Here is a job posting from Dec 2002 out of Lowes.
(
http://www.dfwuug.org/archives/public/jobs/2002-December/000005.html )
You can see here they have AIX and Linux (at least if not more)
It also includes maintaining, documenting, and enhancing existing system
software (written in ANSI C, Java, Perl Korn), maintaining, documenting
and enhancing existing system operating system and management utilities
(AIX, Linux, and others a plus).
Here is a blip from their 10-K SEC Filing for Fiscal Year Ending Feb 2002.
Information Systems
The Company is continuously assessing and upgrading its information
systems in an effort to support growth, to control costs, and to enable
better decision-making. During the last six years, the Company has made a
substantial investment in developing and purchasing new computer systems.
Lowe's has a point of sale system, electronic bar code scanning system,
various design systems and dual UNIX Servers in each of its stores. Store
information is communicated to the support center's central computer via a
terrestrial based (frame relay) network with back up being provided by a
satellite based wide area network. These systems provide customer checkout
with automated credit card approval and also provide store-based perpetual
inventory information. In addition, the systems also provide labor
planning and item movement experience. These computers supply the general
office functions with the information needed to support the stores,
including centralized inventory replenishment.
Someone else did research that appears to point that their appliance
kiosks run Linux....
http://luna.havk.org/mail/luna__2002_12/0248.html
Lowes.com their online site uses AIX w/Apache, switching from Windows
NT/IIS back in 2000.
http://uptime.netcraft.com/up/graph/?host=lowes.com
-Derek
Bryce C said:
> True. I believe those are running NeXT. Not actually NeXT computers
> though. At the very least, it looks like IceWM themed as NeXT.
>
> On Wed, 2003-04-30 at 13:57, Alan Dayley wrote:
>> At the Lowes store in Gilbert, there is a kiosk in the paint
>> department. The computer in the kiosk lets you pick a picture of a
>> kitchen, say, and the pick different paint colors for the trim, walls
>> and so on. As you pick the different colors, the picture changes to
>> the show the color you picked on the trim or walls or whatever. It
>> looks like a browser based application.
>>
>> Anyway, my wife and I are playing with this and decide on a color
>> combination we like. It has a print button to get a list of your
>> color choices on a little card. My wife clicks print and a dialog box
>> pops up to confirm the destination printer. The dialog that pops up
>> is obviously X-windows, with the grey color and the "indented" box
>> around the default button.
>>
>> Sure, it could be any *nix running that kiosk but I'll bet it is a
>> Free OS such as a BSD or Linux. At least is wasn't Microsoft.
>>
>> Alan
>>
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> --
> Bryce C <Plug@BryceCo.Net>
> CoBryce Communications