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Alternative To Windows Desktops

Eric_Z writes "Ace's Hardware has got a article called "The Mad Hatter meets the MSCE" by Paul Murphy, about the TCO benefits of using UNIX(Lintel) instead of Wintel. According to the piece: 'The subject of this article looks at alternatives to the Windows desktop, which is a hot topic these days with IBM/SuSe scoring a highly public win in Munich with desktop Linux, and Sun aiming to build on StarOffice being the leading alternative to Microsoft Office with a software stack code-named Mad Hatter which Sun also plans to use extensively in-house. But companies depending on Microsoft Certified Engineers to adapt to Linux will carry over a number of problems, significantly increasing the chance of project failure. Paul considers the alternatives, the migration problems, and in seeking a more reliable alternative takes the opportunity to look at the business desktop from an entirely different angle, and propose a more radical solution.'"

79 of 405 comments (clear)

  1. MSCE? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
    "The Mad Hatter meets the MSCE"
    I've heard of a Minesweeper Certified Solitaire Expert (MCSE), but what is this "MSCE" being spoken of?
    1. Re:MSCE? by kgarcia · · Score: 2, Funny

      It's a Minesweeper Solitaire Clone Expert...

    2. Re:MSCE? by InsaneCreator · · Score: 5, Funny

      Aoccdrnig to rscheearch at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it deosn't mttaer in waht oredr the ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoetnt tihng is taht the frist and lsat ltteer be at the rghit pclae. The rset can be a total mses and you can sitll raed it wouthit porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe.

    3. Re:MSCE? by trompete · · Score: 4, Funny

      Dyslexics UNTIE!!!

      Should I be concerned that I could read this easily?

    4. Re:MSCE? by Mogombus · · Score: 2, Funny

      Npoe.

    5. Re:MSCE? by 4of12 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Should I be concerned that I could read this easily?

      Yes, it means you've been reading /. far too much.

      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
    6. Re:MSCE? by rifter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ttha si easeucb ti aws not luryt donmra.
      Gnipiwph up a ucikq oapgrrm ot replpyor nmdiozear tghsin eaksm ti os cumh reom aeuderbnal. Ti osal saieintcd soeoenm wya oto nolg ot teiwr het etranp stpo airzmgnnodi is hcum arhder yb danh.

      Obviously you did not understand the original poster. S/he specifically specified that the first and last letters in the word have to still be there for the word to be easy to read.

    7. Re:MSCE? by EvilAlien · · Score: 2, Interesting
      No, but thats because humans actually read partially by the shape of the word. Anybody who has studied ergonomics should know that. It is for this reason that the usage of all uppercase letters is actually something that runs counter to optimum reading rate. Uppercase breaks the shape of the word, thus requiring more focus.

      Mixing letters around but mostly conserving the "shape" of the word, as the "Aoccdrnig to rscheearch at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy" quote does, highlights this perceptual capability. Our brains allows this paragraph to be read at normal (at least without significant impairment) rate without reading comprehension being broken by the fact that most of those words are no longer spelled correctly.

      Human perception fills in a lot of blanks for us in vision, as well. Basically, our brains cut corners in the interests of speed. There are blind spots, such as where the optic nerve leaves the eye, that our vision fills in for us.

      As for dyslexia, the paragraph above probably looks like what every written passage looks to a dyslexic. I suspect that dyslexia involves the brain mangling the shape of words by reordering letters at the outset of beginning to learn to read, so they never really learn to read by shape. I could be way off hear, I'm very out of date as far as dyslexia research.

      --
      perl -e 'print $i=pack(c5, (41*2), sqrt(7056), (unpack(c,H)-2), oct(115), 10)'
  2. TCO benefits by jargoone · · Score: 2, Funny

    TCO benefits of using UNIX(Lintel) instead of Wintel

    I read this as SCO benefits from using UNIX(Lintel) instead of Wintel... and they would like to.

  3. Good good by mrtroy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Microsoft needs more competition!

    The best way to counteract a fat monopoly like those microsoft whores is to put some good ol competition out there against them. Its tough to match those budgets and large scale operations, but more and more companies are fighting them from more and more directions...it can only lead to good things --- better products being produced by everyone.

    Either that or more marketing.

    --
    [I can picture a world without war, without hate. I can picture us attacking that world, because they'd never expect it]
    1. Re:Good good by dmaxwell · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Destroying MS' monopoly doesn't necessarily imply destroying MS. Anyway, monopolies aren't static and absolute. MS has had a good 10-13 year run as an effective desktop monopoly and have turned it into 40 billion of liquid assets. Nothing to complain about by any means (for them...chill out!). In the process, MS has largely inspired the forces that will destroy their monopoly.

      RTFA. Substantially or totally replacing MS in an enterprise is possible and even rewarding. It isn't easy and requires substantial commitments from the organizations' highest management. If MS desktops could easily replaced with turnkey solutions they'd really be in trouble. As it is, MS should be concerned.

      If MS is smart, they won't fight this forever. Yes, they can realize gains from delaying their nascent compitition through means fair and foul. That will be governed by the law of diminishing returns and hopefully they'll know when to quit. MS has plenty of time to diversfy and design a new business model.

      What I'm trying to say is that monopolies aren't necessarily immune to competition; they're just highly resistant. It took 10-13 years but they motivated business and developers enough to code and implement replacements to their tools from scratch. They don't have a monopoly on a natural resource like DeBeers...nothing will dethrone them soon. They have a monopoly on the functionality provided by a rather large collection of bits. Come up with a set of bits thats "Good Enough" and monopoly begins to fracture. They are an altogether easier target than the likes of DeBeers. IBM has had monopolies before. Those days are gone but IBM is still around. They even manage to be the good guys much of the time.

  4. Corporate directory services by sphealey · · Score: 5, Insightful
    [...]With the exception of security management, essentially all of the practical skills associated with those functions will be invalidated. DHCP, WINS, SMB networking, Processor Affinity Management, Domain Administration, Registry hacking, and so on, are all technologies and ideas out of place in a well run Unix environment, though some pollution has crept in.

    [...]can be, and therefore will be, perpetuated in the new environment despite having no natural role there.

    I am not a fan of Active Directory. But if the author thinks that corporate directory services (preferabley Novell eDirectory, but Active Directory if you must) have no role in large-scale corporate networking, I have to question the rest of his conclusions a bit.

    sPh

    1. Re:Corporate directory services by finkployd · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sometimes known as LDAP... Contrary to popular belief, it is not just a crappy network authentication alternative for people who can't be bothered learning how to set up a Kerberos5 realm, it also is a directory service :)

      Finkployd

  5. I already use a Windows desktop alternative. by Hawthorne01 · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's called an iMac. ;-)

    --
    "Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former."
    1. Re:I already use a Windows desktop alternative. by termos · · Score: 2, Funny

      Linux is such a good desktop alternative [...] I Hate when people are comparing software with hardware

      And I hate it when people compare Linux with XFree.

      --
      Note to self: get smarter troll to guard door.
    2. Re:I already use a Windows desktop alternative. by Xerithane · · Score: 2, Funny

      And I hate it when people compare Linux with XFree.

      And I hate it when people compare a particular X11 server with the X11 protocol.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    3. Re:I already use a Windows desktop alternative. by Sprinkels · · Score: 2, Informative

      Current G4 iMacs are able to netboot e.g. run as diskless clients.

      Just press option while booting and select the netboot icon.

  6. yup it doesnt have solitair by stonebeat.org · · Score: 2, Funny

    Including Solitair in the MadHatter might make things easier for MS certified people. Just Kidding :)

  7. Solaris 10 Mad Hatter screenshot by ShadeARG · · Score: 4, Informative

    Here is a Solaris 10 Mad Hatter desktop screenshot.

    1. Re:Solaris 10 Mad Hatter screenshot by Kedder · · Score: 5, Informative

      This looks like regular Gnome2, which is included in new Solaris versions...

      The real MadHatter screenshots seems to be here.

  8. Whats new? by Moth7 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I fail to see the necessity to produce hundreds of windows-clone distros - isn't it win that we want to draw people away from? Look at it through the eyes of the average user:

    It looks and functions like windows. I already have windows. Therefore, I'm sticking with the superior(?) windows

    What we need to do is be developing newer, fresher ideas which keep microsoft on their toes - if we do that then at least MS has to keep coming up with the goods. My point is that a line of copies doesn't work - the average user doesn't care about the inside workings - they want results. I'll take the handheld game market as an example - How many gameboy clones have we seen come and disappear, doomed to sit in the back pages of children's catalogs? What we need as I have said too many times in this post is something new. There is more than one way to do it and until OSs capitalises on that and jumps into that niche, there is little hope of removing MS's stranglehold on the market.

    1. Re:Whats new? by cosmo7 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I fail to see the necessity to produce hundreds of windows-clone distros - isn't it win that we want to draw people away from?

      Also by the time you've copied a feature from Windows, Microsoft has already copied something else from OS X.

    2. Re:Whats new? by Lord+Kholdan · · Score: 5, Interesting

      What we need to do is be developing newer, fresher ideas which keep microsoft on their toes - if we do that then at least MS has to keep coming up with the goods. My point is that a line of copies doesn't work - the average user doesn't care about the inside workings - they want results. I'll take the handheld game market as an example - How many gameboy clones have we seen come and disappear, doomed to sit in the back pages of children's catalogs? What we need as I have said too many times in this post is something new. There is more than one way to do it and until OSs capitalises on that and jumps into that niche, there is little hope of removing MS's stranglehold on the market.

      May I suggest an even more radical solution? Market research! Get a large group of windows users, give them a Linux desktop and tell them to complain and make requests! Linux was made great not because it was made by programmers for programmers but because it was made by USERS for USERS. How about leaving behind the old notion that only code matters and let the current userbase show the way and help developement? Of course some will disagree with this but I claim that a good opinion about UI or insight about possible uses for programs are as important as code.

      Seriously, it seems that RIAA and OSS have one thing in common. Both make a whatever product they want to create and then blame the users for lack of interest.

    3. Re:Whats new? by Liselle · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What we need to do is be developing newer, fresher ideas which keep microsoft on their toes

      This isn't really all that true. You can't just dump a UI/functionality change on the average user and expect them to embrace it. Many have trouble with the interface that we've had since Win95.

      These people have the right idea. Ease folks into it. Otherwise you will have a response similar to what happened with WinXP, where the interface was made more intuitive and easier, but casual computer users still complained (and rightly so, I think) because the things that took them so long to learn got turned topsy-turvy.

      --
      Auto-reply to ACs: "Truly, you have a dizzying intellect."
    4. Re:Whats new? by Liselle · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Market research and focus groups led Microsoft to implement those lovely menus that auto-hide. Nifty idea in theory, however in practice the "play around with it" aspect of users using a program was lost, because they never saw stuff that they didn't use regularly. Sometimes users don't know what's good for them. Focus groups are not the answer to all of life's problems, unfortunately.

      --
      Auto-reply to ACs: "Truly, you have a dizzying intellect."
  9. Re:MSCE???? by Gleng · · Score: 5, Funny

    Microsoft Completely Shafts Everyone
    Management Constantly Spends Erroneously
    Many Confusing System Errors
    My Computer Suffers Exploits

    etc, etc, etc, etc, etc....

    --
    "Proudly Posting Without Reading The Article"
  10. Desktop Corporate Linux... I tried by oZZoZZ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My company runs Windows 98 clients and NT4 server atm, and I figured it was time to upgrade. I looked into Microsoft, with Office/WinXP and server 2003, and the cost was about $40k. That seemed insane, so I decided to try Linux.

    I've been running Linux at home now for a few years, and am quite competitent running it. My first step was to replace the slackware/wmaker combination that I was happy with on my laptop to Redhat/Gnome/Bluecurve, and I was immidetely impressed with how far linux has come on the desktop, I figured this wouldn't be a problem.

    I showed the owners of my company Linux, and they said they were fine with it on every machine... now the tricky part, application compatability.

    Under Wine I was able to get my payroll software and estimating software running, but the accounting software proved impossible. Using older style database clients and VBA, I was totally unable to get it working.

    I came to the conclusion that while I can use Linux on the desktop, application support from large corporate vendors need to be there before Linux can run on the desktop. I also came up with: "in 3 years, if we want to run a different accounting/estimating/etc package, will linux work for us?".. That question is unanswered atm, and therefore using Linux in a corporate enviroment seems to be a gamble right now, a gamble that I am not willing to wager on for my company. Another issue is support from our existing vendors... they supported running their software on Windows and 2 of them *REQUIRED* PCAnywhere to be available whenever needed... this was not possible with Linux.
    Linux on the home desktop seems more than ready, but enterprise/corporate enviroments seem to need better application support before it's possible... while I do belive that the application support will be there in 3 years, I don't think it's a risk work taking atm.

    1. Re:Desktop Corporate Linux... I tried by molarmass192 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      At least you tried. WINE is not a panacea and any apps written in VB rather than WinAPI/MFC are notoriously tough to get working on WINE. After all, you've got an interpreter running on an interpreter in those situations so it's twice as tricky. You're best bet would be Win4Lin terminal server instead of WINE and simply serve the GUIs out to the clients. I had a similar situation where I had to get a 16-bit VB 3.0 app working and WINE consistently choked on it (not surprising since nobody is working on the 16-bit emulation anymore). Anyhow, Win4Lin (not terminal server though) was the cheapest / easiest solution since they already had WinME licenses and they've been humming along for almost a year that way.

      For anybody else reading this, VB apps are an absolute terror to get working under WINE. If you're considering a Linux migration, be weary of these particular apps and have a backup plan.

      --

      Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws-Plato
    2. Re:Desktop Corporate Linux... I tried by ip_vjl · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't understand this attitude that MSOffice is *required* if you run Windows. I see it a lot when comparing the costs of running the two OSes.

      $ windows = OS cost + MSOffice cost
      $ linux = free OS + free office app

      There's nothing preventing you from running free (beer/speech) software on Windows.

      If you need Windows to run legacy apps, why not do it in stages. In your case, upgrade your boxes from 98 to XP - but don't do the MSOffice route. Use Openoffice.org (assuming it will work for you since you were going to do a full linux switch anyway) and other open source software when applicable. (Mozilla Firebird instead of IE, etc.)

      This way, you don't abandon your legacy apps ... and in a few years (at next upgrade time) there will either be a feasible open source solution, or maybe Wine will have advanced enough to run what you need.

      If you can do a full transition, good for you. But to compare costs the way you did isn't a real comparison.

    3. Re:Desktop Corporate Linux... I tried by FreeLinux · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I disagree. I would suggest that the application support is there today but, not the way people are trying to accomplish it. By and large most evaluations like you have done are trying to use Linux as a drop in replacement for Windows. This will probably never happen. While there are many applications that can be used as drop in replacements to Windows applications there are even more that are not. And Windows applications, for the most part, don't run on Linux.

      Bit, how is this different than the likes of Windows 2003. There are countless applications, even Microsoft applications such as Exchange 2000, that will not run on Windows 2003. For some people this will mean that they will not implement Windows 2003 but, as time wears on most if not all will move to Windows 2003 and upgrade or replace their existing applications to ones that do run on Windows 2003. They will buy Windows 2003 and they will also buy Exchange 2003.

      So, rather than looking for a seamless drop in replacement to Windows in Linux, why not look at it from an upgrade/migration point of view? There are numerous accounting applications that do run natively on Linux. The specialty apps that are written in VB will need to be rewritten for Linux. But why not? Chances are that those same VB apps are right now being examined for a rewrite in C#.NET. They'll have to be for the sake of Windows 2003.

      The point is that people seem unwilling to rewrite or migrate their apps for a Linux environment but, for some reason, they think nothing of doing this for their Windows environment. The thing that they fail to take into account is that in the Linux environment this will almost certainly be a one time affair. But, in the Windows environment it will be a recurring theme every few years because that is what Microsoft wants and has to do in order to keep selling the same companies more software.

      All too often people say that it is not cost effective or it is too difficult to make the switch but they seem to disregard these same issues as they run on Microsoft's treadmill.

      BTW, have you repatched your Microsoft RCP service?

    4. Re:Desktop Corporate Linux... I tried by geekoid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      there very first thing you need to do is be sure they understand hom much proprietary data formats are costing them. Try to get them to use open standard data format, regardless of the OS.
      Thiwas you can assure them that the data will always be accessible, regardless of who there main vendor is or what they do.
      Ask them is they want to control the destiny of there company, or id they want MS to cotrol the destiny od there company.
      Once they get data formats to not be dependent, migration will be much easier.
      In corpration like yours, you need a plan. Probably a five year plan that involves new vendors software to use cross platform develepment techniques.
      People who uyse a proprietary script language to do company critical software should be dealt with.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:Desktop Corporate Linux... I tried by Zathrus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Good suggestions, but not always doable in practice.

      Open data standards for payroll and accounting data? I'm sure there are some... they're probably old as dirt and about as fun to utilize nowadays too (yes, I've just spent a couple weeks learning the horrors of X.12 in the shipping industry -- it's used all over but it's archaic, has over 3 decades of different revisions, and an utter PITA to actually use). You can roll your own format (we did... we're in a position to) and make it reasonably open (again, we did... at least to our customers), but the odds of getting someone else to write to your format is low, especially for things like payroll/accounting. You could also reverse engineer their data files (a coworker did so for a flat file database at a former company, producing a real time importer for Sybase/Oracle), but that takes some pretty serious skill and money.

      Don't think that it's just MS producing "proprietary" data. Virtually everyone does. And it's not the big, obvious formats that are a problem -- those have enough people looking at them to crack the nut eventually -- it's the small, uncommon formats that will keep you locked in. And it's equally unlikely that you'll easily find replacements that are low cost and open format. Companies have an incentive to lock you in... the counterbalancing force to this is that in a competitive market place they also have incentive to read other people's formats, which will either lead to a common format or to everyone figuring out how to import everyone else's data.

      In general, without government mandates, it tends toward the latter rather than the former.

  11. Nice timing... by Basje · · Score: 5, Informative

    ... as it was just yesterday that it became know that Ford Motor Company is joining the ranks. They are switching from Windows to Linux

    --
    the pun is mightier than the sword
    1. Re:Nice timing... by Balthisar · · Score: 3, Informative

      I'm a Ford engineer (not a computer engineer). It's about damn time. Of the 20 PC's in my office, we use email (Outlook), Excel, a lot of web-based apps, several dumb-terminal apps, and a few in-house, Windows-based apps (nothing fancy that shouldn't run in WINE or just be updated anyway). It's all Win2K (just got it with new Dells). For what we do, there's no sense in it! The fact that they're PC's means most of the user problems come from home versions of stuff introduced here. The first user is an admin, which works for me, but gives to much power to the less educated.

      --
      --Jim (me)
  12. Re:ha, funny by bajan_on_ice · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think thats where most of the resellers will come in. Im pretty sure that they have considered this a BIG part of any large scale rollout of desktop linux, and I wouldnt be suprised if they have developed some sort of control station type software for pointandclick updates/reconfigs that even a microserf could understand. Especially if the desktop distros are severely pared down to what the average user requires (no root, browser/mail/office suite/IM/media player)

    --
    "The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding."
  13. It's the apps, silly by sphealey · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The author missing one minor point. The core of business information management for small and medium sized business is Win32-based client/server applications. These are the products that you see advertised and discussed in Manufacturing Systems and CFO Magazine. In the middle to late 1980s they were available on several platforms and usually had a Mac version, but by the mid 1990s they had migrated almost exclusively to the client/server model on the Win32 platform.

    These midrange apps are the bread-and-butter of corporate computing. They do not run on the Mac and do not run under Linux. Some are starting to move toward a web browser based model, but not all and not necessarily quickly.

    Until Linux equivalents exist for these midrange apps, the Linux desktop will not be used in midsized organizations.

    sPh

    1. Re:It's the apps, silly by spectrokid · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Gimme SAP Business warehouse under Linux and I give you 1000 users in my company alone.

      --

      10 ?"Hello World" life was simple then

    2. Re:It's the apps, silly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah, that web based model can really shake things up, can't it. Imagine that you can have practically anything on the backend server -- Linux, Windows, Solaris -- and it doesn't matter what the client runs. It could be a text-only serial terminal, a PDA, a phone, a state-of-the-art desktop, or a 10 year old PC. Wow, that's a lot of flexibility. It allows a company to respond faster, deploy apps faster, make changes in existing apps without a company-wide refresh.

      But what happens when you deploy Windows on the server? Yup, you're locked into Windows on the clients. Often, updating the server requires lots of little updates or major updates on the clients. Remember, they based their business model on the same practice that made a new car every year seem the thing to do. I.e., they push the new model as better than the old. Now Microsoft has done some really great business selling that to companies -- to the tune of billions upon billions of dollars -- and it's not likely that Windows will disappear entirely from business. But the problem is, unlike car manufacturers, businesses will be *forced* to upgrade because the old file formats and the apps won't run properly on the new system. If I'm running a business I don't want my technology policy dictated by another company. That's just not good business.

      But Linux grows -- it's now in the "they fight you" phase since the laughter and apathy didn't squash the movement. Microsoft has been repeating "Linux costs more than Windows" and "Initial cost doesn't matter". Hmm, yeah sure. Deploying a Linux desktop for targeted applications is no more expensive than deploying Windows. And cost does matter. Lots of other articles will disabuse the blinded CEO of this latest Microsoft propaganda so I won't mention it here.

      The important thing is that Linux puts the IT roadmap back into the hands of the business. Take Access and a SQL Server backend... Doesn't talk with much else properly. Try getting ODBC drivers to talk to that SQL Server reliably. That's lock-in at its finest. Funny thing though, if you replace that SQL Server with Oracle or Postgresql or even MySQL on a Linux backend and web browser frontends, you suddenly have lots of wiggle room. You can use Macs, your PDA, your text terminal, your Linux boxes that cost next to nothing to deploy.

      (I can't let the TCO argument go though. Microsoft says Linux is more expensive in the long run. Lots of companies are now using essentially dumb machines -- PCs running a proprietary database frontend connecting to a database server. The cost to deploy these Windows machines will always have an associated OS cost. Always. With a Linux desktop you build it once then deploy it everywhere. You don't have to pay a penny more in licensing costs. Not a year down the line, not some hidden licensing cost, not ever. Wait, you say, you still need to pay for Linux expertise? Hardly, the current crop of Linux distros are easy enough to install and maintain that my 70yr old father can do it. Your existing Windows admin, if he is at all competent, should be able to do the same. If not, hire a couple college kids for 1/4 the salary of that Windows admin to maintain your Linux for you.)

  14. Re:MSCE???? by spockbert · · Score: 5, Funny

    Must Consult Someone Else

  15. Metaphors by Xpilot · · Score: 4, Funny

    They used the "mongoose thrown into a snake pit" metaphor to refer to Linux being used in an all Windows environment, and the "Indiana Jones shoots the swordsman" metaphor, to refer to the technological advantage of Linux over Windows. But combine the two and you get the "Indiana Jones thrown into a snake pit" metaphor, and you know how Indy feels about snakes... things don't look good for Linux it seems.

    --
    "Backups are for wimps. Real men upload their data to an FTP site and have everyone else mirror it." -- Linus Torvalds
  16. Troll by poptones · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Better be careful, you're gonna get modded down as a troll.

    I just stuck a fresh install of RH9 on a laptop. It installed amazingly well - in fact, it installed better OOTB than win2k.

    But "better" lasted only until it came time to actually do stuff with it. Sure, samba seems to work well and it has no problem browsing shares on MS boxes. But try to play a video file... oops, no media codec installed in the RH9 default distro. Hmmm... well, try to play an MP3 then. Ooops, no can do - cannot play an MP3 file from a file in a samba share. Try copying the file to this machine and perhaps it can be played then...

    I really want linux to live up to the promise. Really. And I'm looking forward to working with the new media structure in gonome, and hoping to do my part. But I'm honestly beginning to wonder if linux can ever catch up - much less take the lead - on a user friendly desktop.

    1. Re:Troll by Richard+W.M.+Jones · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Please. Red Hat chooses to leave certain feature [patented video codecs] out of their desktop, and it reflects on Linux desktops in general?

      Red Hat would, I'm sure, love to include these in their distribution. Were it not for the fact that larger companies have made sure it's illegal for them to do so.

      Rich.

    2. Re:Troll by warmcat · · Score: 4, Informative

      Its true about the mp3 and video stuff, this is due to Redhat avoiding things with "patent issues". But, if this was making you wonder about how useful RH9 is for media duties, wonder no more: take the freshrpms.net Three Step plan to Redhat media heaven and you'll be all set.

      Step 1: Get and install apt for rpm

      Step 2: apt-get update

      Step 3: apt-get install xmms-mp3 mplayer mplayer-fonts mplayer-skins

      That's it, mp3s, all kinds of video now work. You might need to make your file manager app use mplayer instead of a default app for the right file suffixes is all.

      apt-get install frozen-bubble is a bunch of fun too. Check out freshrpms for the other things you can get that are not in stock Redhat.

    3. Re:Troll by ratboy666 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Of course media codecs aren't installed in RH9. Not even MP3.

      If *you* are the "IT person" (geek) who is responsible for maintaining the systems, then you need to install the standard pieces that make it work. Otherwise, use Microsoft Windows.

      WIN2K doesn't come with needed codecs either. It can't play DVDs "out of the box".

      As to a "user friendly" desktop. That's your job. Really.

      Can't play MP3 files from a Samba share? Works for me... as does playing re-coded MP3s via Apache at work from my home server.

      Now, on to the tools that are "missing" from RH9, that you probably want to download and install:

      ddclient.tar.gz - Update your dynamic IP with dyndns.org. Installs as a standard RH9 service

      gotmail_0.7.10.tar.gz - Fetch all hotmail and transfer to your local mail service.

      install_flash_player_6_linux.tar.gz - Add flash to mozilla.

      j2re-1_4_1_04-linux-i586-rpm.bin - Add Java to mozilla.

      lame-3.93.1.tar.gz - MP3 encoding or recoding.

      mpg123-pre0.59s.tar.gz - MP3 command line playback

      xmms-mpg123-1.2.7-13.i386.rpm - Add MP3 format to xmms player.

      wine-0.20030709-1.i386.rpm - Allow some windows executables (I use this to run MS MSVC6 for cross-builds).

      XINE: (RealPlayer9-9.0.7.151-4.i386.rpm w32codec-0.52-1.i386.rpm xine-mozilla-plugin-0.2-030528.i586.rpm libdvdcss-1.2.6-2.network.i386.rpm xine-ui-0.9.21cvs-030528.i586.rpm libxine1-1_cvs-030528.i586.rpm)

      XINE video and DVD player (you may want to skip the mozilla plugin).

      And that should do it! Not all of these install cleanly, but they all do work.

      Now for the bonus section. I have a cable modem, and want to listen to my tunes at work. I decided on a simple web-based "click on the song to listen" approach (at least initially). The problem is that my cable modem only does 128Kbps uplink, and most of my collection is stored at a higher bit rate. I don't want to completely download the music first. So, I decided to recode the MP3 on the server first (to 64Kbps -- and yes, I use cheap headphones at the office):

      In /var/www/cgi-bin I added an executable

      nph-mp3recode:

      #!/usr/bin/sh
      echo "HTTP/1.0 200 Document follows"
      echo "Content-type: audio/mpeg"
      echo "" /usr/local/bin/lame -S --mp3input -q 7 -b 64 "$PATH_TRANSLATED" -

      In my /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf file added:

      Action audio/mpeg /cgi-bin/nph-mp3recode

      to one of my virtual hosts.

      Now, restart Apache (service httpd restart),
      and any "mp3" files will be recoded to 64Kbps.

      How to do this with Win2K? Damned if I know. Maybe you can give me a bit of guidance. Would it simply be 7 lines of text-based scripting, and a commonly available command line program? Hopefully, something even simpler (although, I must admit, I have a hard time envisioning that -- but I could be wrong!).

      Ratboy.

      --
      Just another "Cubible(sic) Joe" 2 17 3061
    4. Re:Troll by warmcat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's intuitive. Lets see what I have to do in Windows to listen to an MP3.

      Sure.

      #1 First you have to pay MSFT for their stuff (via Dell/whoever or direct) which, although in the case of XP is pretty good, IMHO now no longer has a future. Just a couple of years ago this Slashdot story would have been full of far more serious problems. Now the level of comparison has been raised to how easy it is to play MP3s. Worth thinking about how the story will go in another couple of years.

      #2 Then after install, you have to do product activation, which is compulsory. If you have no internet connection, you have to sit on the phone and recite numbers, then type them in. That's not very intuitive either.

      #3 Then you have to go out on the Internet, or get shipped to you, so you can buy the shareware apps (like WinRar, a DVD player and so on) that you need to get Windows to do its job. MPlayer does a good job on DVDs for $0, rar support in in RH9. Having to pay another company to watch DVDs is not very intuitive either.

      #4 Okay, now you can double-click on stuff. But my Redhat install would be halfway through Parsifal by then and I didn't touch my credit card.

      "Total Cost of Ownership".

  17. What is the Sun motive? by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I am glad to see more code and support for GNOME, that said Sun still is a hardware company and Intel boxes are not their bread and butter. I see this product as a wedge for Solaris, not a true linux push. Even then, I don't see much here you can't get from RedHat's bluecurve additions on top of GNOME...actually I see very little on top of the stock GNOME itself (which says a lot about the high quality of the stock GNOME).

  18. Microsoft will be their worst enemy by Bob-o-Matic! · · Score: 4, Insightful

    By making it more and more difficult for users to run unlicensed copies of Windows OS (XP was a great start, they'll do better next time for certain), the home user who wants to upgrade will find themselves "upgrading" to something else entirely if they want to keep the price the same. No one wants to pay for a software "dongle" to make other software they (may) have paid for work. People buy computers to surf the web, send email, play games. They don't feel they need to pay just to be able to move files around.

    I am hoping that the kind folks at OpenAL and OpenGL make a compelling replacement for DirectX so that games will run natively on Linux. When you get the gamers, you will have won. MS has the gamers right now. When those gamers come to Linux, they'll learn the OS and show their friends. Windows will lose its ubiquity on the desktop because no one wants to pay to upgrade their copy of windows, or even pay for an original license when building a machine.

    It is only a matter of time.

  19. Re:I sense a poll coming on... by schon · · Score: 2, Funny

    What is your favourite mis-interpretation of MCSE?

    Well, I'd say "Must Consult Someone Experienced", but that's usually not a mis-interpretation :o)

  20. Wow, I call major slant here... by __aagmrb7289 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Main thing that bothers me about this article is how obviously slanted it is, without really going into what's important. I mean, I see all of these statements about how things that are true in the Microsoft environment are not true in the Linux environment (or at least, aren't best practice). So, the missing information is this - if the design is flawed, and the solutions are wrong for the problem, then what are the solutions (at least give us a hint) to these problems in oh-so-perfect, everything-else-sucks Linux? Okay, so maybe I'm feeling a little annoyed, but if I'm supposed to be developing/supporting solutions in multiple platforms, perhaps some lucid discussion of the issues and their solutions would be useful? Certainly this article pretends to be hitting these things, but it fails to execute. I'd love to see some links that try to hit these issues in a more complete manner. Anyone?

  21. Re:A few problems with this by ichimunki · · Score: 3, Insightful

    1) Most office workers barely know how to use the software they have. The transition will require training them to not know how to use a whole different set of software. Oh, wait, it won't because no one needs to be trained to not know stuff.

    2) Which is?

    3) Benchmarks are where?

    4) Not nearly enough said. Again, benchmarks are where? And why are they "Linux" FSs in #3, but now we're talking Solaris? Which is it?

    5) People had to learn to use both Word and Excel as they migrated from packages like WordPerfect and Lotus 1-2-3. Not to mention the changes from version to version of just the MS software. I think your users will survive.

    --
    I do not have a signature
  22. Re:I sense a poll coming on... by spektr · · Score: 2, Funny

    What is your favourite mis-interpretation of MCSE?

    I'll vote for Microsoft Certified Software Engineer.

  23. should not be permitted to use the word 'engineer' by sczimme · · Score: 4, Informative


    If memory serves, Microsoft and Novell came under fire a few years ago for their use of the word 'Engineer'. In the non-IT world, the word actually carries meaning: one must complete a licensing process before calling oneself an Engineer. Additionally, these real [i.e. non-IT] engineers are actually held liable for defects/mistakes/incompetence, etc.

    My dad is a Certified Manufacturing Engineer and a Professional Engineer (P.E.); this issue was covered extensively in his trade magazines.

    --
    I want to drag this out as long as possible. Bring me my protractor.
  24. The author is in a happy dreamworld by reemul · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Several of the comments made in the article seem to indicate that the author is living in a happy dream world, where clever users are oppressed into mere drones by MCSE's and MS software. He acknowledges that it is a best practice in the Wintel world to lock down machines as much as possible to minimize support costs, yet seems to think that Unix will "empower users" (from a sidebar) without causing any problems at all.

    Is he crazy? The reasons that machines are locked down is that the endusers are stupid. They know nothing about computers, and ideally they shouldn't have to - they are just tools to do their real jobs. Any extra capabilities will just allow them to break more things. Sun can only support so many users per admin by locking systems tighter than most MSCEs could dream of - the answers to what is wrong are so easy because there are no other options. The users aren't empowered, they are chained down as much as possible. All to the good; but believing you can take the same idiot endusers from a windows shop, give them magic Lintel boxen and some responsibility and rights to manage their own systems, and get *fewer* support calls is just delusional.

    And thinking that it's the OS that is driving all those fast upgrades to physical machines is also absurd. A huge portion of all business desktop and laptop upgrades is driven by vanity, not need. Good luck thinking that a rational OS decision based on security and TCO will quickly stop "mine's bigger" purchasing. You think execs sending email, looking at excel spreadsheets, and playing solitaire need those multi-thousand dollar laptops? You think that running linux they'll stop buying them?

    I liked the approach of the author, to look at the practices that will be reflexive to existing support staff and the effect they will have on a Linux implementation. But his take on the reflexive approaches of the *users* is completely unrealistic, and renders his article mostly useless. Face it, most of the people here on Slashdot have dealt with those endusers - you think the majority will agree that they will miraculously become wise if just given a chance? Or will the /. crew decide that the author is living a dream?

    --
    You're just jealous 'cuz the voices talk to *me*
    1. Re:The author is in a happy dreamworld by IntlHarvester · · Score: 2, Informative
      I give the author a lot of credit for addressing the philsophical underpinnings of the Unix Versus Windows platform conflict. Too frequently, the "IT guys" portray this as a simple matter of switching the software stack, when in fact they are advocating a radically different technology management ideology.

      The author at least makes an attempt to address this idelogical difference from a practical, if biased, perspective. However, by putting it in the context of "the MCSE", it's skirting around the greater management issues involved.

      I though this point in particular was facinating:

      Use of the Unix Business Architecture eliminates all of these problems:

      First it removes the user empowerment lie fundamental to the client-server architecture by eliminating the pretence that the desktop is a personal, rather than corporate, resource and thus positions the IT group for an honest working relationship with users.

      Does anyone see clamoring for a "honest relationship" from the End User side? If anything IT has moved to more of a "service" role with users as it's "customers" -- especially in executive-heavy US corporate culture. A change in platforms is not going to reinstate a great "honest" reverence for the almighty BOFH power-relationship.

      Furthermore, it ignores the reason that corporate computing moved to the "Personal" model to begin with -- IT departments were widely seen as not being flexible enough to provide the solutions that end users needed in the trenches. Sure, there's a massive cost savings with the Host-Terminal model, but there's also a large opportunity cost associated with it, and that's fundementally a high-level business decision.
      --
      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  25. What? 80% Linux desktops and 80% Windows servers? by V_drive · · Score: 2, Insightful

    how does the typical MCSE skill set map to what will be needed to cope with an environment in which perhaps 20% of the servers and 80% of the desktops run Linux while the remainder continue to run Microsoft suites?

    Okay, I'm a developer and not an IT guy, but this does not make sense to me. Why would a company run 80% of their desktops with Linux and 80% of their servers with Windows?

    Am I just missing the whole point of the article?

    --
    char *mySig;
  26. A bit biased by Digital+Dharma · · Score: 2, Informative

    As an MCSA and Active Directory / Exchange admin, I found this author's story just that- A story. He's obviously coming from a position of not knowing anything about Win32 administration, and it was obvious to me he's yet another one of the Lin32 pundits who really doesn't know anything about Win32 networks except what he's heard in the press. Keep in mind that if Lin32 ever gets as big as Microsoft as far as desktop percentages, it will also face the same issues with point and click virus creation tools and the like.On my last assignment I spent a total of 2 days disabling services and other undesirable components of the AD domain I designed. An external security company spent over a weeek trying to break in. Not only did we maintain a 99.9% uptime, but they never did break in. So you see, Win32 networks can be secure and stable, just as Lin32 networks can be insecure and unstable. It really has nothing to do with the OS per se, but rathar the person behind the keyboard. As this author is obviously ignorant to the facets of Win32 administration, I have to wonder how secure and stable his Win32 domain would be, should he ever find himself in such a position.

    --
    End of Line.
  27. You're not the target audience by blunte · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Corporate users arguably don't need mp3 or video codecs.

    They need a snappy computer with basic productivity software that doesn't have to be administered constantly. This is where Linux has a chance.

    Home and power users are going to have to wait longer for a Linux that has all the goodies, out of the box, working perfectly, that can compete with Windows. Or they can just learn how to add what they need.

    --
    .sigs are for post^Hers.
  28. Re:But I like Windows desktops by chill · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Because, in larger business environments, they suck.

    The argument presented in the paper is more of a thin-client vs client-server/desktop approach.

    With the software properly installed and managed on a central server, not individually on each PC, there are significantly less problems.

    Whole industries have been built around the Windows PC that aren't necessary from a corporate standpoint. I speak of client-side firewalls, anti-virus and disk imaging software.

    No need to "push" an image when the PC gets corrupt. No need to reboot the PC. No need to run and license individual anti-virus applications. No need to scan for spyware, etc on each PC.

    "PC Empowerment" is a BS phrase. The only thing most PC's empowered the coporate user to do was send worms, catch viruses and play games. Applications like a word processor, spreadsheet, presentation program, CAD, project management, e-mail and other business software can just as easily be run via a central server. Administration is tons easier.

    And with full-duplex, fast ethernet to the clients and gigbit or bonded channels to the servers, load and run times can often be faster than off of cheap PCs with hard drives.

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
  29. I think the Mac is the only answer for now... by The+Lynxpro · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Speaking as someone who works for a very large government institution, I think the only way to get off the Microsoft train is to go with Macs. And I'm not being a troll when I say this. #1, the computer and the OS come from the same supplier. This is where Linux fails because none of the reputable hardware companies will offer real support for the OS if you run into troubles; nor will they indemnify the institution from the frivolous claims by the likes of SCO. If you buy the HP line, what are you going to have to do, install Mandrake on your own? Won't you still be paying the Microsoft tax unless you buy the PCs from Mitec, a mom-and-pop whitebox store, or purchase a Dell line with that DOS'ish OS on a bundled disc? Or, if you want support, you have to pay extra to Red Hat, IBM, or Sun? #2 the Microsoft apps won't run natively on Linux. You have to run Wine or Codeweavers software, and I'm sure if a government agency does that, Microsoft will be on the phone with the various elected officials to start investigations on software purchases as well as EULA violations (and a BSA audit wouldn't be too far down the road too). I've been thinking about all of this because we run Win2K on Dell P3 800mhz machines, and its time to start upgrading. But each of these concerns is enough to kill any suggestion for switching to Linux, especially when everyone who has a hand in deciding IT issues has MCSE certification to justify their jobs. Whereas if an agency becomes a Mac OS X shop, you have the Microsoft Office apps, but the hardware upfront costs more. Granted, you can shave off 1/3rd of your IT staff if you go Mac, but the political party that would be most interested in saving government monies in such a manner (through layoffs and eliminating redundancies) would probably not be inclined to help Apple out since Jobs and others are left-of-center in their political affiliations, not to mention Al Gore is on their board of directors even if it is in a ceremonial position... And the taxpayer suffers, not to mention us employees that have to use this *poodoo*...

    --
    "Right now, somewhere in this world, Scott Baio is plowing a woman he doesn't love," - Peter Griffin, *Family Guy*
  30. Re:ha, funny by ianjk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Personally, I know quite a few. A good portion of the MCSEs that I know are quite skilled in *nix. I think it is funny how narrow minded some of the people are here on slashdot.

    Taking a couple of tests because:
    a) they were free.
    b) they net you a couple more bucks an hour.
    c) gasp! you want to know a little more about a product that you have to work with every day.

    doesn't make you a dumbass.

  31. It doesn't matter! MSOffice == Windows by gosand · · Score: 5, Insightful
    If you need Windows to run legacy apps, why not do it in stages. In your case, upgrade your boxes from 98 to XP - but don't do the MSOffice route. Use Openoffice.org (assuming it will work for you since you were going to do a full linux switch anyway) and other open source software when applicable. (Mozilla Firebird instead of IE, etc.)

    To many corporate people, it would be just as hard to migrate the Office software as it would the OS. MSOffice is so ingrained in the corporate culture it is pathetic. I have to send my status report to my manager in a Word doc. Everything is stored in freaking Word docs around here. Want to show some people some pictures? Put them all in a Word doc, that way you can email one huge .doc file. I once complained to a guy because he was attaching screenshots to a bug report like this. I explained "do you realize that for someone to see these, they would have to use MSWord. They are just images". His response? "Everyone here has Word installed, that isn't a problem."

    As for the others, you won't see IE go away as long as MS is the OS. Hell, our internal website won't work with Opera, the browser I use. I am actually surprised that my boss lets me run it. Gotta conform and everything.

    Our department gets its MSWord licenses from Corporate, so it doesn't cost our department anything. That is what the managers are most concerned with, their budgets. As long as it doesn't cost them anything out of their budget, who cares? If we all have to upgrade to OfficeXP (which we are doing) from Office2K, then Corporate will take care of it.

    It doesn't matter how compatable it is, if it looks like Office, acts like Office, is better than Office, or is 100% free. If it ain't MSOffice, a lot of places won't use it. Companies sign deals for their OS/Office licenses, so many times you can't split up the OS/Office software. Oh, and you have to upgrade every 3 or 4 years.

    So while I appreciate your idea, in companies where MS has them by the short hairs, it doesn't fly. It is also one of those things that makes me yearn for a better economy, so I can quit this cubicle wasteland and go work for a small company again. The "corporate atmosphere" is slowly killing me. It is killing everyone else too, they just don't realize it.

    Kee-rist, sounds like somebody has a case of the Mondays.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  32. Re:MSCE???? by rutledjw · · Score: 3, Funny
    My Career is Still Endangered?

    And I get Troll'ed into next week... ;)

    --

    Computer Science is Applied Philosophy
  33. Unmentioned benefit by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 5, Interesting

    One of the major benefits of *nix mentioned in the article was the centralization of processing, and how that can decrease hardware churn.

    It's true, but by itself, it leaves a lot of wasted resources by having P3s and P4s acting like dumb terminals. If I'd just shelled out for new machines, I wouldn't like having to shell out for grunty servers to supplant the grunty desktops I'd just bought.

    But the ability to have the whole network act as a Mosix cluster takes this and flips it on its head, allowing maximum leverage of all the hardware resources that the organization already has. Aside from the real-world benefits, pitching that would make a purchaser feel clever, not stupid. It ought to have had a mention.

    --
    -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    1. Re:Unmentioned benefit by Usquebaugh · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Of course it's stupid to make P3s & P4s act like XTerms. The savings come from buying cheap Xterms and beefy servers.

      MOSIX over a normal network would be crazy. You're reliability goes out the window. Think uptime measured in days not years.

      IMHO, thin client/Xterm computing is the most cost efficient platform for business.

  34. Re:should not be permitted to use the word 'engine by mr_z_beeblebrox · · Score: 2, Funny

    As an MCSE with a future father in law who works as an aerospace engineer, I debated this with him once. I conceded (in that case you have to) that I am not an engineer and am not worthy lacking all his skills etc... A couple months later his home network went down and I helped him get it back up. Later, at a family reunion he was heard explaining that I am a network "engineer"

  35. Re:should not be permitted to use the word 'engine by gpinzone · · Score: 4, Funny

    That's why Disney called their non-"Engineer" engineers, "Imagineers."

  36. Oh, that again... by Nurgled · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is quicky becoming the "All your base" of 2003.

  37. We've already switched... by Silicon+Snake · · Score: 2, Informative

    I manage a charity program where we donate/sell dirt cheap older computers to needy families. We've been using win98+oofice for a while, but this weekend we'll donate the first batch of pc's running rh9 + XPde (www.xpde.com). They run Rh9 for stability, have the windows-like XPde interface to help the user becomes used to the new environment. We even got winmodems to work on the thing, so they can have dial-up internet! Linux proved to be a great money-saving alternative in a area where every dime counts.

  38. Aid Linux tranistion & acceptance with Macs by buckhead_buddy · · Score: 4, Informative

    One technology department I'm familiar with had its budget slashed incredibly. Basically, by some pointy haired boss using a CDW catalog and his HP 12c to project the figures.

    The IT staff were in a panic. Supplying WinTel machines as budgeted wouldn't allow funding for many server side technologies and pet projects. Moreover this didn't go over well with the IT staff who would have to be responsible for maintaining and securing these machines. They weren't Linux savvy yet and if they were being honest, most had come to depend on GUI-driven, point-and-click tools to help them in their maintenance chores.

    As they were assembling their rationalizations to take back to management, some extremely clever in-house developers on the IT staff, came up with an open-source solution to deploy:
    * Come up with standard Linux install images
    * Develop tools on Macs to maintain these images

    When the IT staff realized that with this method they weren't in danger of losing their own ease of use, they started coming up with their own justifications for this plan.
    * Good to have IT staff on higher-security platform
    * Unauthorized users easier to id due to distinctive design
    * Wider compatability than Windows or Linux alone

    The voiceless masses have been fairly receptive to the new plan (or at least not coordinated enough to voice a strong opposition). Key executives were allowed to be exempt from the Linux standards, but they were encouraged to use Macs with MS products rather than full Wintel machines (to be as "standard" as possible).

    The use of friendly maintenance tools on Macs (which used tech friendly technologies under the hood for the geeks) was the key to overcoming the general IT fear of Linux. It's not certain if IT will keep using Macs down the road once this irrational fear is gone, but it was very important to get the ball rolling at all.

  39. last 20% still 80% of the work by nomadicGeek · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The problem with large scale adoption of Linux on the desktop is the applications that don't run or don't run easily on Linux.

    Anyone who went through Y2k upgrades of desktops realizes that 20% of the appications (all of the odd balls) were 80% of the work. Upgrading Office, email, etc was the easy part.

    There is a large cost involved in this migration. Even if you can replace 80% of the applications that everyone uses with a Linux alternative, you still aren't even close to being finished.

    Running these applications under Wine or an emulator isn't going to work. The cost of supporting that alone would wipe out any saving from going to Linux.

    I would like to see it happen as much as anyone else but I think that many people underestimate what it would really take to do it. There is still a very long way to go.

  40. ebooks by poptones · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I have a collection of ebooks. I have a collection of pulp books. If I want to quote from one of the pulp books I have to find the book, pore through the pages to find the relevant quote (if at all) and then copy it by typing.

    If I want to find a quote in an ebook I can find it in seconds with a search. And all I have to do is cut and paste the quote. And, thanks to wireless networking, I can do this from anywhere just as easily as with pen and paper. No, scratch that - easier.

    ebooks allow me to collect and catalog far more material than would be practical otherwise. With a forty dollar ebook reader I can carry a collection of books with me - like, for example, the whole shelf of linux references that were posted just the other day in warez.linux. And I can look up information from multiple volumes in just a second.

    Saying "what's the point of ebooks" is like saying "what's the point of google! I can just surf the sites myself!"

  41. Re:MCSE? by boaworm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "A Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer is to computing what a McDonalds Certified Food Expert is to fine cuisine"

    My 2 cents...

    --
    Probable impossibilities are to be preferred to improbable possibilities.
    Aristotele
  42. Re:Win32 Administration Blows Dogs - You moron. by Digital+Dharma · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Hmm... The only Windows box I have directly attached to the Interweb is a honeypot, which has been assaulted time and time again by people with inflated egos and little skill (such as yourself, as your website proves. Anyone who offers to work on WebTV can't be taken seriously), but has yet to be taken down. I have learned quite a bit about that honeypot, like 1. brainwashed *nix pundits have no idea how to hack Win32 machines, 2. *nix pundits like to try the same commands over and over and over, as if somehow persistence is going to change the undeniable outcome and 3. *nix pundits like to make generalized assumptions. Yours was obvious. Who ever said I have an account called Administrator on my domain? Two days to secure a domain is actually not that bad, assuming you take your work seriously and value the quality of work you perform. But maybe you're right. Maybe I should give up the ability to admin 150,000+ workstations and servers via GPO and a single workstation and opt for doing things one machine at a time, which is the reality in the *nix world. Even with scripting, you're still going to spend much more time administering that many machines than I will. Or maybe I could just replace all the nonessential machines with WebTV units and call it a day =]

    --
    End of Line.
  43. Adapt? by noldrin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm sorry, but for the most part I don't think you can expect your Microsoft Certified Engineers to adapt to Linux. You'd be better off hiring new people to be the Linux experts.

  44. Hmm... by Greyfox · · Score: 2, Insightful
    "Sun offers legal protection covering desktop components like Staroffice against third party intellectual property claims that aren't available to companies sourcing their Linux desktops from the IBM/SuSe partnership or other players."

    Catching a whiff of FUD there. They're playing that card with Linux too; they claim to be able to distribute the Linux kernel irrespective of the outcome of the IBM/SCO legal battle (At least that's the way I read it.) They may have a mexican stand-off with Microsoft over document technology, but IBM still has the biggest patent portfolio on the planet. No one but a complete idiot would attack them.

    These sorts of tactics... annoy me.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  45. Re:I sense a poll coming on... by TeknoHog · · Score: 2, Funny

    Minesweeper Consultant and Solitaire Expert

    --
    Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
  46. Having an MCSE by Strange+Ranger · · Score: 2, Insightful

    >doesn't make you a dumbass.

    I think most people understand that. The important point though is that if you ARE a dumbass, having an MCSE doesn't help, on the contrary, it just makes you that much more dangerous. And there's the problem. An MCSE should be treated, at MOST, like an A+ in Networking Methodologies 101 as taught at your school of choice. It should not be a job requirement. It should not make anybody go "Oh great, you can run our network then." It should only make folks say "That's nice that you're good at reading comprehension and regurgitation and are comfortable with taking multiple choice tests."

    Having an MCSE doesn't make you a dumbass. Though framing the cert. and hanging it in your cube does. And so does listing it as a job requirement.

    --

    Operator, give me the number for 911!
  47. STUPIDITY is the problem with MicroSoft by stanwirth · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I can verify that the MCSE community is about 50% losers who I would not trust to tie their own shoe, and about 50% who know what they are doing on SOME if not MOST computing environments. Those are the ones who DONT just do Windows, but are versed in UNIX, Mac and other systems, and are prepared to deal with differences. I would suggest that any company that hires an MCSE who knows no other platform, is a very dumb company.

    That's right. Because an el cheap-o quickie cert is no substitute for actually knowing something about computers It's certainly no substitute for a CS degree and 20 years development and admin experience on other platforms. Experience on a variety of platforms is actually the only guarantee you have that the person has any idea what's going on when taken out of their little point-and-click dumbed-down MCSE world.

    I just had to laugh when this one MCSE was running around to my management telling them that my Linux box was "insecure" because it didn't have a virus checker. In actual fact, I'd put a virus checker on it that was 10 times faster than his, just to whipe his arse when his complaints got loud enough. I was also running a full-blown IDS, proxy and firewall on the Linux box.

    When the "meeting" came, where I was supposed to be on the defensive about my "insecure" Linux box box, I told him how I'd tested the security on his "corporate level IT", described the measures I'd taken on the Linux box, and told him if he could show me a text file on my hard drive saying "MCSE WAS HERE" (like I'd left a note on his saying "TUX WAS HERE", and showed it to him in front of the very management he was bitching to about my "insecure" box), then I'd agree with him that his systems were more secure than mine. Never happened. The little toad. He went out and spent 30 grand on a turnkey firewall box after that, and had to get someone else in to set it up. And it was still crackable because it was so badly configured. Helped that I knew the guy that had designed it. BSD-based box. Nice little unit. Utterly useless in the wrong hands.

    You know if these stupid, arrogant little MCSE toads weren't running around trying to play politics while not knowing even the fundamentals of their fields, it would be easier to help them get on with learning what Linux is about. They must get some sort of Ballmeresque Monkey-Dance Pep Talk about how it's in their best interest to play politics to try to ensure Micorsoft lock-down in their company or something. Monoculture.

    I suspect little dramas like this are being played out all across the world, and the details of this particular story (mine, or the MadHatter's) are not particularly important.

    What is important is the point that a quickie cert on which buttons to push is no substitute for actually understanding how things work, by the experience of having built things yourself , noticed the commonalities between systems (and the differences amongst them) when going from MVS to VM/CMS to Wylbur to TECO to TOPS to UCSD Pascal to VMS to BSD to SysII to HP/UX to SysV to Irix to SunOS to Solaris to NT to DOS to WinXX to RedHat to SuSE...in addition to a formal education.

    The difference between an MCSE with 5 years of "experience" pushing buttons, and an MSCS with 20 years of experience in devlopment and systems planning and admin is like the difference between the machine-operator and the engineer. Why aren't the engineering societies demanding that the "E" in MCSE be changed to "O" -- for OPERATOR. (Support Engineer? What is that, somebody who designs sports bras and jock straps?) Because that's all they really are, is computer operators, NOT Engineers -- unless they have a whole lot of other training and experience, as you point out.

    An MCSE is like someone who struggled through a high-school equivalency and then barely got an SAT score that qualified them for college by "studying the exam" vs someone

  48. Adding to the list of WMDs? by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 2, Funny
    I call them MSNBC's.
    Microsoft, Nuclear, Biological, Chemical

    It makes sense, all four cause damage or rapidly cause long term harm.

    --
    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.