On Wednesday 30 July 2003 12:06 pm, Todd Slater wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 30, 2003 at 09:21:09PM +0300, Robin Turner wrote:
> > Stephen Kuhn wrote:
> > >Now, what I'm trying to get at here is this simple fact: Linux and
> > >Microsoft can get along - and get along quite well together. I went
>
> <snip>
>
> > Absolutely.  In my university most of the servers run Linux.  They used
> > to have a bewildering variety of server OSs, including NT, but Linux
> > started taking over a few years back (Mandrake 7.2!) and now all your
> > base are belong to us (except for a couple of stubborn Solaris servers).
> > For workstations/PCs, the majority of students and staff run Windows
> > (mainly 98, with a few XP boxes, probably installed illicitly by users)
> > the scientists and techies generally run XP or Mandrake, and the arty
> > types have a few Macs.  In my own office, all the boxes run Win 98,
> > except for mine, which is running Mdk 9.1.  It runs the printer and FTP
> > server, and every night it backs up all the Windows boxes and checks
> > them for viruses.
>
> Sorry for hijacking this thread but . . .

** You are not hijacking this will fit in just right with what promises to be 
**a very intresting thread

>
> I need suggestions for selling folks at work (a technical college) that
> Linux should be part of our IT curriculum (especially the web
> development/e-commerce part). They want to keep everything Windows,
> .net, .asp, java; I'm not faculty but would like to point out the folly
> of a Windows-only approach. What can I cite (that is not hyper-biased)
> other than the Netcraft surveys showing over 60% of web servers run
> Apache?
>
> It was only after making a presentation to some higher-ups that I was
> able to put pressure on our IT manager to let me run a Linux server to
> solve some problems we were having. The theme here is that folks here
> are ignorant about Linux. I mean, can you imagine an IT program in
> ecommerce that didn't at least cover publishing on a *nix server?
>
> But then again, we always upgrade to the latest M$ Office suite on the
> grounds that it's what businesses use. I tell them that if they wanted
> to teach what businesses use, we should really do a survey and see what
> businesses are using--around here, probably Windows 95 and Office 97!
>
> Todd


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