[Info-vax] AXIS2/C, gSOAP
Neil Rieck
n.rieck at sympatico.ca
Sun Aug 8 16:58:05 EDT 2010
On Aug 8, 8:41 am, Neil Rieck <n.ri... at sympatico.ca> wrote:
> > Although a new CEO at HP might make changes, one should not have any
> > hopes or expectations this will happen.
>
> You are correct. We have all been here before and a new CEO won't make
> any difference as far as OpenVMS is concerned (remember when Sue got
> Carly to put on a VMS T-shirt for a photo-op? We can never expect
> anymore action than this)
>
> > VMS is an orphaned child that HP has been forced to have custody of. It
> > gives it enough food to survive and that is it. HP has upheld its
> > promise to continue to support the existing customer base. Alpha was
> > murdered 9 years ago, and HP is still supporting it, and 8.4 is being
> > released on Alpha and that Itanic thing.
>
> North America has been under the influence of uber-capitalism for more
> than a decade now. Just like Star Trek's Ferengi, all that matters is
> profit (or gold-pressed latinum whatever that is). So upper-management
> will only pay attention to OpenVMS if it brings them profit.
>
> I recently attended a webinar which stated: before 1990, approximately
> 30% of any product's budget was placed into manufacturing a product
> while 70% was going into marketing (this was definitely true of the
> automobile business). This meant that any piece of crap could be
> marketed to general public. (my mind also falls back to a time of
> glossy color publications from a company called DEC :-) But everything
> changed with the internet. Now word spreads very quickly about whether
> a product is good, or more importantly, bad so companies began to flip
> things around with 70% of a budget going into manufacturing with 30%
> going into marketing.
>
> The software business was handled a bit differently. Companies didn't
> increase the manufacturing portion so much as they just slashed the
> marketing portion. Hey, 99% of the people writing/using software were
> already on the internet so the only software marketing campaigns
> involved "sell software to retail consumers (Windows)" or "writing
> chess programs to beat grand masters (IBM)".
>
> From what I can tell, OpenVMS got a triple dose of this treatment by
> having the proverbial "red-headed step child" transferred to two
> foster parents (Compaq then HP) while the marketing/manufacturing
> budgets were interchanged. But HPQ was able to go one step further by
> cutting the OpenVMS marketing budget much lower than 30%.
>
> In fact, it was already close to zero when people like Sue Skonetski
> and Terry Shannon had their HP-sponsored road-shows. But annual
> corporate bonuses are based on annual measurable "increases of gross
> income" or "decreases of support costs". Since people weren't auto-
> magically buying more OpenVMS licenses or OpenVMS support contracts,
> HP went the second route by off shoring support to Asia. Hey, why pay
> someone $1k per week in North America when you can get someone in Asia
> to happily accept $200 to do the same thing? And since the internet is
> also used to support this kind of business, there are no increases in
> shipping costs.
>
> The one thing wrong with uber-capitalism is this: the only thing on
> the planet demanding a guaranteed amount of annual growth is "cancer".
> Yes, we have modeled our economy upon a disease and things won't go
> well for North America until we stop this madness.
>
> Back to the reason why you hang out at this news group: you will never
> ever see OpenVMS marketed like VMS once was (or even ever). If you
> want to contribute to HPQ's measurable stats, then convince people to
> buy a new Integrity box with licensed OpenVMS software (and perhaps a
> support contract). As far as HP is concerned, OpenVMS is just one way
> to facilitate the sale of new hardware.
>
> If you don't believe me, take a look at what is going on at the Apache
> website. This is an example of very high quality software with no
> advertising budget.
>
> Neil Rieck
> Kitchener / Waterloo / Cambridge,
> Ontario, Canada.http://www3.sympatico.ca/n.rieck/
Sorry for replying to my own post but I forgot a few related thoughts:
In most instances computers are appliances and software is pretty much
invisible. For example, do Macintosh owners even care that they are
using a UNIX variant? Nope, they only care that their computers work
the way they expect. Do we know anything about the embedded software
controlling various parts of our automobiles, home entertainment
equipment, etc.? Nope but maybe we should. Most people don't think
about anything other than inserting the key and driving away.
On top of this, freely available open source software has improved to
the point where it is even giving Microsoft and IBM some real
competition. In the case of IBM, they are now making much more money
selling software services to companies than they ever did by selling
software. It is for these reasons that I don't think computer
manufacturers will ever return to marketing operating systems and
language products the way they once did. Only technical people are
even interested in such things anyway.
Question: So just how will "the OpenVMS community" keep OpenVMS live?
Answer: The same way the Open Source Community keeps their stuff
alive. We will use the internet to support OpenVMS products as well as
each other. On top of this, we will encourage people like John and
Brett (and many others) in their efforts to port open source software
to OpenVMS. If we don't do it nobody will.
Yesterday I watched my Alpha Server system do things that the original
designers of OpenVMS never intended even though gSOAP is just
middleware. In some ways it was similar to watching Apache HTTPd
running on OpenVMS for the first time. Very cool.
Neil Rieck
Kitchener / Waterloo / Cambridge,
Ontario, Canada.
http://www3.sympatico.ca/n.rieck/
More information about the Info-vax
mailing list