Linux Visibility on Microsoft Network
Wesa, Richard (GE Consumer & Industrial)
Richard.Wesa at ge.com
Thu Apr 8 18:05:34 UTC 2004
Mark,
Very nice dissertation. Thanks for all of the keystrokes. I agree with much of what you said.
As you may have guessed, General Electric has a HUGE Microsoft network.
Recent rumor says GE is considering conversion of servers to Linux for two reasons.
1. Viruses
2. Licensing costs
I'm sure the thousands of workstations will remain Windows for quite some time.
I just thought I would get ahead of the game and experiment with a Linux server and play around
with security. Maybe even use it for some real server work on the network for my clients.
Thanks again for your thoughts. I really appreciate it.
Have a wonderful Easter weekend.
Richard
-----Original Message-----
From: redhat-install-list-bounces at redhat.com
[mailto:redhat-install-list-bounces at redhat.com]On Behalf Of Mark Knecht
Sent: Thursday, April 08, 2004 11:56 AM
To: Getting started with Red Hat Linux
Subject: Re: Linux Visibility on Microsoft Network
Wesa, Richard (GE Consumer & Industrial) wrote:
> I would like to thank everyone who has given me their time to provide help with this problem.
> I am 59 years old and have only so much time left. I am not going to spend the rest of my life
> trying to make a Linux Server work on a Microsoft network. It's not worth it.
> I'll suffer with (Bill Gates) until my time is done.
> Thanks again for trying.
> Richard Wesa
>
Richard,
I hear you...
This is, I think, another example of what's wrong with Linux in
general. It's not a comment about the folks on this list at all. They're
all great and very helpful.
Linux is still an operating system that is best left to zealots that
really want to learn it and invest huge amounts of time to become
experts. Without the likes of Rick, Bob and others here I wouldn't be
able to use it at all. It's not user friendly - far from it. I think the
whole 'Samba talk to Windows' area is a particularly tough one. I never
made it work 'right'. Some of it works, so I'm not stranded, but it
isn't worth my time to go further. M$ doesn't make it easy, not that
they have any reason to...
I recently removed all traces of Linux from my small home recording
studio after 1 year of trying to make it stable. Audio stuff that was
working started failing with new kernels. I couldn't mess with it. I
couldn't afford to spend the time. Quality control is low in many areas
of Linux software releases. I cannot complain much as I don't have to
pay for it except in the use of my time, but that won't put bread on the
table of some Linux developer so things don't change much.
I still use Linux religiously for email, not because the clients are
better than Outlook, but simply to avoid viruses. I am running Linux
here at work. It works, but it's a big struggle in a windows world.
I hear you. I hope you won't leave, but don't try to make it do what
isn't easy for you at your skill level. It isn't worth the time unless
you have the need.
- Mark
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