Craig Brennan on Fri, 11 Jul 2003 09:13:04 -0400


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Re: [PLUG] Community Service Project (Devil's advocate)


Agreed.  As far as Windows professionally goes, have you ever seen the
migration manual for going from NT to 2000?  It should not be that hard to
go from Microsoft Product to Microsoft Product.  Good ol' "Captive
Directory" made things worse rather than better in my opinion... plus it's
a bad ripoff of NDS which was a pretty decent product.

So far with Linux, I have been asked one question when migrating... "Is
this an upgrade of a current installation? Y/N"  After that, it's
answering some questions and plugging in some numbers.  That's as
complicated as it's been.

Craig
http://caffeinedout.com/ui

--- Magnus <chrish@trilug.org> wrote:
> 
> On Thursday, July 10, 2003, at 05:00 PM, George Gallen wrote:
> 
> > There are surely many more job opportunities out there
> > for those versed in Windows vs those versed in linux.
> 
> That's an incredibly nearsighted basis for recommending Windows, 
> George.  If these were High School seniors I might have a little more 
> tendency to not balk at this.
> 
> I've been doing UNIX & Linux work professionally for almost 6 years now.
> 
> I've been doing windows work professionally for over 9 years now.
> 
> The things I was doing 9 years ago in Windows are obsolete.  The things 
> I was doing 5 years ago in Windows are now largely obsolete.  But you 
> know what, I'm still doing the same things in Linux & UNIX that I was 
> doing early on in that part of my career (plus some new things, too).  
> The things I've learned with Linux have applied amazingly well when 
> dealing with other vendors systems like Solaris, AIX and HP-UX.  I have 
> no reason to believe that the core of Linux will be all that much 
> different in another five years.  Whereas Microsoft has grandiose plans 
> for totally revamping how we think of Windows every 4 or 5 years.  
> Indeed, Windows 2000 is about to become largely obsolete within the 
> Microsoft community.
> 
> Considering the age of these children, the staying power of UNIX, and 
> the questionable future of Windows (or should I say the complete 
> assurance that Windows will be completely changed when these kids are 
> out of high school) I think that putting some flavor of UNIX or Linux 
> on these machines is a good thing.
> 
> Though if the goal were to teach them UNIX, I'd favor NetBSD or OpenBSD 
> over Linux.
> 
> --
> 
> C. Magnus Hedemark
> http://trilug.org/~chrish
> PGP Key fingerprint = 984D 9A88 3D60 016F BE01 1506 60FB 85E1 9ABD 96F6
> 

> ATTACHMENT part 2 application/pgp-signature x-mac-type=70674453;
name=PGP.sig



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