Nevertheless, in an industry where change is a constant, VMS has few
peers in its age bracket. The hoary software of the VMS never had a castle. It succeeded at first as the prime operating
system of the DEC Vax minicomputer. As Data General, Wang, IBM, and
others moved into minis, DEC stayed ahead with its Vax architecture
powered by the VMS. VMS could run a Vax efficiently; for that matter,
it could run whole clumps of Vaxes, known as Vaxclusters.
But the Vax was no castle. When competition intensified, VMS
had to move on. It powered the Alpha line of servers brought out first
by DEC, then Compaq Computer. When Compaq was bought byHewlett Packard
(NYSE: HPQ), VMS -- now known as OpenVMS -- moved on
again, this time to Intel (NSDQ: INTC) Itanium architecture servers. VMS was
never royalty in a castle; it was more like a resourceful, gypsy
worker.
VMS was designed by Dave "eat your own dog food" Cutler when he was
one
of the top programmers at DEC. Cutler would move on also, putting his
development talents to work atMicrosoft (NSDQ: MSFT),
where his experience led to leadership of the Windows NT project. NT's
security gains over earlier forms of Windows flowed directly out of his
VMS experience.
VMS was designed to be secure from the ground up, not as an
afterthought, and it had multiple barriers for would-be intruders. It
would check the role of someone giving it commands to see whether they
were authorized to do what they were trying to do. If your password was
X, and an intruder starting trying to guess passwords using L, M, N,
etc., by the time he got to X, VMS would have spotted the pattern and
locked his account, even when he got to the right letter.
"We've never had a virus on OpenVMS. It's never been hacked
into for the life of the product," says Ann McQuaid, general manager of
OpenVMS at HP.
Gareth Williams, associate director of the Smithsonian
Astrophysical Observatory Minor Planet Center, knows about VMS'
security and other virtues. Williams is a self-taught programmer
trained in astronomy. When he arrived at the observatory on the Harvard
campus in Cambridge, Mass., it became his job to track the 400,000
orbits of known asteroids and comets in the solar system. His computing
resources for the job were two MicroVaxes running VMS. The system was
gradually expanded with several larger Vaxes until the center had a
cluster of 12.
The center shares space with the university's observatory, and
when the pinch was put on office space, it was decided by building
authorities that 12 Vaxes in an office were a waste of white collar
space. Seven were wheeled off to a remote corner of the building known
as the "gobs of gear" room, says Williams. But the Vaxcluster still
performs, he says.
Not to worry, adds McQuaid. The Vaxcluster can run whether the
computers are right next to each other or separated by up to 500 miles.
The Deutsche Borse stock exchange in Frankfurt runs on VMS. The
Australian Stock Exchange runs on it. The Amsterdam police department
in the Netherlands runs on it. The train system in Ireland, Irish Rail,
runs on it. AndAmazon (NSDQ: AMZN)
uses OpenVMS as the OS for the system which controls the shipment of
112,000 customer packages of books, CDs, and DVDs every day. The operating system "has a very loyal installed base of customers,"
McQuaid says, and they show no signs of wanting to give it up.
After 30 years, can this operating system go on forever? When
Compaq decided to kill off the Alpha chip, "that did not sit too well
around here," says Williams, who's still tracking asteroids on his
Alpha servers. HP says it's willing to continue to support OpenVMS as
part of its Itanium server lines. Williams can't be sure when he'll be
able to migrate to Itanium or whether HP's commitment is concrete
enough to warrant the conversion.
So he's stuck with an old dilemma. "We always said we would
move away from VMS when something better came along. There isn't
anything better," he says.

mainframe also
is over 30 years old, but that's mainly because it's embedded in a kind
of castle that won't fall.