On Mon, Aug 6, 2012 at 1:32 PM, Murugan, Naresh Kumar <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi, > > As a linux administrator, have learned so many things which is related > Operating system perspective, memory manangement , monitoring,volume > management and so and so. Now I am looking on moveup to unix so which unix > flavour is good as high technical exposure and if i prefered as solaris how > is scope of that ? will it suites when moving from linux to unix as solaris ? > > I don't have any perspicacity of solaris in production as well as how the > concepts differ from linux ? > What actions be needed for carrier growth in linux ? > > Please let me know if anyone aware or mention some key points. Even most of > the guys having some kind of thinking on this sure it will give the pathway > for upcoming Linux administrator. >
A carrier is a ship. You want to use the word career. Of course carrier also can be used for other forms of transport but usually it is used to refer to ships. Your mail also shows poor English and muddled thinking. Along with that you want to become a systems admin instead of a programmer. So it is all wrong. Anyway Solaris is old commercial UNIX. Today by UNIX people mean FreeBSD, NetBSD or OpenBSD. Start with FreeBSD. After you find that you are comfortable with it then graduate to NetBSD. Then you can get to OpenBSD in the end. This process will take 3 years. I started my career with Solaris though I knew Linux from college. That was 98. Nowadays Solaris is hardly used. People use either FreeBSD or OpenBSD. In certain cases NetBSD is used. -Girish -- Gayatri Hitech http://gayatri-hitech.com _______________________________________________ ILUGC Mailing List: http://www.ae.iitm.ac.in/mailman/listinfo/ilugc
