A very nice article in Eweek.
http://www.eweek.com/print_article/0,3668,a=43105,00.asp
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Linux Goes Ka-Ching
By Lisa Vaas and John S. McCright


Linux is making cash registers ring, and not just for Red Hat Inc., SuSE
Linux AG and other distributors of the open-source operating system.

Retailers of all sizes are investigating the use of Linux on POS, or
point-of-sale, systems to provide some flexibility in their software
deployments and lower operating costs by avoiding licensing fees. Cost
savings is crucial in the world of retail, where life is lived on
razor-thin margins.

When it came time to decide whether to run POS PCs on Windows or Linux,
retailer Batteries Plus LLC pulled the plug on Microsoft Corp.

"We were on [Windows] for a couple of months, and it comes down, really,
to performance," said Michael Lehman, vice president of technology at
the Hartland, Wis., company.

More than a year ago, Batteries Plus migrated from a traditional
store-based POS system that ran under Windows to a WAN-based system that
used Synchronics Inc.'s CounterPoint software, which provides POS and
other retail business management capabilities. The system initially ran
on Windows with Citrix Systems Inc.'s MetaFrame but after a few months,
it became clear that the CounterPoint implementation had problems.
Connections were dropped consistently, Lehman said—not a good thing when
customers are waiting in line to buy batteries.

The company already had two identical servers with the same hard drive
and memory configurations. One ran Windows, the other ran Red Hat Linux.
Exporting data from the Windows system took hours, whereas importing the
same data into Linux took "a matter of minutes," Lehman said. Likewise,
reports that took 7 to 10 minutes to run on Windows took 40 seconds on
Linux.

Given Batteries Plus' previous experience with Linux, its attractive
price and better performance, the choice of Linux for the front end was
easy, Lehman said. The company now uses simply configured PCs running
Red Hat Linux Advanced Server in its stores. The PCs are connected to
keyboards with built-in swiping systems for credit cards. They hook to
virtual private network connections through frame relay, digital
subscriber line or cable modems to a central server, where the Batteries
Plus central database resides.

Batteries Plus is hardly alone. Hannaford Bros. Co. earlier this year
became the first major grocery chain to begin deploying Linux POS
systems. The Scarborough, Maine, company plans to finish installing
Wincor Nixdorf Inc. hardware and Retalix Ltd. software running Red Hat
Linux at its 119 stores next year.

Andee Pure, general sales manager at Synchronics, in Memphis, Tenn.,
said about 20 percent of the retail software vendor's customers are
using Linux on the front end and that "most of the big ones"—retail
chains with 100 or more stores—are now using Linux.

Software vendors hear the ka-ching of those cash registers. That's why
Pervasive Software Inc. late last month released a Linux remote access
component to its Pervasive.SQL 8 database, allowing it to remotely
manage and maintain PCs running Linux, including POS systems.

Separately, Minneapolis-based POS software developer Retek Inc. last
month said it is porting its namesake applications to Linux to make the
systems cheaper to operate, more flexible and simpler, officials said.

Sales of Linux servers to retailers will grow at a compound annual
growth rate of more than 31 percent between 2002 and 2007, according to
International Data Corp., of Framingham, Mass.

Despite this momentum, several things are blocking Linux from wider
deployment, according to Greg Buzek, president of IHL Consulting Group,
a retail research company in Franklin, Tenn. First, although Linux is
free, "it takes a sizable IT department to customize it and put it
together," Buzek said. "It takes a more demanding internal requirement
to write the Linux applications and take ownership of it and support it.
It's not like having a third-party, Microsoft-like partner who takes
ownership of the application." Another reason retailers aren't moving
more aggressively toward Linux is that Microsoft is tweaking pricing.
"Not to say there aren't people who are through with Microsoft," Buzek
noted.

Finally, Buzek said, there are many retail situations where older,
proprietary systems or AS/400s are getting upgraded. Such installations
often deal with transactions that are more complex than a simple Price
Lookup, and as such, customers prefer Windows' functionality over Linux.

Indeed, Microsoft, of Redmond, Wash., still claims many retailers as
customers of its Windows XP Embedded operating system. Last month, for
instance, it announced that electronics vendor Circuit City Stores Inc.
will deploy POS systems using Microsoft software at 600 stores. In
addition, some analysts said that Microsoft's move last month to license
The SCO Group's Unix patents was motivated in part by the desire to
persuade the installed base of SCO Unix users with POS systems to
migrate to Windows instead of Linux.





Copyright (c) 2003 Ziff Davis Media Inc. All Rights Reserved.


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