First, let's get this out of the way: Yes, it was funded by Microsoft, but that doesn't necessarily invalidate what it has to say. In fact, the 47 page PDF was written by Herbert H. Thompson, PhD of the independent firm "SecurityInnovation", which has no ties to Microsoft aside from Microsoft contracting them to perform the study.
But much of the PDF contains some facts that highlight why some businesses may be hesitant to switch to Linux. The vast majority of the Linux cheerleaders, both on this site and in general, don't have the insight to see past the trivial "Linux is free, Windows is not" mantra; nevermind the fact that in most cases corporations do purchase Linux much like Windows contracts, and in this case it compares SuSE Linux Enterprise (SLES) 8 and 9 to Windows Server 2003.
The study was done by comparing the two Operating Systems in an e-commerce environment over the period of one year.
Some of the more interesting findings are Linux administrators took 68 percent longer to implement new business requirements than their Windows counterparts, and the "Novell SLES solution experienced 14 critical breakages while the Windows Server solution experienced none." SLES 8/9 also required 4.79 times the number of patches as Windows Server 2003, resulting in more work needed to be done by the Linux administrators.
It's a good read. I'm not expecting any detractors to have anything of substance to reply other than knee-jerk "if MS funded it, it's false" bull.
But much of the PDF contains some facts that highlight why some businesses may be hesitant to switch to Linux. The vast majority of the Linux cheerleaders, both on this site and in general, don't have the insight to see past the trivial "Linux is free, Windows is not" mantra; nevermind the fact that in most cases corporations do purchase Linux much like Windows contracts, and in this case it compares SuSE Linux Enterprise (SLES) 8 and 9 to Windows Server 2003.
The study was done by comparing the two Operating Systems in an e-commerce environment over the period of one year.
Some of the more interesting findings are Linux administrators took 68 percent longer to implement new business requirements than their Windows counterparts, and the "Novell SLES solution experienced 14 critical breakages while the Windows Server solution experienced none." SLES 8/9 also required 4.79 times the number of patches as Windows Server 2003, resulting in more work needed to be done by the Linux administrators.
It's a good read. I'm not expecting any detractors to have anything of substance to reply other than knee-jerk "if MS funded it, it's false" bull.
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