I guess I had microsoft all wrong - NT is better than Linux ! Damn, now I better trash my slackware/apache solution with an uptime of 200 days and reload NT with an average uptime of 5 hours - I just loved the way that you could set up permissions in 10 different places without any conflicts. Oh, and I guess I better go and tell the largest supplier of Bandwidth in South Africa, Internet Solution, to trash all of it's unix/linux boxes and run NT instead - they obviously didn't do any research before opting for the unix/linux solution. Heck, I also can't forget about my genius buddy who learnt just about everything you could possibly know about running an NT server, and decided to switch to Linux instead - guess he was wrong too. And the amount of cash I spent on my Linux Solution - ow, it must've set me back at least $0.00 - plus I could only find about 15 million pages of documentation, none of which required one of those wonderful 10 page registration questionaires to access. Finally, there's the users on our system - they all love thier windows desktops - er, what's explorer ?, cut and paste, what's that ?, The start menu, where ? - ah, but all they really need is word & solitaire, right ?
How do you see bandwidth improvements over the next 10 years or so impacting on the future of Multi-player gaming ?
I guess I had microsoft all wrong - NT is better than Linux ! Damn, now I better trash my slackware/apache solution with an uptime of 200 days and reload NT with an average uptime of 5 hours - I just loved the way that you could set up permissions in 10 different places without any conflicts. Oh, and I guess I better go and tell the largest supplier of Bandwidth in South Africa, Internet Solution, to trash all of it's unix/linux boxes and run NT instead - they obviously didn't do any research before opting for the unix/linux solution. Heck, I also can't forget about my genius buddy who learnt just about everything you could possibly know about running an NT server, and decided to switch to Linux instead - guess he was wrong too. And the amount of cash I spent on my Linux Solution - ow, it must've set me back at least $0.00 - plus I could only find about 15 million pages of documentation, none of which required one of those wonderful 10 page registration questionaires to access. Finally, there's the users on our system - they all love thier windows desktops - er, what's explorer ?, cut and paste, what's that ?, The start menu, where ? - ah, but all they really need is word & solitaire, right ?