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I heard from the system manager at Pioneer Global (now called Verio Northeast) that the old wizard.pn.com system is getting decommissioned in December. It started out in August 1994 as the main news server on a 486DX2/66 with 32Mb of RAM. It began serving web pages soon thereafter and began virtual-hosting with Apache in August '95. The Apache deployment was first in the region, to my knowledge, by a couple of weeks--this was a major moment in web history, since it enabled ISP's to sign up commercial accounts and register domains with practically zero equipment overhead. Quickly I concluded I didn't want to be in the high-volume, low-margin website registration business, but it was an interesting challenge to get it set up in the early days. In the fall of '95, wizard.pn.com ran out of steam under the increase in netnews volume, so I upgraded it to a Pentium P133 with 128Mb of RAM. I think that's the current configuration, and it has 6 SCSI drives with about 15Gb of storage. The new owners of the company went with Sparc Ultra servers and is beginning to phase out older gear. Yet, aside from occasional hard-disk failures, the legacy of Linux at Pioneer Global is one of high availability and solid, high performance. Linux will live on indefinitely in the form of the old UUCP server, uu2.pn.com, which I built shortly before leaving the company in August '97. It started out as rkbhome.jti.com, a 386DX25 with 100Mb disk and 4Mb RAM, in December 1992 running version 0.98pl5. In January '93 I upgraded hardware to a 486DX33 with a 1-gig disk and 16Mb of RAM. A couple months later I came up with the name 'pioneer' for the system, and adopted the 'ci.net' domain name as part of an initiative called Community Internet which provided news and email service to members and activists interested in making Internet accessible to the public without barriers of economics or technical expertise. (The next year, PPP wars started in earnest with the launch of TIAC, Shorenet, and a host of other providers locally and nationally, so the civic aspect got lost in the whirlwind of commercial activity--hopefully I'll be able to get back to civic networking once my life quiets down a bit!) Pioneer.ci.net was a 486DX2/66 with 32Mb of RAM at the time I decommissioned it in September '97, almost 5 years after launching it. (Actually, it's still powered up but not online. Guess I'll leave the electricity on for another week or so, until the official 5-year mark is hit!) I checked uptime on the other Linux server over there, ts1.pn.com, and it's 205 days. That's a PPP server which is likely to get decommissioned and replaced with something from Cisco if my guess is right. For those who are wondering what happens to someone who builds an ISP and gets burned out supporting it 24 hours a day for 3 or 4 years, here's what happened to me... In February, I signed an agreement to sell the company to Verio. They took a few months to bring in new management, and I worked during the transition for 6 months. Then I dropped out of sight for 3 months, during which I worked on fixing up a 90-year-old Somerville house--ask me the SKU number on anything at Home Depot, I've been there 200 times by now--and have resurfaced as a senior network integrator at GE Capital. (Warning, advertising pitch: mine is a new group of a half-dozen network guys looking for WAN/LAN deployment work at mid-size to large companies, please give me a chance to look at your RFP's for projects in '98--our office is in Boston but we can do projects like 100BaseTX upgrades, router/switch replacements, Frame Relay installations, and NT/Novell/Apple/Unix server upgrades pretty much anywhere. Oh, and my boss always wants me to mention the lease-financing group. And I'm always on the lookout for talented new-hires. Ah, I'm descending into undesirable sales-pitch SPAM. End unpaid advertisement.) Undoubtedly I'll be sneaking Linux boxes into various corners of GE as I figure out where to tuck them. One of the interesting things about all this history of Linux and the Internet tied together is how the industry is getting fragmented. At a talk for entrepreneurs last month, one of the VC guys mentioned a study done by one of the big Silicon Valley venture funds. It's a set of binders called "10,000 Niches", and details ten thousand different angles on the Internet being converged on by more than that number of companies in the software, hardware, and service sectors. It's totally unprecedented, on a scale bigger than the early days of PC's when there used to be myriad competitors in that arena. Even though at first glance one would think there'd be no room at all for long-term profits running a company with that many competitors, VC funding is increasing rapidly for Internet-related companies. Something different has happened with the Unix market, despite its ongoing growth and its long-time ties to the Internet its history has paralleled since the early '70s. Every player except Sun and Linux has pretty much dropped out; Digital has played a strong hand but the recent Intel deal (to outsource fabrication of the Alpha chip) is likely, in my opinion, to hand 98% of the remaining commercial Unix market to one company, Sun Microsystems. Sun is quadrupling the size of their employee base here in Massachusetts in a new facility, I hear, and the rest of the Unix players are fading. Meanwhile Linux has continued building a track record, and has been made freely available to enough commercial users that it's going to be around for a good long while. The Microsoft juggernaught has attracted pretty much all desktop applications development from other platforms, including Linux and Solaris. The open question remains this: will Linux remain a preferred server platform for Internet applications, as Microsoft and Sun set their sights on this segment of the industry? And, whatever happened to IBM and DEC, have they gone away for good? -rich
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