Реферат: Linux And Windows NT Essay Research Paper
unfixed bugs, high prices for technical employees who make things go, and extra
machines and software as the site grows. There’s a notable lack of consensus as
to whether Linux or NT delivers a lower total cost of ownership. TCO, as the
bean counters call it, is one of those numbers derived more from bookkeeping
than science, so it’s easy for two companies to report wildly different results.
I found that most everyone thinks their system is the right one, price-wise.
More interesting is that they consider the biggest cost advantages to be faster
turnaround time for solving problems and getting new features launched and not
the lower price tag. It doesn’t matter how good your Web site is if it’s down or
so slow that surfers hit their Back buttons. When it comes to staying up instead
of locking up, Linux got high praise from everyone I talked with. NT owners were
notably less enthusiastic about its reliability but pointed out that on a larger
site, a load balancing device such as Cisco Local Director can hide downtime by
sending traffic to other servers while one reboots. Several managers said the
more frequent reboots were an acceptable cost compared to, say, hiring pricey
Unix Administrators. Scalability is a word that gets thrown around a lot,
especially when beating up on Microsoft. In IT jargon, it means the ability to
increase the size of a system in such a way that the associated overhead costs -
hardware, downtime, administration work – go down in proportion to the overall
size of the system, instead of staying the same or going up. If your Web site’s
traffic grows by a factor of 10 in the next year, ideally, you should only have
to pay for the extra hardware that the traffic passes through, keeping all other
costs the same. This is why Internet companies have such huge potential profits
compared to, say, newspapers. But NT gets a lot of flak for not being as
scalable as a Unix system. Linux advocates were outspoken about its superior
scalability. NT owners don’t necessarily agree. They point out that NT systems
need to be scaled differently than Unix systems. Also, scaling large systems
requires expertise as well as the right parts. For sites less high profile than
these, though, getting the right staff, hired guns, or vendor support to plan