Poster: iamaboringperson Date: 2003/8/21 7:44:43
I'm pretty sure most banks use or used OS/2
I remember the bank I'm with used OS/2 years ago, that was before they merged with another one, and then started using MS-Windows machines running as terminal emulators!
Yeah, it used to be incredibly popular in the financial sector, and *someone* is keeping the eComStation guys afloat. Still, it's been at least 3 years since the hearse left the building (for those mad scientists' lab), and IBM's own marketroids are pushing NT/XP derivatives on the one hand and Linux on the other, so it's done a good disappearing act in the places it'd be visible, at least for me. (After all, the only reason it was *there* in front of the teller was because someone had a contract with IBM, and it came with a VT3270 emulator! ;-))
I used it, I loved it in spite of its warts, it's sad to see it go... but for backend servers, *NIX is better suited anyway, and nobody gives a crap about the desktop XPerience these days. A Linux distro standardized around one GUI toolkit (or RedHat's bizarre unification effort) really isn't much different from a user's perspective. (Remember how much fun it was to add and remove protocols? Or to try and use the frontend(s) for configuration of network services? Or to finally get it speaking SMB only to realize IBM and MS disagreed on 'machine name' vs. 'ID' fields?)