I admin over 6,000 SCO unix boxen... My customer always wants more usability from these machines, Netscape with plugins, the ability to read MS documents etc... Maybe now SCO will have the added functionality of Linux, I think this will be a good thing as long as they go about it properly
Have just been through the cycle of distro's.. RedHat 6.1, Mandrake 6.1, Caldera, Turbo Linux, and finally thank god Slackware 7 pre 2. I believe that out of them all redhat was the easiest for me to do the initial install. But for configuration, adding additional software, (or removing it!) I would have to say that Slackware seems to be the best overall. Plus Slack does'nt sem to be as picky no dependency problems usually, like the redhat based distro's that use rpm. It is'nt the prettiest thing in the world, but Linux is'nt supposed to be windows!!
I admin over 6,000 SCO unix boxen...
My customer always wants more usability from
these machines, Netscape with plugins, the ability to read MS documents etc...
Maybe now SCO will have the added functionality of Linux, I think this will be a good thing as long as they go about it properly
Have just been through the cycle of distro's..
RedHat 6.1, Mandrake 6.1, Caldera, Turbo Linux, and finally thank god Slackware 7 pre 2. I believe that out of them all redhat was the easiest for me to do the initial install. But for configuration, adding additional software, (or removing it!) I would have to say that Slackware seems to be the best overall. Plus Slack does'nt sem to be as picky no dependency problems usually, like the redhat based distro's that use rpm. It is'nt the prettiest thing in the world, but Linux is'nt supposed to be windows!!