AlbertPacino
Explorer
Latest round of bid to topple open source certainties.
Microsoft is expanding its anti-Linux "Get the Facts" campaign by targeting the issue of reliability, a company executive said at the on Tuesday, the day the Open Source Business Conference kicked off in San Francisco.
Get the Facts is a marketing effort by Microsoft that compares Windows favourably with Linux and other open source software products. Microsoft launched the campaign in mid-2003 and has gradually expanded its scope to include issues including total cost of ownership, security, indemnification and, the latest addition, reliability.
"Reliability has been challenging for us. It is an area that has been very noisy," admitted Martin Taylor, general manager of platform strategy at Microsoft. "Customers say that reliability is very important to them and that they are hearing that Linux and Unix are more reliable than Windows."
In the absence of a clear definition of reliability or benchmarks, Microsoft commissioned a study that pitted Windows Server 2003 against Red Hat’s Enterprise Linux 3.0 AS. As part of the study, 18 Linux and 18 Windows system administrators were hired to run the simulated IT environments of a mid-sized company over a four day period.
The administrators had to troubleshoot intentionally introduced errors and conduct tasks such as configuring new devices, making backups and setting up remote access. Linux and Windows ran on three Hewlett-Packard ProLiant DL380 G3 servers. One was used as an infrastructure server, one as an e-mail server and one as a file and print server.
"We found that the Linux environment provided about 15 percent more end user loss of productivity," Taylor claims. Over the 26 hour test period spread over four days, the Red Hat systems had services down for 4 hours, 59 minutes and 44 seconds, while the Windows system had users waiting for services for 4 hours, 20 minutes and 19 seconds, according to a copy of the study, which was conducted by VeriTest.
Additionally, the study found that the Windows administrators were able to complete more assigned tasks than their Linux counterparts. Also, the troubleshooting was easier on Windows, according to the study. On the Windows side the administrators needed 33 percent less in average total time to do their tasks than on the Linux side, the study said.
Linux administrators ran into a number of issues including a lack of integration, bad documentation, missing drivers and update patches that caused trouble, Taylor said. Also, Windows warned the administrators when the system was low on memory, for example, allowing them to act, while the Linux system did not, resulting in system downtime, Taylor said.
But open source advocate Bruce Perens [cq] disputed the notion that Windows is more reliable than Linux and gave a simple example: computer viruses.
"Look at the viruses. Every day my mailbox gets 30 Windows viruses in it. They come from systems that have already been infected and are just sending out viruses to everyone they know. And that is not happening to the same extent for Linux or open source software," he said.
According to Perens, open source software will always be less prone to virus attacks because it was designed to be connected to the Internet. "Microsoft is still catching up with that," he said.
Having compared "apples to apples," Microsoft's Taylor said that he feels good about Microsoft's reliability story.
However, in real life Windows and Linux are not used for the same type of tasks, according to an independent Yankee Group survey of 509 IT users released on Monday. The hourly cost of Windows downtime in actual user environments is three to four times higher than that of Linux downtime, according to Yankee Group.
Windows downtime is more expensive because the operating system is used for more crucial tasks in businesses when compared with Linux servers, according to the Yankee Group survey. Users also told the researchers that Windows and Linux security are nearly equal and that Windows recovers 30 percent faster from attacks than Linux servers.
Furthermore, according to Yankee Group, Linux is not displacing Windows in server rooms, but most users are installing Linux servers parallel with Windows servers.
Microsoft plans to use the reliability data it got from the VeriTest study in new ads, Taylor said.
Source
Microsoft is expanding its anti-Linux "Get the Facts" campaign by targeting the issue of reliability, a company executive said at the on Tuesday, the day the Open Source Business Conference kicked off in San Francisco.
Get the Facts is a marketing effort by Microsoft that compares Windows favourably with Linux and other open source software products. Microsoft launched the campaign in mid-2003 and has gradually expanded its scope to include issues including total cost of ownership, security, indemnification and, the latest addition, reliability.
"Reliability has been challenging for us. It is an area that has been very noisy," admitted Martin Taylor, general manager of platform strategy at Microsoft. "Customers say that reliability is very important to them and that they are hearing that Linux and Unix are more reliable than Windows."
In the absence of a clear definition of reliability or benchmarks, Microsoft commissioned a study that pitted Windows Server 2003 against Red Hat’s Enterprise Linux 3.0 AS. As part of the study, 18 Linux and 18 Windows system administrators were hired to run the simulated IT environments of a mid-sized company over a four day period.
The administrators had to troubleshoot intentionally introduced errors and conduct tasks such as configuring new devices, making backups and setting up remote access. Linux and Windows ran on three Hewlett-Packard ProLiant DL380 G3 servers. One was used as an infrastructure server, one as an e-mail server and one as a file and print server.
"We found that the Linux environment provided about 15 percent more end user loss of productivity," Taylor claims. Over the 26 hour test period spread over four days, the Red Hat systems had services down for 4 hours, 59 minutes and 44 seconds, while the Windows system had users waiting for services for 4 hours, 20 minutes and 19 seconds, according to a copy of the study, which was conducted by VeriTest.
Additionally, the study found that the Windows administrators were able to complete more assigned tasks than their Linux counterparts. Also, the troubleshooting was easier on Windows, according to the study. On the Windows side the administrators needed 33 percent less in average total time to do their tasks than on the Linux side, the study said.
Linux administrators ran into a number of issues including a lack of integration, bad documentation, missing drivers and update patches that caused trouble, Taylor said. Also, Windows warned the administrators when the system was low on memory, for example, allowing them to act, while the Linux system did not, resulting in system downtime, Taylor said.
But open source advocate Bruce Perens [cq] disputed the notion that Windows is more reliable than Linux and gave a simple example: computer viruses.
"Look at the viruses. Every day my mailbox gets 30 Windows viruses in it. They come from systems that have already been infected and are just sending out viruses to everyone they know. And that is not happening to the same extent for Linux or open source software," he said.
According to Perens, open source software will always be less prone to virus attacks because it was designed to be connected to the Internet. "Microsoft is still catching up with that," he said.
Having compared "apples to apples," Microsoft's Taylor said that he feels good about Microsoft's reliability story.
However, in real life Windows and Linux are not used for the same type of tasks, according to an independent Yankee Group survey of 509 IT users released on Monday. The hourly cost of Windows downtime in actual user environments is three to four times higher than that of Linux downtime, according to Yankee Group.
Windows downtime is more expensive because the operating system is used for more crucial tasks in businesses when compared with Linux servers, according to the Yankee Group survey. Users also told the researchers that Windows and Linux security are nearly equal and that Windows recovers 30 percent faster from attacks than Linux servers.
Furthermore, according to Yankee Group, Linux is not displacing Windows in server rooms, but most users are installing Linux servers parallel with Windows servers.
Microsoft plans to use the reliability data it got from the VeriTest study in new ads, Taylor said.
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