Hmmm, I have thought about it. Yes I take pride in my work.
Not an MC* anything. Don't believe I need a piece of paper to say I am capable of anything. I either do it or I don't do it. It's up to me. In general I feel that if your opinion of me if based on me holding a piece of paper or not is your issue to work out, not mine. If I had been heavily involved with the open source stuff, I would work my ass off to lock it down so anyone can read it but not as many people can get changes into it and compiled and out where it can cause damage. I would also try to shut down the huge numbers of different people/companies all doing similar things but in non-compatible ways. For geeky tech people, this kind of environment is fine. For the world as a whole and big businesses (100k+ employees) in particular it is too chaotic and uncontrolled. It is why many large large businesses are afraid of using open source products. Also the licensing scares many as well. If you have a business that doesn't mind becoming a software design and writing house, it is great, but if you have a company that manufactures a motorcyle or bricks or sells hotdogs, MS makes more sense at this point. Exchange servers do suck, MS needs to scrap that and start over, no argument from me whatsoever. My SP woes occur in the lab, not in production so very few if any late hours spent on that. I can't ever recall rolling back a SP or hotfix in production. I don't agree another way would be any more rewarding. I generally enjoy myself and am extremely well compensated. A long time ago I started out on Commodore Pet's, moved through Sperry Univac and IBM Mainframes, moved through DEC PDPs and VAXes, moved through Sun Sparcs, ended up in Windows and think it is some of the more realistic systems I have seen for the world of users as a whole versus a world of IT people. A trifle insecure (heh) at times, but making decent strides while trying hard to support legacy systems so businesses don't get the wind knocked out of them on upgrades. If given a second chance I would make some different decisions in life but none affecting what I was working on technically. If something came out tomorrow that I truly felt blew MS out of the water across the board and was the thing that would win out across the world, I would jump. I haven't seen it yet and don't expect to see it any time really soon. MS occasionally gets zapped in areas and gets hurt, but they are extremely nimble and able to recover. Will they be that way after Bill is gone? That I wouldn't count on as he is both very intelligent and very vocal (damn the PC people) and will spin the company on a dime and has done so. I think while he is there and has power and gives a shit, MS will be on top. Maybe someone else will really kick in in say 40 years or so... As for me, I will hoepfully be retired and out of the biz in 5-6 years. I intend to spend my 40's, 50's, 60's, 70's+ on a beach somewhere with some little intelligent hottie whose worst worry is what color to dye her hair this week. This stuff isn't religion, it's a job to pay for some of the fun things in life. Finally, anyone who thinks that MS is the reason for all the viruses and worms and exploits running around is deluding themselves. Every multiuser system especially any that share information in some way shape or form is insecure in some way. I would say some of the safest machines on the internet today are PDP 11's running RSTS/E. Not because there aren't holes but because no one is trying to figure out their holes. If MS were gone tomorrow, the focus would simply turn to whomever had the most popular OS. joe -- www.joeware.net -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of *Hobbit* Sent: Friday, September 26, 2003 8:44 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] I gotta love how all the Microsoft victims get all defensive when someone implies that they've spent the last decade+ ruining their own careers and wasting time running in tiny circles getting pretty much nowhere. Do you guys honestly take PRIDE in your WORK?? What, and tacking MCS* after your name doesn't count, have you actually ACCOMPLISHED? How would things be different today if you had spent all that time helping to bring open-source up to today's level of expected functionality and designing the future, instead of scratching your heads late at night over obscurely ailing Exchange servers and service packs that broke all your apps? Why won't you admit to yourselves that in the big picture, you could have gone a different and more rewarding way, if you'd only started out right so long ago? If you were given a second chance now, would you change? ** THINK ABOUT IT. ** _H* _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.netsys.com/full-disclosure-charter.html _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.netsys.com/full-disclosure-charter.html