On the cost of Windows vs. Linux

Filed in LinuxTags: , , ,

Just posted this to slashdot and thought I’d share it somewhere it’ll actually get read:

in re: Windows vs. Linux costs to implement and why Linux will never be “free”.

The ‘free / not free’ argument is meaningless. You will pay for licenses and support from Microsoft plus the cost of IT support staff and engineers. You will also pay either support contracts from Redhat, etc… plus IT support staff and engineers or pay more for better IT support staff and engineers and use community supported Linux.

When all the bills come due, you’re going to pay about the same for the same functions and scale regardless of the OS. The curve for the cost of Linux flattens out earlier as you move into the hundreds of servers or very large or widely dispersed infrastructure, but the cost of a competent staff to support Linux is higher.

It is easier to support Windows with less knowledge and experience, therefore making Windows staff less expensive. In truth, there are probably 10 middling competent Windows engineers for every solidly competent Linux engineer in the marketplace. The Linux engineers tend to stay employed longer as well.

When all you’re looking at is the base cost of a software license, or piece of hardware, then you’re not looking at the most important, vital and expensive part of the bill; the people.

Linux admins and engineers I’ve worked with and around have tended to be problem solvers by nature. Windows admins and engineers I’ve worked with and around have tended to be implementers by nature. They each have their strengths and weaknesses and you have to pick based on a strong understanding of your company’s needs, not just on the flashy marketing tripe from Microsoft or the FOSS communities.

TL;DR: In the end, Windows and Linux will cost you the same. Which one is best for your company depends entirely on your company.

New phone, same as the old phone.

Filed in Android, ReviewTags: , , ,

Got my new phone. My old Samsung Galaxy S 4g (yeah, it’s *that* old, only 512mb of on board storage, maxed at Android 2.3) finally pissed me off enough to replace it. 2-3 reboots / day and locks up randomly. Missed a couple of very important calls yesterday because of it.

New HTC One (yeah, tethered myself to t-mobile another 2 years.. shrug) feels GREAT in the hand, the HTC sync software that does a wifi migration from old phone to new worked wonderfully. That was a very good thing since the 16GB sd-card in the old phone doesn’t have a slot to live in on the new phone.  The transfers took about an hour in all, but went off without a single hitch.  Well, one hitch, but that’s not the software’s fault.

Everything else is awesome except one.. tiny.. infuriating… thing.

The SIM card. The SIM card on the galaxy is a full sized card. The HTC One uses the new micro-sim card. That means I have to take time tomorrow and go into the t-mobile store to have them activate the new sim on my current account and number. Hopefully they won’t screw up my account this time.

(update) Called T-Mobile to get the new sim card activated and my account configured on it.  Took about 30 minutes in all, but most that was waiting for the callback.  I left the sim in the box, in my van, in the parking lot.  After retrieving it, and getting the callback (on time, yea t-mobile!), everything went smoothly.

So far, I really like the HTC.  First comment from a couple of people I called once it was live, was “did you get a new phone?  I can understand you, even with that pipe clenched in your teeth.”

Overall, with the 2 and a half days I’ve used it so far, I’m extremely pleased.  I’ll be diving deeper into the wonders of the new Android version and having enough room on the phone to, you know, install stuff.

Scott

 

Oh, no! Another tech blog!

Filed in AdministriviaTags: ,

I’ve been posting random tech screeds on facebook, livejournal, google+ and, yes, in the day, even tribe, for years.  Whereas those sites are good for short term discussion or even some intense debates, they are, by definition, ephemeral.   The noise is too high, and traffic too voluminous to really do any deep topic justice.

So what’s an overactive, overachieving tech geek to do?  Why start a blog, that’s what!    I intend this space to be one for discussion, debate, geek-measuring, showing off and just about any random tech related thing that passes through what some neurologists insist is merely a brain.

So, without further ado, here.   Remember, the flogging will continue until intelligence improves.

Enjoy.  No, really, I insist.  ENJOY THIS, DAMNIT!

Categories
Click to view/hide
Calendar
Click to view/hide
June 2013
M T W T F S S
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930