On 6/8/2012 11:55 PM, David Froble wrote:
> JF Mezei wrote:
>> Keith Parris wrote:
>>
>>> Press reports say “Intel executive Kirk Skaugen … testified that the
>>> amended agreement between Intel and HP gave it access to the Itanium
>>> microprocessor through 2022, and that HP could extend it even longer.”
>>
>>
>> Shareholders will not tolerate HP continue to sink moey into that IA64
>> thing when customers are leaving it in droves.
>>
>> The fact that HP agreed to slow down development to space the remaining
>> 2 generations means that IA64 will not be competitive with each of those
>> 2 generations.
>>
>> Your boss, Whitman admitted to press analysts that there was nothing
>> that could be done to fix BCS and that HP was pinning its hopes on the
>> new project Odyssey that will run Linux and Windows.
>>
>> So HP has realised that with IA64 sales dropping like a brick, they
>> probably have to accelerate Oddyssey to market as fast as they can to be
>> able to offer a migration to the deffecting customers.
>>
>
> Ya know, I really do not understand this Odyssey thingy. In the past,
> anyone who could easily leave VMS, and could accept the new environment,
> whatever it was, is most likely already gone. Some, I don't know how
> many, cannot move to weendoze or any Unix/Linux. So for them, what the
> hell good is round 2, or 3, or whatever, of trying to get these people
> to move to something that will not do the job for them, for whatever
> reasons.
>
> As I've wrote before, the applications I'm working with will not move
> off VMS. No way, no how. So, if there is no future for VMS, then there
> is no future for my applications, and that will mean starting over from
> scratch. Without some overwhelming reason, and I doubt there will be
> one, does anyone with a fraction of a brain think that I'm going to come
> near the entity that caused me all my problems with a thousand mile pole?
>
> So JF, while you claim to see fleeing customers, I see customers that
> given half a chance will be the most loyal HP has. Not because they like
> HP, but because they NEED VMS. The question then is, will HP blow off
> their potentially best customers?
>
> My perspective is, give the customers a chance, such as VMS on x86 and
> continuing development, and HP will have customers as long as x86 is a
> viable CPU. Even then, anything that replaces x86 will most likely have
> an easy upgrade path, if it wants to be successful.
>
> Thing is, whether HP has the people who could actually do the job, is a
> rather big question.
The handwriting has been on the wall for the last fifteen or twenty
years! People say "No! This cannot be!" The VMS community has fought
a valiant rear guard action! It hasn't changed much of anything!
VMS and VMS based applications are still around but there is damned
little new development going on. Those of us who know and love VMS
are getting older. I came on board in 1984. Prior to that my
background was largely IBM System 360/370 and IBM System/7.
I retired in 2004, not because I wanted to retire but because the PC &
Windows made everybody a "computer expert".