From: | "Open" <open@open-mag.com>
| To: | "mswier@yahoo.com" <mswier@yahoo.com> |
Subject: | 64-bit nervosa |
Date: | Fri, 9 Apr 2004 21:03:03 -0400 |
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
How deep can you get on Linux clustering? Deeper than ever before, if
your business is serious about reaping the benefits of big-bang
computing. In this month's The Linux Line, Dave Turek, VP of Deep Computing at
IBM, bares all. Click on:
<http://www.open-mag.com/cgi-bin/opencgi/email/redirect.cgi?TLL0329>
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
April 9, 2004
Hello MIKE SNIER (Account no. 113093)
Open Magazine - Your strategic guide to Open Source
http://www.open-mag.com/cgi-bin/opencgi/email/redirect.cgi?Open0409>
Everyone knows the oldest profession in the world, and this week we
discovered the least desirable: vendor-sponsored research. Find out why a
Windows NT cost-of-migration survey with negative conclusions about
Linux has incensed an Open Source group in Australia.
For Linux-watchers thinking of venturing into 64-bit computing with the
new 64-bit x86 extensions, read what analyst Joe Clabby, president of
Clabby Analytics, identifies as significant differences among approaches
taken by AMD, IBM, Intel, and Sun.
For catching all the heat, click on
<http://www.open-mag.com/cgi-bin/opencgi/email/redirect.cgi?Open0409>
The editors of Open magazine