"The list is long, yet distinguished."
 
Pretty much the combinations are endless.  Think about it: for every deployment there is at least one administrative staff member and one boss.  That means there are likely at least three opinions on how it should be done "right".  Multiply that number of deployments times the number of opinions of how it should be done and you have a start at getting the number of possible things that could go wrong. 
 
Just always remember that if it weren't for the 8th layer, the other 7 would run flawleslly.  
 
Always best to distill the products to the decision points during the design and deployment.  Make the decisions based on the best information available *at the time* and move forward.  Remember that it's expected to have to adjust over time, but this should not be painful adjustments if the entire team (you, yourself, and the vendor in most cases) did their job to the best of their ability.
 
On 7/21/06, Figueroa, Johnny <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
 
Ouch, how many things could go wrong? I thought the domain controllers would complaint if the time synch had a gap over 5 mins.

 

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