Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!image.soe.clarkson.edu!abstine From: abstine@image.soe.clarkson.edu (Arthur Stine) Newsgroups: comp.unix.aix Subject: Re: Risc System/6000 Message-ID: <1990Mar10.174015.16644@sun.soe.clarkson.edu> Date: 10 Mar 90 17:40:15 GMT References: <1443@ks.UUCP> Sender: abstine@sun.soe.clarkson.edu (Arthur Stine) Organization: Clarkson University, Potsdam, NY Lines: 38 From article <1443@ks.UUCP>, by drake@sd2.almaden.ibm.com (Sam Drake): > In article <1990Mar9.015943.4351@world.std.com> madd@world.std.com (jim frost) writes: > >>Yep, but my sparcstation 1 worked right out of the box and hasn't >>crashed yet. > > Hey, that one's hardly fair ... if you have a 6000 at all, today, you > by definition have a pre-release, early-ship machine with pre-release, > early-ship, not-done-by-definition software. Complaining very publically > because it's not as stable as another company's shipped production level > system isn't exactly kosher...? > Well, then why did IBM announce it sooo early, if they aren't prepared to ship 'production' quality machines? Advice: if your product isn't ready then don't announce it and ship some 'pre-release' machines and then turn around and complain when users criticize it for not working right. It seems like a typical IBM tactic to pre-annonounce their machines in order to try to get some market share. Well, in the workstation market, I would predict that if a customer is looking at some machines, and he looks at DEC, Sun, HP, and IBM, the IBM wouldn't be the one he would pick right now because the machines that he can actually get his hands on are 'flaky'. Making bold promises like 'oh, it is a pre-release machine. it will be much better when it is ready', don't really hold water. If your machine isn't ready to ship NOW, then don't announce it. Data General did the same thing. The DG machine machine I saw shortly after they brought them out was flaky. All the IBM RS/6000's I've heard about are flaky. First impressions are VERY lasting impressions. If IBM wanted to make a big splash in the workstation market, they should do it with something that floats once it hits, not something that sinks once it hits and has to be held up with a life preserver until it can float... -- Art Stine Sr Network Engineer Clarkson U ABStine@CLVMS.Clarkson.Edu