Oops, running Windows Server costs London Stock Exchange a day in downtime. Time to switch to linux.

TradElect runs on HP ProLiant servers running, in turn, Windows Server 2003. The TradElect software itself is a custom blend of C# and .NET programs, which was created by Microsoft and Accenture, the global consulting firm. On the back-end, it relied on Microsoft SQL Server 2000. Its goal was to maintain sub-ten millisecond response times, real-time system speeds, for stock trades.

It never, ever came close to achieving these performance goals. Worse still, the LSE's competition, such as its main rival Chi-X with its MarketPrizm trading platform software, was able to deliver that level of performance and in general it was running rings about TradElect. Three guesses what MarketPrizm runs on and the first two don't count. The answer is Linux.

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It seems to me that Windows is more guilt by association here. While I'm not a lover of Windows, I'd be more inclined to blame the custom software that was written on top of Windows than the OS itself. (I've seen enough high traffic sites running Windows (and heck, most ATMs run it these days), and enough bad coding in Linux based software to be less convinced it's as simple as switching to Linux. I'd say dump the guys that wrote the software, get some good engineers behind it, and use what ever technologies they want to use. (And while the vast majority of good software engineers that I know use Linux or Mac OS X, I know good ones that use Windows, too.)
You're right, it's more likely that blub coders write in .Net on Windows Server than C on Linux.

Similar failures could have occurred with Java on Linux in the wrong hands too... or C on Linux for that matter.

Net on Windows Server than C on Linux.I'd say dump the guys that wrote the software, get some good engineers behind it, and use what ever technologies they want to use.

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John peter
Stock Advise

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