PIN number

  _____  

From: Cameron [mailto:cameron.orl...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, July 15, 2009 12:54 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Apple vs Microsoft?



Right up there with my personal fav....

NIC Card

 

From: Mayo, Bill [mailto:bem...@pittcountync.gov] 
Sent: July-15-09 12:03 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Apple vs Microsoft?

 

Agreed.  I can guarantee you that you would have similar results taking any
of our desktop support guys and telling them to setup a new Windows domain.

 

I also can't help but point out that it is "Mac", not "MAC".  "Mac" is short
for Macintosh.  "MAC" stands for Media Access Control
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Media_Access_Control).  Seeing that drives me
as crazy as hearing someone say they are going to the "ATM machine".

 

  _____  

From: Jonathan Link [mailto:jonathan.l...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, July 15, 2009 11:55 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Apple vs Microsoft?

A bench tech does not a network guru make.

On Wed, Jul 15, 2009 at 11:48 AM, Jeff Brown <2jbr...@gmail.com> wrote:

I used to work for a consulting firm that actually had both MS and Apple
techs.  The mac techs were so excited about the I-Server and of course
convinced that it would lead the the short demise of all windows servers. 

 

Their first install started at 4 pm on a Friday, they were replacing a SBS
with this new MAC. It NEVER crossed their minds that they might need an MS
tech to help at all with this migration.

 

They called me at 5 p.m. on Saturday.  NOTHING worked on either server.  

 

These were 2 FULLY certified MAC specialists who were approved to do
warrantee work for most everything Apple.

 

The "manual" for the xserve looked like it had been written by a sales
person.  It looks to me like no one in that whole org knows JACK about
networking.

 

They had not even considered looking at the firewall portion.....  well
anyway, maybe the guys I worked with were the biggest part of that problem,
but I don't think so.  I think both of them were  better than average for
MAC techs, but they were lost on server side, and the EASY interface didn't
do the job for them.

 

It does have some COOL features.  You can pull up any mac's current session
and watch them work without them knowing it...  Wow.

 

 

On Wed, Jul 15, 2009 at 10:28 AM, Jonathan Link <jonathan.l...@gmail.com>
wrote:

Sure you are.

Not that there's anything wrong with that.

:-)

 

-Jonathan

On Wed, Jul 15, 2009 at 10:16 AM, James Rankin <kz2...@googlemail.com>
wrote:

Stick an Apple logon on a lump of Steve Jobs' vomit and Mac users would
claim it tasted like pumpkin pie, and looked much cooler than Microsoft puke

This is from someone who is sick of hearing a colleague Apple fan-boy
bigging up their iPhone by showing us how "useful" it is, from the
lightsabre noises it can make to the fact that there is an app for
everything (including the cure for AIDS)

Not wanting to reignite the old MS v Apple debate or anything :-)

2009/7/15 David Lum <david....@nwea.org>

Your boss might want to consider how hard it may or may not be to find
someone to handle the XSERVE thing as well, the talent pool will be smaller
and (I would expect) the salaries to be higher. I know of some Mac users
that love their Macs unless they need help with it, because so many folks
are PC types..

 

Also "I have been told that 150 users can be better managed on two XSERVE's
than on a Windows Active directory network"

Have them define "manage". I would expect it manages Mac's better J.

David Lum // SYSTEMS ENGINEER 
NORTHWEST EVALUATION ASSOCIATION
(Desk) 971.222.1025 // (Cell) 503.267.9764

P.S. I have to LOL Za, I have a Optiplex 745 with 64-bit XP running VMWare
Workstation and it is hosting my dev environment: SQL server, web server,
misc. development servers (W2K8, Moss2K7, SCCM, etc) and a VM of Win XP. Of
course, I can only power up about 4 VM's at a time, but.

 

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-----Original Message-----
From: Vue, Za [mailto:z...@emory.edu] 
Sent: Wednesday, July 15, 2009 6:19 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues

Subject: RE: Apple vs Microsoft?

 

Where does the boss get the idea that a Mac environment will be a better
long term move?

 

I still manage one Xserve. Attached to it is an Xraid with 16 hard drives.
Used exclusively for data storage. One 400 GB hard drive failed in last 3
years. Controller B was also replaced on the X-Raid. The server is attached
to a Win08 AD.  Overall the system works well but I am just not a proponent
of Mac OS. AD integration has greatly improved with the latest OS.

 

A Dell Optiplex running Windows 2008 for under $1000 can handle 150 users
but maybe your company has money to spend. Get two Optiplex'es and cluster
them and attach a disk array. The cheapest single Xserve is currently
$2999.00 and comes only with a 7200 160gig HD. Customize the system to your
requirements and you are looking at $6000-$7000 per server. Just to remote
into the server requires a $300 extra software. Crazy man.. I torrent the
damn thing instead. :)

 

I have a Dell Optiplex 745, 3.0 Ghz, 6/GB RAM, 2x250 GB HD set up as a
64/bit Win08 DC and print server for 23 networked printers. I have 160 users
& 400+ students in the department. The darn thing is as quiet as my laptop.

 

 

-Z.V.

________________________________________

From: Shawn [sh...@loprestohome.com]

Sent: Tuesday, July 14, 2009 10:01 PM

To: NT System Admin Issues

Subject: Apple vs Microsoft?

 

Does anyone here have any experience, good or bad, regarding the Apple
XSERVE being utilized to host email, data storage, open directory, etc as an
equivalent replacement for Microsoft Server? We are currently running SBS
2003 and have 40 users, but will soon be upping that number to 150. My boss
insists that moving everything over to a Mac environment will be a better
long term move, but I am a bit hesitant without having some outside data to
back that up.

 

I have been told that 150 users can be better managed on two XSERVE's than
on a Windows Active directory network, yet I have had a rough time finding
any direct comparisons.

 

If any of you have experience running either a mixed environment with both
OS X Server and Windows Server or just a pure OS X environment w/ Mac
clients as well, I would be interested to hear what your take on this is.

 

I would also be very interested to here from anyone that has done a
migration from Active directory to Open directory, along with any challenges
on the user end. What challenges did you face? Are there any specifics that
you can offer regarding stability, administration, etc?

 

Thanks in advance for any input you can provide.

 

Shawn

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-- 
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rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such
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