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I'm not replying to a specific mail, but being relatively new to the System i (right now about 2 years of experience), I have my own opinion about a lot of topics. The company I'm working for sells an ERP Software (http://www.dias-is.com, German only), with it's own GUI Client, which uses an In-House protocol to display stuff on clients (we have a Windows Native client, plus a Java client). All Business Logic runs on the System i, in ILE RPG. This software is a successor to a previous software running on plain 5250. We mostly have small business customers located in Switzerland, small business here means "50 or less" users. Most of our customers are in the sub 10 users range. In my opinion, the system i is a great platform, it offers very good documentation and integration. There's not much which isn't integrated nicely into the system. I also work a lot with windows and linux, and i5/OS always seems to be more b"designed" and fully integrated. There, however, many many things wrong with the System I right now. (All prices in swiss francs) * Price 20k for a 600CPW machine with 1 GB RAM, 36GB Disk. For the same amount of money, I get a dual quad core machine, with half a tera of 15kRPM disk space, 8GB memory, and all appropriate windows/sql server licenses. Not that even one of our customers needs that much power. Disk space is completely overpriced. 3k for two 36GB disks? That's just ridiculous. * Speed The 600CPW model is already vastly overpriced. And it also SLOOOOW. Accessing the admin webserver on port 2001 literally takes MINUTES. Restoring backups, installing PTFs, doing saves are all a total PITA, it takes AGES. It reminds me of PC performance back in 1998. * Hardware platform For 20k, what IBM deliver is just, well, pathetic. Installing RAM in the system requires you to take it completely apart (service processor, power supplies, tapedrive/cd unit, Fans). IBM can do this a lot better, just look at the x3550 and x3650. They're both very maintenance friendly machines. For a quarter the price. The dual power supply is NOT standard in the 20k model, the rack mount kit available for it is one of the most awful cases of "engineering gone bad" I've seen. Why doesn't the Service processor allow me to get a console? HP's iLO (no charge with linux, charge with windows), or IBM's RSAII (always charge) allow me to do that. * Consoles Consoles are available in three flavors. Twinax - Too old, but reliable. Works fine. But you can't sell this anymore. HMC - Far too expensive. I get a nice System x for that price. No customer will every buy this. Thin Console - I've written about it earlier. Buggy, buggy, buggy. Works mostly. There are no alternatives, though. Operations Console (LAN, Serial)- I'm not going to touch it with a ten foot pole. A separate PC for a software which "mostly works". * iSeries Access Why is it still called iSeries Access? I thought it's a System i? Anyway, iSeries (not System i) Navigator is just a huge piece of junk. It's slow over WAN links, and it's slow in general. That's not because of java, it's because of incompetent application developers. Many things can only be done with OpsNav, as there's no native 5250 commands. Like creating NetServer shares. * LPARs LPARs are pathetic when compared to Vmware ESX server, or the free offerings from Microsoft (Virtual Server 2005), and Vmware. They require a disk controller per i5/OS Partition, and separate disks. Also, saving without a tape changer is not really funny, and there is no way to control a save from a single partition (like for example Backup Exec for multiple windows servers). * Integrated xSeries You can now use the 3k per 36GB disks on my System x. Yes. I've always wanted to do that. It's great! Also, you can buy PCI cards of slow, old PCs, which can also use the expensive storage. Cool thing. I have no idea who would EVER buy this. These are the things which I find to be the most crucial points wrong about the System i. If I were a CIO (which iam not), I wouldn't see one compelling reason to buy a system i. Except if there is some great software running on it, which I absolutely want. The system i itself will never compel users to buy one. Not with the current pricing, and the current deficiencies. Judging the pricing, and the slow performance of the entry level machines, I would guess that IBM is just milking the System i community till it is done, and there's no more money left. Storage prices for memory (30k for 16GB in 2GB for a 520? I can get the same amount of memory for a PC in less than 10k. And yes, it is technically the same memory) and disks (3k for 2x36GB 15kRPM, vs. 1.5k for 2x147GB 15kRPM (3.5" PC), or .8k 2x72GB, 10kRPM in 2.5" PC). There are many technical reasons not to buy a System i. And not many technical reasons for a New System i (if you're a mac or windows shop right now). There are lots of reasons for legacy customers not to switch systems, but that's just milking the cow.
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