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Improving the Linux vs. Microsoft debate: The impact of TCO

By JT Smith on May 31, 2002 (8:00:00 AM)

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- By Jack Bryar -
Is there a chance that Microsoft, proprietary Unix vendors and the Open Source community might stop swearing at each other and actually begin providing potential customers with usable information? Judging from the news of the last week or two, it hardly seems possible. However, both Microsoft and the Linux community are beginning to use cost and performance arguments that can help their potential customers make intelligent choices. It might even help repair the tattered reputations of a few vendors.
The scare tactics and disinformation campaigns of Microsoft, Sun, and even some Open Source advocates have become boring and tiresome as well as shrill and incredible. Sun is still recovering from its crude disinformation campaign targeting Linux users. John Stenbit, the bluff, burly chief information officer for the U.S. Department of Defense had to personally swat down a whispering campaign by Microsoft that claimed Stenbit's flirtation with Open Source posed a threat to national security. Stenbit, the former chief of TRW's systems integration business, has been advocating a highly decentralized network-centric systems architecture [link is PDF] that doesn't sound much like Microsoft's vision of the future, and he's considered a Unix guy in defense technology circles. Open Source advocates who compare Microsoft to drug pushers and corrupters of foreign governments don't do the credibility of Linux community any favors, either. Is it no wonder that the many large customers are so turned off? A senior IT manager I spoke to this week put it best when he justified the freeze in his systems budget, saying, "We're waiting for our vendors to grow up."

A couple of years ago, I suggested that the only way to re-energize the market was to improve the debate about the merits of Linux vs. Windows. It was past time for some honest comparisons of the type that matters most to the average company. Vendors needed to explain the difference between Linux and Microsoft systems in the only manner that means anything to the average business manager: cost. Evangelists for Linux (or that matter, Unix or Windows) should have to compare the cost -- the total cost -- of owning a computing system based on Linux compared to the total cost of owning an enterprise architecture based on a proprietary Unix or Microsoft platform.

These "total cost of ownership" (TCO) calculations are a little more complicated than comparing the cost of a package of a couple of Red Hat CDs to the cost of thousands of Microsoft licenses. Even at Microsoft prices, the cost of software is only a small part of the total cost of managing a large IT environment. In recent years, Gartner, KPMG, and Forrester have all issued reports that agree that hardware and software combined represent less than 20% of the total cost of owning a system.

Far more important are the costs of running the local help desk, performing system audits and other administrative functions, and writing and supporting custom code. At most larger companies, these and similar costs are far more significant than the price of the enterprise software platform. So are the costs associated with improving or degrading employee efficiency. A California-based financial services company I worked with last year calculated it could justify the cost of a wholesale upgrade of its enterprise architecture based on the fact the the proposed system could shave five seconds off the time it took most of their 2,000 employees to log on to their complex of system resources.

Reliable TCO assessments can be hard to do. Many firms attempting a TCO analysis quickly give up. There claim there are simply too many factors to account for. Many are difficult to calculate objectively. Most evaluators lack the required expertise in accurate cost accounting and performance benchmarking Even so, most companies can, if they try, assess the financial impact of :

  • Controlling the number of desktop and server images
  • Reducing logon failures
  • Reducing support costs
  • Minimizing end-user training costs
  • Lowering set-up costs
    Enhancing flexibility by allowing users to "work from anywhere" while accessing the system resources needed to do their jobs

Other factors are harder to quantify. For example, what is the degree of risk associated with reducing unauthorized access to system resources by outsiders? And what is the financial impact?

After a slow start, there's a growing trend by vendors and purchasers to perform TCO analyses when justifying competing IT platforms. Firms like Compaq have introduced TCO as an element of their sales and market education programs. Apple enthusiasts are promoting TCO analyses to justify retaining Macs in the workplace. A variety of organizations have tried to use TCO analyses justify the deployment of Linux throughout the enterprise.

Many of these Open Source "analyses" are fairly primitive. Some do little more than wonder aloud, "what possible combination of costs could Windows servers offer a lower TCO than Linux or OpenBSD servers?" without an honest look at those costs. Others have done their homework. Last year, Red Hat sponsored a devastating IDC study that quantified the TCO benefits of running Linux compared to Unix. The study confirmed the findings of a 1999 Gartner Group study that suggested companies deploying a Linux platform would enjoy a 20% overall cost advantage compared to firms running Unix. Proprietary Unix vendors have been on the defensive ever since.

What about Microsoft? A study for the U.S. Department of Defense conducted by MITRE [PDF] gave the lead to Linux over Microsoft NT in the back office because Linux was easier to manage, had more robust security features, and supported remote monitoring and management more effectively. MITRE found that each of these features resulted in measurable cost savings and risk reduction. A study for LinuxWorld.com was less credible, because the author cooked the books a little. For example, he assumed that Microsoft-based systems would require all parties to upgrade upgrade their equipment and software every few years, but that, for some reason, Linux users somehow would add nothing to their desktops and system managers would add nothing to their back-end systems during the same period.

In any case, Microsoft's product managers claim that much of the reliability and support costs cited in these studies were specific to the limitations in NT. Beginning last September, they began to use TCO justifications to promote Windows 2000 as "An Operating System Even a CFO Would Love." Microsoft has put together a "Rapid Economic Justification" SWAT team to promote sales based on quick returns on company investments in IT hardware and software. In addition, the company has begun to publish a series of white papers and customer profiles showing, the company claims, that Windows 2000 and its successors are generating dramatic improvements in reliability and significantly lowered administrative and support costs.

Are these claims for real?

Compared to NT, they almost certainly are. Even in mixed NT/Unix environments, it is not hard to believe the numbers in an upcoming customer study that claims a company could reduce its internal domains, cut the number of servers and reduce IT support staffing by 20% by moving off NT to a different operating platform. Other Microsoft-sponsored TCO studies, such as one focused on Allegis, merit a slightly more skeptical look. According to that study, Allegis claims it could generate new product faster running on Windows 2000 than on Unix. Perhaps.

In any case, such papers, and similar efforts by Open Source and proprietary vendors represent a marked improvement over earlier, cruder efforts to draw cost comparisons between Microsoft and its competition. Moreover, they advance the competitive discussion. Competing systems vendors from the Microsoft, Linux and Unix communities need to move away from from rancorous exchanges of disinformation and begin to focus on issues that will advance the interests of their customers in a safe, secure, inexpensive operating environment. If they compete hard enough, their products might improve. And that wouldn't be a bad thing, either.

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on Improving the Linux vs. Microsoft debate: The impact of TCO

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The first thing.

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on June 01, 2002 01:11 AM
Studies that are "sponsored" are worthless, just ignore the.

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Re:The first thing.

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on June 03, 2002 08:32 PM
No, they aren't. There are two kinds of sponsored studies: those where the analyst tells the client what he wants to hear and those whre the analyst makes a real study and the client will publish it only when it shows its products are good/the best. The later have an informative value provided you are on alert for artificially restricted field of study (the client knew the overall picture was not good so he had the analysts concentrating on that tiny part where he knows he will win, but a honest analyst would not accept a such job).

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TCO is...

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on June 01, 2002 02:41 AM
TCO is but one of the criteria. Itīs certainly better than just comparing face values, yet it can be tricky to explore all the implications in cost. For instance, any enterprise wants a "power" position when negotiating. Thus, it follows, itīs not sound to promote monopolies. This "future cost" of strenghtening a monopoly is difficult to assess.

Other factors play important roles, too. Sometimes itīs important to have different systems, e.g. for study purposes.

And, perhaps more importantly, thereīs the financing factor. Whatever option is chosen, it must be paid somehow, either "in cash" (in advance) or along the time. Some people or organisations cannot afford a big initial payment, even if the selected option has a lower TCO. Although, in theory, it would possible to get a loan at a fair rate to make the purchase, the reality of life or management conveniences now and then prevents this from happening.

One final personal comment, if I may, everybody seems to like choice, choice is good etc. I would more precisely say that "power to choose" is good. For example, Ferrari wants to sell cars; I could choose to buy one, except for the fact I donīt have the money; also, had I the money, what if change my mind and decide for a Mercedes? How easy can I recover the money spent on the Ferrari?

This also applies to the Linux or Windows decision. Instead of just examining TCO, which is important by any measure, I would think about CTDO: the Cost of Trying and Deciding Otherwise.

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TCO is important to your CFO

Posted by: DCallaghan on June 01, 2002 03:52 AM
TCOs studies are intended to be used as an iterative, standardized process to assist in communicating your technical decisions to the people who write the checks. Its not important that they cover every nickel and dime, its just important that they provide a known framework on which you base purchasing decisions.

Define where you will be getting your data (using unsponsored data sources), what you will be tracking (support costs, training costs) and then define your critical assumptions (load times, downtime, per user, per dept, etc). Work with accounting to find out their expectations on fixed asset depreciation. Remember, you don't know accounting, they don't know IT.

This is an iterative process. Review and revise, documenting the revisions, quarterly.

Once you have a framework in place for communicating your assumptions, and a track record for being in the ballpark, you'll find the mutual frustration you feel in dealing with the bosses will go away. Pretty much ;)

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what??

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on June 01, 2002 05:31 AM
"Is it no wonder that the many large customers are so turned off?"

From linux??

This is a strange statement. I have yet to hear a large corperation spokesperson say they will not use Linux becouse of the unruely crowd that developes and supports it. And the extensive use of GNU/Linux in almost everything from cars to search engines to PDA's to servers to Amazon seems to speak contrary to the claim that "large customers are so turned off".

hook

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Eye wan ter be a jerno

Posted by: sgp321 on June 01, 2002 09:03 AM
The points raised are about as legitimate as can be managed - if one wants to rehash the old paid-for/independent studies argument, or even invoke some new data. But please, why do we care? This story would get nowhere on kuro5hin.org, simply because it's saying absolutely nothing.


Here was I, wondering if a career change might suit me. Then I find someone being paid for this crap.


GIZZA FSCKING JOB! I can write crap like this for half the money!

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TCO debate is no improvement

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on June 01, 2002 08:18 PM
The TCO debate is advanced fud along the same lines as the "Linux virus" myth.
Breaking the costs down.
Hardware: Linux and Windows run on the same hardware. This cost is identical
Software: The cost of software is basicly free with Linux and $50 to $2,000 for Windows.

Tech support: If your IT staff even needs this your suffering badly.
That said..
Linux tech support: Free via irc
Windows tech support: usually included with the software for something like 90 days.. then pay after that.
Additionally Linux favers trainning over tech support.

Trainning: Here is where tge fud hits the fan.
Clames of millions for Unix trainning for office support is very dishonnest.
That price tag is for professional trainning of admin to run Unix AND NT boxes side by side. It's not a reflection of the trainning costs for Unix in an office environment.
The Windows side then clames no cost at all.
The truth is that the total buget for trainning is the smallest part of the TCO equasion. It's hidden in admin costs and tech support costs. A full trainning session vertually eliminates tech support and slashes admin costs.
Trainning costs are identical unless you go for cerifications.. then Microsoft can actually be more expensive.

I'm remembering the office as it was in the 1970's & 1980's.
Trainning: None each employee read the manual and trainned his/her self.
Tech support: Ask the tech/computer guy/lady...

The TCO was hardware + software.. The hardware cost was dictated by need.. software was cheep.

In the end we can fuzz up with numbers the only TCO varable is the price of the software. The rest is a fixed cost.

What makes this debate interesting is the TCO calculations reguarding tech support and trainning are favoring Unix now a day.
It's really just an issue if bad management to throw good money after bad at poor trainning and questionable support.

  It just so happends that this one peace of FUD is comming back to haunt Microsoft and is bitting Sun on the butt.
Both well deserved.
Sun is a hardware vender who isn't able to make compeditive systems anymore. They use Solarus to make themselvs compeditive.
But Solarus has it's own sad history.

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TCO must include impacts of proprietary formats!

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on June 02, 2002 01:24 AM
Any discussion of TCO is incomplete without a review of the impact of proprietary data formats on the intellecutal assets of a company. These are not often included in the discussion, but become increasing important when help desk time, necessary upgrades (and license management), and employee time is squandered just trying to go back and read/capture something done by a co-worker 10 years ago. This is a pernicious problem.

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A study for Linux World...

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on June 02, 2002 01:26 PM
From the article:

>>>A study for LinuxWorld.com was less credible, because the author cooked the books a little. For example, he assumed that Microsoft-based systems would require all parties to upgrade upgrade their equipment and software every few years, but that, for some reason, Linux users somehow would add nothing to their desktops and system managers would add nothing to their back-end systems during the same period.

1- Last I checked, most Linux software could be upgraded at no cost while with Microsoft no cost equals no upgrade. There's no way to know that Linux software would not be upgraded "every few years".

2- Last I checked the hardware requirements for the latest Linux software was about the same as the requirements for two year old Microsoft software.

These two points mean that a company has at least two of the most important TCO bases covered: up to date software (as to security and/or features)and a longer hardware life cycle.

I'm sure that after a few MS faithful are fired (with fanfare)the rest of the workers' responsibility level would rise enough for them to start doing their jobs with the (free)tools provided.

How much is it worth to have (or lead) a self determined company? Perhaps therein lies a very important aspect of TCO studies that has been neglected in all but very few of all the TCO studies I've seen. In fact the most self determined companies are the ones that, in the name of TCO, try their hardest to tie other companies into their "solutions"; and the reason for their self-determinism is merely that they own the said "solution".

Now if a company takes say 3/4 of a million dollars per year out of the savings from points one and two above, and hires a few hackers familiar with the kind of software development the company needs. Wouldn't said company be in a better position than a company tied to the whims of another?

The basic needs of people are still along the lines of food, sleep, housing, transportation, hygene, clothing, entertaiment, etc.

Of course there's a lot of people in the world, and software is a great help in the production of stuff we need (or don't)but I can't help to think that a high percentage of the fortunes of software tycoons is money unnecessarily paid out of the bottomlines of companies that produce the things we ultimately consume/use.

Fortunately free software addresses these issues but most companies' management have to grow the balls to love their own companies more than they love the software companies and their over priced products.

I gotta go.

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TCO

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on June 03, 2002 11:43 AM
Neither Linux OR MicroSoft are so easy to administer that a zero training budget is realistic. Both require fairly arcane knowledge to install and operate sensibly. In my short, non-professional experience, I think the real TCO is in the path to future capabilities and the need or lack of need to upgrade. To put it succintly(a little late)"You ain't seen nothing yet".

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