rden@rden.gen.nz (Robert den Hartog) (06/10/91)
The company I work for recently bought SCO Unix. Just last week we also decicded to get the TCP/IP for the same, so we checked the price list; SCO TCP/IP $1800.00 (US$900). But wait, thats only the runtime. TCP/IP development, $1200.00 (US$600). Well we were stuck, so we forked out $3000.00, and got 4 disks and 1 binder of manuals. Is it normal SCO policy to sell the TCP/IP in two parts for _so_ much? $1200.00 seems a lot for a bunch of .h files and 1 library (the disk was less than 1/2 full!) Oh, and 1/2 a binder of documentation. Bit of an aside speil follows, it may amuse some folks out there... The people I work for decided to go with SCO for the support, however the local agents (not SCO themselves) are the biggest bunch of idiots I've ever seen (all their support is done via fax machine to the US, that's once you finally get them to understand what your problem is. (I'll save those stories for now)) However they outdone themselves with the invoice that arrived today: - I personally collected the goods on the 6 June (it was ordered from the US, the agents hold _no_ stock!) The invoice had a $12.00 local cartage charge - The invoice was dated 31 May. (NZ standard terms are payment by the 20th of the month following the date on the invoice.) What sort of cheek is that (without concent from the purchasor I think it's in fact illegal in NZ.) Needless to say the invoice has been returned, sans cheque. Sorry to bore you, but it's interesting watching what companies in trouble try to do to save themselves. (Rumors travel quickly in a small country, and are rarely wrong.) BTW, if you're wondering, this machine is running Esix. -- She bit me on the neck, now I'll live forever - Al Bundy, MwC Hey, have a nice one. Robert den Hartog. {rden|robert}@{rden|mercury}.gen.nz ...If it don't work, yell it, I like bang paths, they work.
larry@nstar.rn.com (Larry Snyder) (06/17/91)
rden@rden.gen.nz (Robert den Hartog) writes: >decicded to get the TCP/IP for the same, so we checked the price list; >SCO TCP/IP $1800.00 (US$900). But wait, thats only the runtime. yep - we noticed the same thing >TCP/IP development, $1200.00 (US$600). Well we were stuck, so we forked >out $3000.00, and got 4 disks and 1 binder of manuals. >Is it normal SCO policy to sell the TCP/IP in two parts for _so_ much? yep.. Open Desktop is another expensive system - look at the pricing if one wants to add unlimited users and development... Heck - Dell's entire SVR4 package includes everything - for 1295. -- Larry Snyder, NSTAR Public Access Unix 219-289-0287/317-251-7391 HST/PEP/V.32/v.32bis/v.42bis regional UUCP mapping coordinator {larry@nstar.rn.com, ..!uunet!nstar.rn.com!larry}
ralfi@pemcom.pem-stuttgart.de (Ralf U. Holighaus) (06/20/91)
larry@nstar.rn.com (Larry Snyder) writes: >rden@rden.gen.nz (Robert den Hartog) writes: >Open Desktop is another expensive system - look at the pricing if >one wants to add unlimited users and development... >Heck - Dell's entire SVR4 package includes everything - for 1295. Even Ingres and the Development System for Ingres??? Be careful with what you say/write! Regards Ralf. -- PEM Programmentwicklungsgesellschaft | Ralf U. Holighaus fuer Microcomputer mbH | Technical Support PO-Box 810165 D-7000 Stuttgart 80 Germany | holighaus@PEM-Stuttgart.de VOICE: x49-711-713045 FAX: x49-711-713047 | ..!unido!pemcom!ralfi