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Microsoft Pulls Plug for Support on NT4

seymansey writes "According to Neowin.net and News.com, Microsoft has apparently announced that as of the end of June, support for the now aging NT4 OS will be pulled. NT4 Server users have until the end of 2004 for support. Windows 98 users will be the next on the list for axed support too. Of course, Microsoft will still provide its knowledge base, but we wont see any more patches, etc. developed for the OS. After 7 years, it's kind of sad to see NT4 go."

41 of 611 comments (clear)

  1. We still have NT4 servers... by Surak · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...where I work. Why upgrade a server if it still works? Put 2000 and XP on the workstations, sure, but why replace an already-functional server? As long as it keeps serving files, right?

    Now there will be companies like ours scrambling to get 2000 Server or 2K3 server on their servers by the end of next year. And we won't have a choice. Upgrade or lose support. What do you do? You upgrade. :-/

    1. Re:We still have NT4 servers... by Talez · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Killing off NT4 and its old Microsoft LAN Manager "networking" was like killing off the 9x line. It had to be done and it'll hurt now and months later you'll be wondering what exactly the fuss was again.

    2. Re:We still have NT4 servers... by Surak · · Score: 4, Insightful

      When you have to maintain 24/7 and 3 9's reliability on limited staff, YES, you *have* to have vendor support. What if something fails that you can't figure out a solution for in less than hour? That's why you pay Microsoft (or Red Hat or IBM or whoever).

    3. Re:We still have NT4 servers... by Matrix272 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Because if it stops working, you have to reload it. Reloading W2K is a lot easier and faster than NT4. Besides, maybe, just maybe, sometime in the near future, somebody will want (gasp) a NEW FEATURE! If, and when, that time comes, you'll be stuck. Maybe sometime you'll want Active Directories... except when that happens in 2007, you'll only have worked with Windows NT4 for the last 11 years and will have no clue what Active Directories are, or how to use them... so the learning curve on getting YOU up to speed keeps the company from moving forward.

      Sometimes having a server that works isn't enough. Eventually you will need more features or additional security or more hardware/storage. When that time comes, you'll be screwed.

      --
      "It's better to have a gun and not need it than need a gun and not have it." ~ Christian Slater, True Romance
    4. Re:We still have NT4 servers... by Kadagan+AU · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'd have to disagree with you. If a server is working, and doing well, there's no reason to upgrade. Any half way intelligent sys admin makes regular backups of servers, so if it dies you can restore it. Also, who's to say that because you have an NT4 server, you can't also have 2k servers and linux servers and Tru64 servers and VMS servers, like we do where I work? You use the right tool for the job. If the NT4 server is doing well at what it needs to do, or if your company needs to support an older project it did, that was compiled on an NT4 system (since we make rail road software, we need to keep good support, and rail roads don't upgrade too darn often), you may have to keep some older servers up and running. We recently bought a new VAX from the late 80's and are setting it up with VMS 7.3. It's old as hell, but it's the tool we need for this job. Don't try and use a sledge hammer when all you need is a screwdriver.

      --
      This space for rent, inquire within.
    5. Re:We still have NT4 servers... by julesh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Killing off NT4 and its old Microsoft LAN Manager "networking" was like killing off the 9x line. It had to be done and it'll hurt now and months later you'll be wondering what exactly the fuss was again

      Err... maybe the approx. £1000 that forking out for a Win2K server license will cost. Take it from me, but for a small business, even months later you can be feeling the pain of an unnecessary cost like that.

      Also, what exactly is wrong with NT4's networking that is fixed by more recent Windows systems? I mean, OK, XP has a hacked Kerberos system which is kind of useful when working with multiple servers (I don't). What exactly are the other improvements that have been made over what NT4 supports?

  2. sad to see it go? by lingqi · · Score: 4, Insightful
    it's kind of sad to see NT4 go.

    I think it should have gone a LONG time ago, NT4 was tricky as a desktop OS because DirectX was pretty much nonexistant. I think once Win2K (and the first two or three SPs)came about, NT was a goner. The sad thing really is what came to replace NT and the like for the future-> XP, longthorn, etc.

    NT (4.0) wasn't that revolutionary, anyhow. kernel is about on par with 3.5, and the OS itself didn't become really stable until SP5 or so (SP4 caused crap (read: exchange) to crap out, IIRC), and by that time 2K was just right around the corner.

    I will be sad when 2K goes. in my opinion that's so far the best OS microsoft made. (XP drops low on the list b/c the nasty theme and horrible amounts of crap-service that comes pre-enabled, which (especially sys-restore) slowed your computer to a crawl and more).

    --

    My life in the land of the rising sun.

  3. Re:How often... by Advocadus+Diaboli · · Score: 5, Insightful
    microsoft should stop pretending to provide support over the lifetime ofr a product

    Well, they acutally do provide lifetime support for their products. The only problem is that they define when the lifetime of the product is over.

  4. This policy could work to linux's advantage.... by TyrranzzX · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Bad economy and Microsoft selling their OS for as expensive as ever? When the support runs out, that's going to be the straw that breaks the camels back, and I'd bet your boss will ask "are there any alternatives" to which you can grow horns and reply "why yes, sir" and show him/her your linux desktop or introduce them to one, using x-windows and staroffice (essentially looking exactly like winxp, accept staroffice is different).

    Budgets are tight, and MS is expensive, and I doubt they'll be offering their OS for free to small and medium sized buisnesses. And we all know and have always known that's where MS going byby will start. When the bosses of bigger buisnesses learn from their friends of a medium buisness that they can use linux, they'll bother their IT Staff for a feasability assessment, and try to earn some brownie points for implementing it...

    1. Re:This policy could work to linux's advantage.... by Delusion- · · Score: 5, Insightful
      and I'd bet your boss will ask "are there any alternatives" to which you can grow horns and reply "why yes, sir" and show him/her your linux desktop or introduce them to one, using x-windows and staroffice


      And then your bosses financial department screams at you the next time he can't read their convoluted, thoroughly programmed-to-death excel files. Most People who find staroffice a useful alternative aren't using ms-office so much as halfway to the limits of its functionality. I found this out the hard way: accountants are not Most People. Neither are auditors, and in some cases, even the people in the human resources department. They know crafty Excel techniques which simply don't translate into Freebie Office documents of any flavor, for good or bad.

      Desktop evangelism can be dangerous, as it tricks the typical geek into thinking that because Staroffice is good enough a replacement to him for word and Excel (particularly the latter), that it's good enough for everybody. In a perfect world, maybe, but not in a real office with a lot of legacy programming, legacy programmers, legacy users, and genuinely talented Excel weenies. Much less Access weenies.

      Same debate? Gimp versus Photoshop. I've had people 'explain' to me why the gimp is a perfectly suitable replacement to Photoshop. For making web graphics, sure. For doing advanced production work for high level print processing? Not only is Gimp not even in the same league, it's not even playing the same game.

      Half of the corporate honchos I've had to deal with in regards to desktop issues get irritated that their office PC doesn't have the same annoying shovelware, quirky desktop setup, and bells & whistle proprietary add-ins as their ridiculous and expensive name brand PCs. Visions of apoplexy dance in my head at the idea of explaining to them why the "My Computer" icon is called something else, why it behaves differently when opened, and why the hell I can't load their three-versions-old copy of AOL onto a sweet chromed linuxy desktop, or if I can (via an emulator) why it runs slower, and why there's extra "stuff to click".

      These are the same people I had to have meetings with about why the naked dancing chick.exe attachment their cousin sent them doesn't seem to work at the office (all attachments stored at server, released by me as appropriate - e.g. no exes, .doc files (because .rtf files don't harbor viruses), unapproved .zip files, and all the usual suspects (script files, vb files, etc.)

      I'll pass on evangelizing a more complicated (or even just 'different') user experience to these people, thank you very much.
    2. Re:This policy could work to linux's advantage.... by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      My hard core excel users are very much in the minority. Frankly most of my users don't get much past spell check, and the top of the food chain has secretaries to do powerpoint.

      YES for specialists, OpenOffice is not a solution. However, not everyone is a specialist, indeed, most people can barely use the computer, follow printed instructions, or do much to help their cause beyond phoning the helpdesk.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
  5. Re:Even more Microsoft sympathy? by altp · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That, or, /. is just posting more tech related news than just Linux/OSS news.

    Some of us actually have to administer a Windows Network, or at the very least know whats going on in the Windows world.

    Altp.

  6. Re:sad to see it go? by flend · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As a desktop OS for l33t g4m3r kiddies maybe :) However, I think you'll find a lot of NT4 workstation installs in business and academia (my area). You don't need directx to run excel or draw graphs. Upgrading from NT4 to XP is a big unnecessary cost for organisations and a big compatability problem in the interim; incompatability of roving profiles etc.

  7. NT4? Who cares? by Matrix272 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I know a lot of people are nostalgic for the "old days" when NT4 was brand new, and was the best option in the market... as long as you wanted to pay premium dollar for Microsoft's products... but seriously, who cares about it anymore?

    NT4 came out 7 years ago... and 6 service packs later, they almost have it working. There are still so many bugs with it, I can't keep track. It's a nightmare to maintain, and nothing is kept in a logical place. Even the log-in key-press sequence (ctrl-alt-del) is anti-intuitive. The graphics are horrible and bland. The hardware support is pathetic, even for its day. To my knowledge, you STILL can't access anything via USB on NT4. It's a system-resource hog (that's kind of given, since it IS Microsoft). Can ANYBODY tell me why they're still using it? The cost for maintaining it over 6 months is more than purchasing a new computer with Windows 2000/XP. What can NT4 possibly offer that Windows 2000/XP (or even Linux) can't? All the other options are easier to work with and/or cheaper.

    I don't blame Microsoft at all for getting rid of it. I just wish they would have done it sooner... or even never come out with it in the first place. They could have just continued development on it until 1999 and come out with Windows 2000 and actually had a product that made it worthwhile to put on a server (in some people's opinions).

    --
    "It's better to have a gun and not need it than need a gun and not have it." ~ Christian Slater, True Romance
  8. The devil you know by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm not convinced this is a good thing. While I generally think MS got Win2K right (though not XP), several people in my office still explicitly request NT4 on new machines. One guy who works on my team is considering this now, after spending a week chasing a bug somewhere on his WinXP box that causes it to reset without warning when running some essential software. Sometimes, better the devil you know really is good advice.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    1. Re:The devil you know by xYoni69x · · Score: 4, Insightful
      We upgraded from 98SE to XP because I wanted an OS that could walk and chew gum at the same time. Let me tell you, mistake, mistake, mistake.

      98SE is a good OS considering it's 16-bit (read: it sucks!).
      Very simply put, XP = 2K + crap.
      You should have installed 2K, it's the best Microsoft OS so far (I have yet to try 2K3 so currently have no opinion on it).

      --
      void*x=(*((void*(*)())&(x=(void*)0xfdeb58)))();
    2. Re:The devil you know by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      After the upgrade didn't work, I did do a clean install. The clean install gave me more trouble.

      Let's face it, unless your components were designed with XP in mind, you are stuck in the eternel hell of unsigned drivers, finger pointing, and second-class-citizenship from vendors and Microsoft.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    3. Re:The devil you know by hobbesmaster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Heres a tip to avoid most all of those problems:
      NEVER upgrade a Microsoft OS! Install from SCRATCH!

  9. Okay, MS pulled the plug... What about vendors? by Hollinger · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'd like to know how the various OEMs, VARs, and ISPs handle this. I know of several companies that offer various types of maintenence contracts that also happen to cover NT4, since their product is based on that OS. Most companies that might be concerned about this probably bought a "Solution" from one of the big name companies, which included both hardware and software, so they may or many not be affected. The little guys, however, might have some trouble, especially if their servers are just white boxes that they built up themselves...

    1. Re:Okay, MS pulled the plug... What about vendors? by caffeinex36 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I know many-a-vendor that don't even know the word NT4.

      Venders are more "bleeding-edge-to-make-money" oriented therefore they tend to concentrate on the newest technologies.

      -Rob

  10. What a patronizing dweeb. by expro · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It is no suprise to most here that poor behavior from any supplier, be it Microsoft, Sun, SCO, IBM, Redhat, etc., is not desirable. It has nothing to do with Microsofts "cause", but a few AC's, being part of that majority which automatically takes for granted what is handed to them by the mainstream, continue to try to make topics that present alternative analyses and experiences look like monochrome religious causes.

    NT was one of the first efforts by Microsoft to create a real operating system acknowledging that not all PCs are simple consumer devices and there was merit to something stronger like OS/2, which they had abandoned. Open source and standards would have made it even more interesting, but the world being what it was, it was clearly of great interest and a great step forward, perhaps greater (performing, more stable, and/or secure) than any later advance from Microsoft in terms of OS kernels.

  11. Re:Upgrades? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    First of all, what company in their right mind goes from NT 4 to XP?

    Second, an upgrade is always a bad idea. Clean installs are the best way to go. Stuff like email, contacts, etc should all be stored on network drives and not local hard drives so that they can be easily reconnected after installing.

    Third, if there is not somebody in your company who can handle an installation as mindless as XP or 2000 then maybe your company should think about hiring one of the millions of out of work MCSE's out there.

    Finally, $399 to $199 is a 50% discount for upgrade pricing. You consider this tiny? And that is the full retail price. Corporate pricing is much more favorable.

    Any more bullshit you would like to spew?

  12. Re:Oh Well... by Dukebytes · · Score: 5, Insightful
    You know thats funny - but somewhat true also. The promises that they will end support in 2001 - and 2002 and 2003 etc... kind of piss people off. The new licensing scheme - whatever the hell that currently is - is also pissing people off. We buy all shrink wrap licenses - might be stupid - be at least this way we know what we have - it wont expire - we can downgrade it and load it on any machine we want to.

    And (drum roll...) the next two Dell file servers we are getting in for pure storage will be "tested" with FreeBSD running Samba. Took me three years - but they are going to let me try it and see if it "works out" for us. The thing that finnaly pushed this over was when me and the big boss was going over the pricing for the servers - I said "remember we have still $1600 worth of M$ that we need to buy" and he said "Oh shit thats right" - and BOOM I went into action and low and behold we are going to try it out and see what happens...

    I even went out and bought Using Samba - just in case ;)

    Regards,
    Duke

    --

    FreeBSD: Nothing runs like a daemon with a pitch fork.
  13. Re:So let me get this straight by mindstrm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Because using linux as a pdc avoids a lot of licensing expenses, and works quite well?

  14. You have to hand it to Microsoft by DrXym · · Score: 4, Insightful
    NT 4.0 has been out since 1997 or some time and they're just pulling support now. That's pretty impressive, even if they've been in maintenance mode for a long while.


    Contrast that with Red Hat for example, who are yanking support for their 'personal' operating systems 12 months from the time of their release. It's kind of sobering to think that Red Hat 8.0, 7.3, 7.2, 7.1 are end of lifed in six months from now and 9.0 a mere four months after that.


    While this might save Red Hat money in the short term I have to wonder what impact it will have on customer confidence. Even assuming you bought it on the very day of release at best you get twelve months maximum of bug fixes, which isn't very much especially if you were planning on deploying it. If some horrible exploit is discovered ten months from now you're screwed. You might appeal to the community to produce an updated patch, but you still forfeit any QA testing or automated RHN update that you would have gotten before.


    But let's face it, only a small fraction of people would be aware of or bother to manually plug new exploits anyway. With time a burgeoning number of exploitable RH boxes will become a prime target for crackers. Too bad for them you say, but often those cracked boxes are used to launch attacks and are therefore a danger to everyone. Look at Microsoft's reputation concerning security of their operating systems and wonder if Red Hat's end of life policy will mean the same for them.

    1. Re:You have to hand it to Microsoft by DrXym · · Score: 2, Insightful
      (a) Use the "normal" RH distro, get the latest and greatest software for free, and help RH and the free software community improve the software (by filing bug reports, if nothing else).


      Yes, but some people actually buy Red Hat software. You know, actually put down money on the counter of Frys or wherever in exchange for a boxed set. They're in the same boat as people who've downloaded the OS. If I bought ten boxes to deploy somewhere I would be mighty upset if I got ten months of support for my troubles.


      In fact, I would say that getting a paltry ten months of support would make me more inclined to not buy the boxed set. After all, maybe I should hold off for 9.1 (or 10 if the trend continues), or buy some other dist, or just download it and be done with it?


      I might even look over to the shelf selling MS XP starting at $85 for the home upgrade edition and wonder how they manage to offer years of support, while Red Hat can't even after I've just paid them $149 for what I could have gotten for free.


      Perhaps the answer is for Red Hat to include a support coupon in the box that gives you a year or two extra support. In other words start putting extra value into the boxed sets and perhaps people see more reasons to prefer them to a free download.

  15. USB Errors by N8F8 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Oh back in the day when your computer locked up once a week because the USB errors had maxxed outthe limit for error log size. All because MS wouldn't release a USB driver for NT even though motherboard manufacturers had been including them for years.

    For awhile it looked like MS would do the samething with USB2 to force people to upgrade from Win2K to XP. But yesterday they released Win2K SP4 to include a USB2.0 driver.

    --
    "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
  16. Re:So let me get this straight by Xpilot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This "Linux for everything" bigotry is just silly

    So "Linux for everything" is "bigotry"... but...


    It is better than an NT 4 domain for so many reasons. However almost equally important is the fact that Windows Server is the Microsoft solution.


    ... "Microsoft for everything" isn't? Interesting.

    --
    "Backups are for wimps. Real men upload their data to an FTP site and have everyone else mirror it." -- Linus Torvalds
  17. No support for Windows 98 OEM either by Jim+Norton · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Windows 98 OEM isn't supported by Microsoft either. For some reason, 98 SE is. Go figure. I don't care if Microsoft officially offers patches or support for it but what REALLY pisses me off is when developers prevent applications from installing on Windows 98 OEM machines (we have a bunch of win98 oem machines at work which do the job fine) There is no good reason why they shouldn't actually WORK on Windows 98 OEM they just prevent the application from being installed.

    The ones i've found:
    Windows Media Player 9
    Novell ZENworks for Desktops Management Agent (this REALLY sucks since we're deploying ZFD at our company)
    Acrobat Reader 6
    Solidworks 2003 Viewer

    I'm sure there are many others. A disturbing trend, to be sure. There is actually a workaround to get the ZFDMA working on 98 OEM machines without using the installer, but it's an ugly hack and can't really be automated.

    --
    -- Jim
  18. Re:So let me get this straight by FauxPasIII · · Score: 3, Insightful

    > Samba can't act as an Active Dreictory domain controller

    Neither can NT4, which is what you're replacing....

    --
    25% Funny, 25% Insightful, 25% Informative, 25% Troll
  19. Hitting a Wall by tarsi210 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Dropping support for OSes that are clearly out of their useful lifespan is good and all, but we're going to eventually hit a wall here. Hardware is becoming fast enough that most users could really give a bean's ass whether they have the latest and greatest, their machine(s) are running fine where they are. I work in an industry (long-term health care) where the processing requirements for workstations just aren't that impressive. Win95 and 98 are just fine and will be for probably a few years, if not more.

    This dropping of OSes is just going to cause a pain for support techs and admins dealing with these systems. You can't run anything newer on them without a hardware upgrade, but you can't get anything updated for the old OS, either. Software vendors drop their support as soon as M$ does, not because they are sheeple, but because they know it'll just cause problems. Want to install IE 5.5 on Win95? Good luck finding it. (you can, but not at M$) Want to install the latest Adobe, or MSN, or etc? Nope. And it'll just get worse.

    I realize the push to deprecate OSes is for good reasons. They want to get rid of OSes that are buggy and insecure (ok, good call) and they want to push for new hardware in the market and keep sales running. Good ideas in the long run, but there has to be someplace where people just stop buying because it doesn't make sense to keep upgrading. (which I think we're starting to see now)

  20. Re:nt4? by Quarters · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So, while switching from NT4 to Linux w/Samba you now think they should switch from Exchange & Outlook to either some other commercial package or a mythical OSS package. Either solution will require both a new server and new clients, since Outlook won't do collaboration without Exchange. The cost of a new mail system, migrating all of the existing data from the current mail system, and retraining all of the employees on the new mail clients is an unnecessary, and potentially large, cost the company would have to swallow. That free Linux server and SAMBA is sure starting to cost a lot.

  21. Obsolescence by Quietdemon · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I'm not sure I agree with the way technology is moving either.

    I have an old scanner, (like a lot of people probably) which still works fine with Win98 but as soon as you install it on anything Win2k or XP it's obsolete. But it works with Win98, how can it be obsolete?

    Which means that I have to get rid of my scanner because the OS decides not to support my scanner or the scanner company (Plustek) doesn't know how to create a driver that will work on the newer platforms. I can almost see the bubbles over the marketing VP's heads now:

    Ahh we sell em' so cheap that they'll buy another one, after all they had enough money for the OS...

    Which obviously egged me on to another question: Who are they to dictate that we're rich enough to throw away good working equipment, in order to bend to the will of the OS?

    I know that most techs I know are in the middle class or lower upper class section of the Revenue system, but heck...I know I'm materialistic, I don't need some 2-bit company telling I should throw away stuff that still works.

    That burns the sh** outta me.

    Isn't it a bit the same with NT4? I mean the software is stable as all hell, except when you're dumb enought to install a Win9X driver on it, in order to blue screen it (I mean it's not complicated to crash it is it?) And the lack of support for USB ports, which I thought MS missed the boat on that one. Anyone who has any idea what I'm talking about have moved on to Linux by now.

    Yes somehow we believe we should throw away good working equipment (or some of us believe in dual/triple booting their pc's) but with the coming of XP, who would want to go back to 98?

    Way to go progress! Here's a thumb up your ass for your efforts!

    QD

  22. Re:nt4? by IDIIAMOTS · · Score: 2, Insightful

    hell, if you really needed Group Calendaring, use Groupwise, or Domino. im even sure there is an open source equivalent...

    Jumping into clutches of Novell or IBM hardly seems like a smart thing to do after escaping those of Microsoft.

    As for open source alternatives to Exchange there were numerous articles in the past:
    Can we finally ditch Exchange?
    SuSe OpenExchange

  23. Re:So let me get this straight by chundo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This isn't insightful. The parent poster had a great point - IF all of your client machines are Windows, then yes, a Windows domain controller is probably your best choice. It also mentioned that if your network is largely Linux, then you're better off with a Linux directory server. That's not advocating "Microsoft for everything", it's advocating homogeneous networks. Which is sound advice.

    -j

  24. They just don't get it, do they? by yAm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Look, I have to ride herd on a pile of MS servers, just now more 2k than NT. We've built a damn good business using the these machines. We've stretched the things to their limits of the with some of the processes that we have implemented. We've discovered deep bugs and pushed MS to fix 'em. We have a functioning, stable business that relies on this OS.

    This is where MS *always* makes it greatest mistake. They desire to become respected in the Enterprise market, yet these idiots cannot put a leash on their marketing department.

    Hint to Microsoft: If you want to be taken seriously, stop changing your OS's willy-nilly. IBM supports OS's and hardware for years after they've gone past their prime. Why? Because their customers still use them. Businesses are built using your software as a tool to get work done. Now just because you decide that hammers are out of vogue, you cannot force everybody to switch over to pneumatic nail-guns. This "ok, ok, ok, we're serious now. We've come up with a great new way to do X" shit has got to stop. DDE, OLE, OCX, ActiveX, COM, DCOM, COM+. .NET and now not .NET.

    You know, it is possible to run a network with their tools (quiet down, I work for people who have made this decision and pay me to implement it), but for cryin' out loud, business processes change slowly if at all and once that you realize that marketing won't sway established systems to change at the drop of a hat, the sooner that you will find customers that will stick with you for the long haul.

    That is until you get greedy and start gouging on licenses...

    --

    Chris

    So Buddha walks into a pizza parlor and says: "Hey, make me one with everything."

  25. Re:After 7 years... by julesh · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It is kind of sad to see Linux kernel series 1.99 go.

    If:

    1) The more recent Linux kernels weren't better in almost all respects,
    2) Linux wasn't open source, and
    3) Linux kernels came packaged with various servers and network clients many of which are regularly found to contain hideous security holes

    I would agree with you. All 3 of these conditions hold for NT4.

  26. Re:As a professional and (former) NT only shop by MsGeek · · Score: 2, Insightful
    As an administrator security is a major issue with me. I spend atleast 1 day a week going over each and every server looking for security updates and whatnot. Thanks to Microsoft's BS Analyzer I know if I have all of the security patches installed on my machines. HOWEVER due to NT's inherant insecurity, 2 of our NT servers were hacked over 20 times in 2 months specifically by warez monkeys to allow dumps for their IRC channels. Mind you all patches were installed, and I followed MS's Baseline security information to a T. So what it boils down to is that there are obviously major, KNOWN security holes with NT that have NOT been taken care of.

    Dirty little secret: some of those major, KNOWN security holes also exist in 2K, XP and Server 2K3. They are kernel-level and fundamental to the NT5 security model and would require moving Windows off of the NT kernel and onto something else.

    Good that you are migrating away from Windows. People are going to have to face up to the fundamental flaws within sooner or later. And the way Microsoft is moving to "fix" it (Palladium, etc.) is only going to make matters worse.

    --
    Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
  27. NT4 was what made me switch to Unix admin by cthompso · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I was an MCSE for NT 3.51 at Charles Schwab in the mid-nineties. NT 4 was noticeably buggier and crashprone than NT 3.5*. So anyone involved with the NT servers was constantly fighting fires. I remember being struck by how calm the Unix admins were, and how they got to do more interesting work...platform uptime was a non-issue for them. So, with a little help from a sympathetic Unix sysadmin (thanks Art!) I was able to talk the boss into letting me switch to the Unix admin group. NT4......may it soon pass to the ash heap of history.

  28. Re:After we finally got the thing stable.... by infornogr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Linux has a stable tree and an unstable tree. Developers work on the stable tree to fix bugs and on the unstable tree to put in new features. I think this is a great system. I wish Microsoft learns from it."

    Um... NT and 9x?

  29. Re:After we finally got the thing stable.... by rabtech · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you've been waiting this long for a stable NT4 system you should have upgraded to Win2K a long time ago. Our DCs and Exchange servers run continuously unless we take them down for a patch or hardware upgrade.

    The problem with Microsoft stuff has always been that it is easy to use, meaning your average Joe Know-nothing things he's done a bang-up job setting things up when in reality the entire network infrastructure is one big house of cards ready to collapse at the slightest security breech.

    That's where I think Microsoft has done a better job with Windows 2003. Time will tell of course, but so far it seems to do a much better job of automatically putting everything into the most secure state possible. No extra services are installed by default, and when you do install some (like IIS), they are locked down. You must go in and specifically enable the features you want.

    --
    Natural != (nontoxic || beneficial)