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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.dec
- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!sunic!sejnet.sunet.se!eric
- From: eric@sejnet.sunet.se (Eric Thomas)
- Subject: Re: Unix Review review of Alpha/OSF
- Message-ID: <1993Jan22.004241.1@sejnet.sunet.se>
- Followup-To: abstine@visix.com
- Lines: 27
- Sender: news@sunic.sunet.se
- Reply-To: ERIC@SEARN.SUNET.SE
- Organization: SUNET, Stockholm, Sweden
- References: <1993Jan19.030611.1@sejnet.sunet.se> <C146xK.Du6@usenet.ucs.indiana.edu> <1993Jan20.032354.21323@bilby.cs.uwa.edu.au> <1993Jan20.194415.17508@decuac.dec.com> <C182FK.GJ9@visix.com>
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 00:42:41 GMT
-
- In article <C182FK.GJ9@visix.com>, abstine@toy4x4.visix.com (Art Stine) writes:
- > I don't see any diff to getting them on
- > tape or over the net, except that: 1) it costs DEC less to distribute over
- > the net 2) we can get it alot quicker...
-
- This is a gratuitous statement. A small 300ft tape holds a couple dozen
- megabytes of data, uncompressed. The post office will (in Europe) deliver
- overnight for 3 to 10 dollars, and there are private carriers which can do
- better and/or cheaper, especially in large urban areas and if you mail a lot of
- tapes from the same place every day.
-
- Now look at your "cheap and fast" Internet solution. Every day there are
- hundreds to thousands of customers requesting a patch for one product or
- another. Nowadays small self-documented source patches are a rarity, the normal
- patch replaces a number of object modules and includes instructions and
- installation procedures. If you want all these customers to be able to retrieve
- this data during working hours (if they do it overnight you won't be faster
- than the post office) and at a reasonable speed (say, 10 kilobytes per second,
- and that's already a looooooooong FTP for my little 300ft tape), you have to
- have a hell of a fast Internet connection, which you have to hire people to
- take care of. Then you still have to keep a backup delivery mechanism
- operational in case the Internet is down and your customers can't wait. And
- when all that is ready, you'll find out many segments of the Internet aren't
- quite big enough to provide decent service to your customers, and who do you
- think they will complain to?
-
- Eric
-