For example, an administrator who runs 100% linux at home, but works in both Linux and Windows server at work would not be 100% Linux by this definition. Nor would an admin that has 100% Linux servers, but also admins 10 Windows-based client machines in his office.
I am pretty close. All home machines are either Linux or MacOS X. Work laptop is dual-boot WinXP and Linux. At work I take care of about 80 Linux and Solaris machines.
Why keep the XP boot partition around? Choice. If there is a tool that requires it, I have the option. Being a single-OS person today would be career suicide -- always use the best tool for the job at hand.
I have one specific thing that forces me to boot to XP (or run Excel under an emulator, at the very least) -- a password protected Excel spreadsheet someone at the company puts out. Can't open it in anything but real Excel, AFAIK.
Nate, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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