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SUSE Linux version aimed at Big Blue mainframes

SUSE Linux version aimed at Big Blue mainframes

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 30 Jan 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

An open source OS aimed at IBM System zwill help companies manage costs and reduce risk, according to Novell. Analysts say the mainframe is a cost-effective system for Web services

Warren Shiau, leader analyst of IT research at Toronto’s Strategic Counsel, agreed, saying Novell’s announcement helps companies that are hung up on the potentially high migration costs behind a move to Linux on IBM System z.

“The biggest thing that prevents companies from doing things IT-wise, even something that they know they’ll benefit from in the long-run, is switching cost,” Shiau said. “So you build tools to make it easier, which is the idea here. If you significantly reduce installation cost, time and effort, your product becomes more attractive and you get people who’ve been putting off deployment to start deploying.”

And for Shiau, continued expansions of the mainframe market demonstrate to him the long-term viability and interest the technology has from many organizations in this space.

“The mainframe was supposed to die a long time ago, but it hasn’t happened,” Shiau said. “There are certain requirements, workloads, and functions that the mainframe is simply the best platform for.”

Historically, the biggest problem with mainframes, he said, has been that they’ve had a proprietary stack sitting on them – meaning even if the hardware is commoditized, it’s still an expensive and locked-in platform.

“But there are several things that have been going on to change this includes huge reductions in mainframe hardware pricing, IBM opening up its middleware stack and putting it on the z-Series, and the z-Series running Linux,” Shiau said.

As the cost of mainframes comes down and the more open the platform becomes, he said, the more companies are going to start considering moving a lot of their major workloads back onto the ‘new’ mainframe. And from an administration, management, control, and security standpoint, Shiau said, this can make a lot of sense.










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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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