keitai denwa, but XP, > Vista, and 7 don't. All the Eee PC class machines run XP.... Clearly, MS could shoot themselves in the head here by carrying on with the bloat introduced between XP and Vista that the market (at least that part of it that makes any kind of active choice in this) is rejecting. However, I think that MS, even lacking the better leadership that it had in the 90s, has a reasonable chance of coming to their senses at some point, and they do have a huge market of people who will buy the product regardless to support them while they come to their senses. It will be interesting to see if Dell is still offering XP downgrades for their business machines in 2010. It's also going to be interesting to see if the competition can avoid the downhill slide that's started over the last couple of years. Every time I upgrade Ubuntu it gets a bit more byzantine, which is not good from a security point of view, and policies that automatically have me running dns, mail, web, etc. etc. servers open to the world simply because I happened to install the package to play with. This is just inviting attack. (Actually, the ssh one might be one of the most dangerous, since the default policy is vulnerabile to the password-guessing attacks that have been running in the wild for years.) We're already seeing effective trojans and viri for Macs; any expansion of the Linux user base at the expense of Windows is only going to increase the economic incentive to attack Linux systems. And if the Ubuntu and Debian maintainers are heading towards a Windows level of security, what's going to happen as more and more vendors start adapting Linux to their custom boxes? > ...and even with reasonable consumer boxen like my wife's Vaio > (2.5GB RAM)... Well, that definition changes rapidly, of course. For mid-range developer boxes, 3GB has been the minimum memory size (you need 3 DIMMs for all but the newest i7 motherboards) for a year now, and these days we wouldn't bother to put in less than 6GB. cjs -- Curt Sampson <cjs@example.com> +81 90 7737 2974 Functional programming in all senses of the word: http://www.starling-software.com
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