On Wed, 27 Apr 2016, Dave Wade wrote:



Don’t fret, once OpenVMS v9.0 is released, on x86-64, there won’t be any doubt
as to who won.  :-)


Sadly, no one won. I doubt any one (well perhaps not anyone) would consider 
OpenVMS for a new deployment.

Upgrading existing environments, yes, but a new green field site. It would have 
to have very good reasons.
(I know you will all come out with some, but perhaps one for every 10,000 Linux 
and/or Windows Server deployments.)

Digital is now a fond memory for most. Both VAX and Alpha are no longer 
manufactured.

I actually wonder if an FPGA VAX chip could be made that would run faster than 
existing real VAXEN. That could perhaps form the basis of a nice VaxStation...
... on browsing I found this...

http://h71000.www7.hp.com/openvms/journal/v7/vax_6000_emulator.pdf

Dave


I don't know ... I know the primary market is probably legacy environments but I'm really, really excited that OpenVMS is making it to x86-64 and as a working sys admin, I wouldn't hesitate to pitch OpenVMS for certain situations if I felt it was right for the job ... I'm mostly a UNIX guy but I've always thought OpenVMS was cool, too, no prejudice. I encourage OS diversity ;)

Particularly in the HPC space ... I would love to put a cluster built on VMS against a cluster built on Linux and compare availability, throughput and uptime over the course of a year ... Results could be interesting.

I'm sure like a lot of folks on here, I have a lot of positive nostalgia associated with DEC (and I'm pretty young) ... I will always be a fan for sure. But versus Linux ... which has swept the market ... OpenVMS does have some real technical merits to stand on. It doesn't just have to be for legacy applications and hobbyists.

Best,

Sean

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