From: "Toby Corkindale" <[email protected]>
>> On 30/09/13 17:51, Peter Nunn wrote:

>> From his perspective, it?s about redundancy.  He can throw out one lot
>> of IT people, replace them with another lot, and they will still be able
>> to support the system.
>>
>> He can?t find a Linux shop just by walking up the street or finding the
>> first IT company in the Yellow Pages.
>
> Also worth noting that with Linux, you tend to get a huge variance in
> the way things are set up, depending on the sysadmins who created it.
> If you bring in a new Linux shop, they may well take quite a while to
> figure out how everything works, and then want to change it.

I do not think that is true.

Of course, you have few flavours but it boils down (for most) to Red  
Hat vs. Debian based distributions.

It is probably even more consistent over years - compared to the move  
from Windows XP to Vista to Windows 7 to Windows 8.

Installs, setups and upgrades will be look very similar whoever it is  
doing it, as long they do not try to be deliberately "exotic".

Customisation will need some understanding - but the same challenge  
will be there for every Windows admin too.

I moved between jobs and never found that too hard to understand  
setups done by others.

The bigger challenge was dealing with "messy setups" (means no  
policies at all - so I do it differently on every second machine).  
(Maybe that just offends the German in me;-)

Well, that happens under Windows as well, and it is actually needs  
more effort to have computers that look the same.

Regards
Peter

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