I'm sure there are server logs out there that have never been deleted. If you have the storage space google does, and are able to give away 2GB to everyone on the internet, why not keep a record of everything anyone passes through your servers?
We hear "Stability" and "Security" all the time as the two biggest buzzwords in the industry. Why not put money in those aspects of Linux?
I know there are plenty of security experts who dabble around in Linux to try and find out what holes there might be, but with that much money they could probably afford a decent team of auditors to seriously look at all the Linux code and anylize it for every security flaw they could possibly think of that hasn't been resolved.
Stability might be a little bit more obscure but why not try and hire developers to spend time finding potential sources for crashes and suggesting ways to fix them?
The Linux hype is always "Linux: More stable and more secure than MS", why not actually make it uncontestably true?
I'm sure there are server logs out there that have never been deleted. If you have the storage space google does, and are able to give away 2GB to everyone on the internet, why not keep a record of everything anyone passes through your servers?
We hear "Stability" and "Security" all the time as the two biggest buzzwords in the industry. Why not put money in those aspects of Linux? I know there are plenty of security experts who dabble around in Linux to try and find out what holes there might be, but with that much money they could probably afford a decent team of auditors to seriously look at all the Linux code and anylize it for every security flaw they could possibly think of that hasn't been resolved. Stability might be a little bit more obscure but why not try and hire developers to spend time finding potential sources for crashes and suggesting ways to fix them? The Linux hype is always "Linux: More stable and more secure than MS", why not actually make it uncontestably true?