My two cents,

A number of years ago when I was working for a company and not myself I
was asked to either go Novell or Windows NT route.  I choose Windows
route because I looked at a number of factors and one factor that I
noticed was a trend was that fast majority of local college students
that were graduating were leaving with Microsoft skills.

Where I currently live there seems to be a mix of Linux and Microsoft
requirements for graduation, Linux has taken a foothold.  I personally
think that if someone that I am hiring has a mixture of they are good
hire.  I guess what I am saying is look at the local collages to see
what they are training in.

Someone commented in the said that Linux is more secure than Microsoft
they should really check the various Bug track websites out.  Both have
their share of bugs.  Yes Microsoft tends to grab more media attention
but there has been some SSH bugs that were scary.

p.s. I am not for Microsoft and I am not for Linux.  I personally
believe that both there are situations when you would use Microsoft and
there are situations when you would use Linux.  Further more, in some
situations where desktop publishing / video editing should be done on a
windows box and sometimes it should be done on Mac and so forth.


Allen Armstrong


> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:IMail_Forum-
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Joe Scharbrough
> Sent: July 25, 2004 5:23 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: RE: [IMail Forum] Beating the Micro$oft Cost
> 
> I have often been asked by my clients the same questions you are
asking
> and
> after much consideration of Linux verse Microsoft I always come back
to
> the
> same question. What is really best for the company not what does
someone
> in
> the IT department want to do? The hard fact facing any company today
is
> that
> IT people change jobs often. Can your company easily hire Linux people
in
> your area or do you have a signed in blood agreement never to leave
(ie
> are
> you the owner). I always ask my companies to look at who can support
their
> infrastructure if and when I am gone. Good network design calls for an
> operating system that you can hire people to administrate. I have
great
> admiration for the Linux OS but I have to look at the long term
interests
> of
> my clients.
> 
> I began my certification on Novell and I love it. The darn thing never
> fails. However in my geographic area I am seeing a lot of firms switch
to
> Windows because they can not find experienced Novell engineers and
> administrators. The same is true of Linux, I do not see a wealth of
talent
> out there yet. I am sure that in the future Linux people will be
easier to
> find but for now I can not in good conscience advice my clients to
make
> the
> switch.
> 
> Thank you,
> 
> Joe Scharbrough
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Marc A.
Funaro
> Sent: Saturday, July 24, 2004 9:25 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: RE: [IMail Forum] Beating the Micro$oft Cost
> 
> Hi Everyone,
> 
> I think my message may have implied emphasis on something that, in
> retrospect, is only a part of the bigger picture... I do very much
> appreciate your points of view.  I guess I should clarify my situation
a
> little better...
> 
> The move to Linux actually involves more than just a decision to save
> money;
> in reality, I think that saving money will simply be a fringe benefit
IF
> in
> fact it is fully realized.  *I* think it will be fully realized, but I
can
> just as easily be wrong.  To be totally open about the decision, I
would
> also have to include the facts that (1) As a web applications
development
> firm, we're moving a way from ColdFusion and towards Java/Java Server
> Pages/OO programming, (2) I have a personal interest in becoming an
> experienced Linux/*nix admin (adding diversity to my skillset,
something
> that can't possibly hurt, can it?), and (3) my own experience with
Windows
> since the 3.0 days (NT and WFWG) has given me enough "trouble" to want
to
> seek the much-acclaimed stability of the *nix platform in general,
while
> I'm
> still young enough to care.  :)
> 
> I have a personal love of technology that REALLY delivers on its
promise
> and
> I guess part of me is looking to find out, in a way, if the *nix
people
> are
> just MS bashers, or if they "really have a point" when it comes to
overall
> platform stability.  The last time I really, truly experienced
technology
> "at its finest" was with an installation of Novell 4.1 at a law firm I
> once
> consulted for; at the moment they were pushed to go with a "wonderful"
> Microsoft solution, when I went to "down" the server for the last time
for
> them, it had been up and running for around 475 days straight.  When I
> asked
> about it, they said "yeah, it's kinda just sat there and ran... I
think
> [someone] rebooted it a year or so ago, when we needed an OS patch or
> something..." (which leads me to believe that the uptime was probably
even
> longer).  That, to me, is delivery on a promise.  Once they moved away
> from
> that platform, they got used to the "oh yeah, occassionally you have
to
> reboot the server" thing.... as I think most of us have.  (I can't
> complain
> too much... our Win2k3 servers have actually been doing very well.)
> 
> So, i was really "wrong" in how I phrased my initial post, as it was
too
> focused on cost savings.  There's really much more to it than that for
me
> personally as well as professionally... I just don't want to continue
to
> be
> an "MS drone", and never seek the answer to the question "Could this
be
> better?"... if I at least explore this new avenue, I'll be adding to
my
> skillset AND answering the question at the same time... while perhaps
> improving the services we offer our clients.  If it turns out that I
> cannot
> come up with a reasonable alternative to iMail, then it's a no-brainer
to
> stay on Win2k3 and iMail, and move on to something else.  I know I
should
> expect some bias, since I *did* post my question in the iMail
newsgroup
> (and
> you'd all be totally right to flame me for that transgression!!), but
I
> know
> that there's also people on this list that are in fact experienced
*nix
> admins, and may have (strong?) opinions regarding the stability of the
> Windows/iMail solution compared to some other enterprise-level
solutions
> they may have been involved with.  It's those people that I'm most
> interesting in hearing from... because they have what I seek --
experience
> from both sides of the "fence".
> 
> Again, I hope I'm not offending anyone... iMail has been very very
good to
> us.  But I think it's kinda important to continue to ask questions and
> learn
> more about what's out there too.  My apologies for making it sound
like
> simply a "money-based" decision when, as I said, after thinking about
it
> there really is much more to it than that. :)
> 
> Thanks again everyone, and apologies again for this relatively
off-topic
> post.
> 
> M
> 
> p.s. I didn't really grasp what the response below was trying to
say...
> "My
> ISP" ?? Not sure what you mean...  please feel free to clarify.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Matrosity Tech Support [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Sent: Saturday, July 24, 2004 8:39 PM
> > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Subject: RE: [IMail Forum] Beating the Micro$oft Cost
> >
> >
> > I agree 100% as NOTHING is really free in life. Your ISP may
> > be finding
> > themselves looking for Linux gurus instead of keeping you as well.
> >
> > Bill
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
> > Matt Robertson
> > Sent: Saturday, July 24, 2004 7:08 PM
> > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Subject: Re: [IMail Forum] Beating the Micro$oft Cost
> >
> >
> > Marc,
> >
> > I would give serious consideration to buying a Win2k server license.
> > As was pointed out, you are headed for a learning curve that
otherwise
> > doesn't exist.  While it won't cost in hard dollars lost time
> > has to count
> > for something.  imho a lot more than 800 bucks; especially
> > considering the
> > customer service issues that are go with this if you are an ISP.
> >
> > Just a thought that admittedly doesn't address your core question...
> >
> > --
> > --Matt Robertson--
> > MSB Designs, Inc.
> > mysecretbase.com
> >
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> >
> >
> > To Unsubscribe: http://www.ipswitch.com/support/mailing-lists.html
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> >
> >
> >
> >
> 
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> 
> 
> 
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