Spoken like a *nix hacker. ;-) No, Sprint is still, and will be for a very long time, a mainframe shop. They have plenty of *nix, as well, but the corporate data lives in a DB2 for OS/390 data base. Sprint PCS is a big AIX user. They have a DB2/AIX/SP box(es) that has one table that is over 6 Terabytes living across 64 nodes (or something like that), but the long distance company runs on mainframe DB2. But even at that, they also have some mainframe DB2. They are one of the largest participants in the Heart of America DB2 User Group (of which I am an officer), which has traditionally been a mostly mainframe group, but is now expanding to include "baby" DB2, which is not really a baby anymore, see reference to the Sprint PCS table above. It was not an exageration when I said that 70% of the worlds data resides on IBM mainframes. Not necessarily in all in DB2, but also including IMS and VSAM. IMS fast path is still the very fastest data base in the world, and is used by companies that need extremely high transaction volume. Were talking tens of thousands of transactions per second. Mainframes are used by companies that need high availability also. Unix variants are pretty reliable, but not compared to the mainframe. OS/390 has something like an average 99.9999% uptime. Also, multi terabyte DASD farms are quite commonplace in even small shops. It's unbeaten for availability, security, reliability, recoverability, and scalability. All things that are very important to large IT shops. The mainframe is NOT dead. It's merely been reinvented as a REALLY big server. :-) I really didn't want to get into a whole mainframe vs. unix discussion. We're on the same side. :-) Like Jeff said earlier, there's a place for each. I'm here to talk about Linux, and Linux on the mainframe is, without a doubt, going to be a very significant contributor to acceptance of Linux into Corporate America. I want to get ahead of this trend, so I am pursuing Linux on my own time at home, and I love it. It's a great OS, and there seems to be a really great community that has evolved around the whole open source concept. That's what this is all about. Sorry for my rants. I'll be quiet now. Peace, Jim Mike Coleman wrote: > Jim Herrmann writes: > > Anil seemed to be writing from somewhere deep in the bowels of Sprint, > > certainly a large mainframe shop. > > I wonder if they still are. I mean, it wouldn't surprise me if they had a > few, but I bet most of the occupants of the glass rooms are Unix boxes of > various flavors (and probably lots of Windows servers as well).