I think alot of this has to do with how much time you are willing 
to invest in 'pulling up your bootstraps' so to speak.  I have
found that by reading the manual very carefully a couple of times
has provided me with the knowledge of how to work with cvs plus the 
knowledge to know that I can do something with cvs and just need to
look it up.  I would suggest setting up a play area after reading
through the manual and then trying different things out.  Once you
have read the manual and played with cvs for a bit( this should just
take the afternoon one day ).  You should have a better feel
for what your organization will need in the form of support...

donald

On Mon, Feb 28, 2000 at 08:11:33AM -0800, Peter A. Gnoffo wrote:
> I am new to the world of configuration management and CVS.
> I am trying to get a sense of the need, if any, to purchase training
> and support services for CVS to be used in a research tool software
> development project. There are about a dozen people on the team
> actively involved in code development, located on the same network.
> We primarily work in unix environment (SGI's), but some may transfer
> files to Windows laptops to work offsite. 
> Advice appreciated.
> Thanks,
> Peter
> 

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