Linux Online
[ Register ]

[ Applications ]
[ Documentation ]
[ Distributions ]
[ Download Info ]
[ General Info ]
[ Book Store ]
[ Courses ]
[ News ]
[ People ]
[ Hardware ]
[ Vendors ]
[ Projects ]
[ Events ]
[ User Groups ]
[ User Area ]

Linux in a Nutshell, Fourth Edition

[ About Us ]
[ Home Page ]
[ Advertise ]

News Comment
All comments on news story: Linux Losing Market Share to Windows Server
It's a reply to comment:

I see ... by: pinniped 
> The fact that Windows has maintained a steady growth rate over
> this same time frame could be the result of companies expanding
> their Windows-based IT infrastructure to meet the demands of
> users who always want to be online, she said.

So MS make their systems so inefficient that people need to buy more machines and more licenses ... what a nice scam. Wait until people upgrade to 'VisDuh Server' - that will really fuel the sales of servers.

Increase not as big as they say by: UK MAdMaN 
Dell have said they're selling more Linux servers than Windows ones.

Bill Hilf says Linux is being used in high-performance computing, but not for messaging, collaboration, file and print sharing. I don't know about him, but if I ran a print shop, I'd want my servers to be high performance so they could handle all the print jobs sent to them.

I'd like to know how this data was recorded, because as we know Linux is often installed on machines that used to run Windows but don't any more as Microsoft stopped supporting the version the company was running (i.e. NT, 2000). These will be tracked as Windows servers, not Linux. Also, some companies deal with suppliers that only sell servers preloaded with Windows. When they get these servers they remove Windows and install Linux on them.

Netcraft's recent tracking shows that Linux web server use has dropped, until you take into account the fact that they're no longer tracking Google's servers.

Most of the growth of Windows-based servers will be coming from existing Windows users that need the extra power after upgrading to a newer version of Windows (we all know how bad a new version of Windows is on processor and RAM compared to the previous version). There's less incentive for Linux users to do this as you can just install a minimal distro that won't tax the server.

Just a few things to think about.

All of our GNU/Linux servers are on old windows server hardware. by: FreeOS 
Guess that doesn't count for server market reports.


Comments: feedback (at) linux.org
Advertising: banners (at) linux.org
Copyright Linux Online Inc.
Compilation ©1994-2008 Linux Online, Inc.
All rights reserved.