Quote from Agyar:
I'll disagree with you again here.I've been a DBA and a developer on both SQL Server and Oracle systems. Compared to Oracle, SQL Server is still garbage in my opinion. SQL Server has Oracle beat hands down as far as ease-of-use, but unlike on the desktop that doesn't matter nearly as much for a database. Data integrity, scalability, and uptime are a BIG DEAL for a database and MS still isn't there. I haven't tried SQL Server 2005 yet though, so maybe my opinion will change.
Oracle 10g running RAC on a Linux cluster is about as much fun as a database geek can have.![]()
MicroShit has been wanting to do this a long time and this is where recently they had patch on XP where the "activation of malicious code" comes in. Next thing is they'll switch it of if they "are of the opinion" that you run an illigal copy. "Have to protect our intellectual property". Yeah right, it is midnight and you are int he middle of a trade. Then your computer goes offline and won't reboot.
Too far fetched? NO. I have had this happen with several pieces of software that were based on "monthly payments". Oops, sorry, we had a ID-10-T problem. Why do you think I have stand alone charting software with a stand alone data vendor and an alternative data feed / environment completely setup in VMware on another OS? < 90 seconds to boot up another machine and be operational on that. And on the "normal" machine that is up an running < 30 seconds to start the VMware environment, just in case there is a non-OS problem.
People relying on a SINGLE piece of software from a vendor (being this broker, charting, OS or whatever) are not taking this business seriously and are a blow up waiting to happen.
I do not lightly forget problems with 4 different pieces of software not working at a critical moment. The quality of the stuff is going rapidly down the gurgler and that is why open source is able to exist today.
Those who have tried to lock in people with "certification" programs, "lease based (monthly) licensing fees" etc are trying to desperately hanging on to their customer base when they can not hang on to them because of innovation or other advantages. Novell comes to mind, so does Data General, NCR and a host of others.
I have been told that the city of Munich has switched completely to Linux - 17000+ workstations. That is not a hobby.
MicroShit is a monopoly and they are desperately trying to hang on to that. But eventually the market will find a way around them, and this is already happening elsewhere. The official OS in China is now Linux, the last MS OS was Win2000.
They should have broken up a long time ago, just like Bell was. But Bush stopped that.
Sticking your head in the sand and monopolising the local market does not mean that you are going to win the war outside the US. Alternatives are springing more and more up.
Ever tried Ubuntu? It must be several factors easier to install than anything else I have used in the last 20+ years. In fact I can run it of a "live CD" and not install at all on HD. Reminds me of the old DOS days. It finds wireless cards, video etc automatically where as under Solaris I cannot even get it to detect much of the hardware.
If you have not tried Ubuntu I suggest you take a look at it. You may be pleasantly surprised.
Maria
PS Oracle is shit too. This is why it has to go down for maintenance.
I've been a DBA and a developer on both SQL Server and Oracle systems. Compared to Oracle, SQL Server is still garbage in my opinion. SQL Server has Oracle beat hands down as far as ease-of-use, but unlike on the desktop that doesn't matter nearly as much for a database. Data integrity, scalability, and uptime are a BIG DEAL for a database and MS still isn't there. I haven't tried SQL Server 2005 yet though, so maybe my opinion will change.
