US bank sees savings by moving to Linux servers
Cleveland's Key Bank is keeping its own bank balance healthy by moving much of its back-end infrastructure to Linux.
In mid-2004, Key Bank, which manages US$92.3 billion in customer assets, began replacing aging Unix servers with Intel-based Linux servers that are less expensive than sticking with pricey and proprietary Unix hardware. The bank saw its server costs fall by 80 percent, according to Dave Seager, vice president of Unix systems engineering.
As part of the project, the bank last year bought 100 HP servers running Red Hat Enterprise Linux. By 2008, Seager expects Linux to comprise half of Key Bank's servers.
"In the last year, Linux has gone from 'unapproved for use in the building' to our platform of choice," Seager said.
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