top | item 28422610

(no title)

iamnotwhoiam | 4 years ago

What exactly does a mainframe mean today? I’ve logged onto multi user computer systems via a thin client before, but I guess the hardware I was connecting to was probably commodity so not a mainframe? Do these things run Windows/Linux or is this some super proprietary OS2 descendent or what?

discuss

order

rwmj|4 years ago

The article answers this in the first few paragraphs. Mainframes are extremely reliable and have high I/O bandwidth (and relatively poor CPU performance). You can run Linux on them - Red Hat ship and support RHEL for s390x - but most of the time they run z/OS along with z/VM. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z/OS

iamnotwhoiam|4 years ago

But 5ghz is an incredibly high clock speed. Is the cpu hampered in other ways?