From: "Trent W. Buck" <[email protected]>
> Petros <[email protected]> writes:
>
>>> 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.
>
> I'm a sysadmin.  I routinely inherit systems.  It's definitely true.
>
> Simple things are usually consistent, but Toby's right that it can take
> a while (weeks/months) to understand all the... quirks and pecadillos of
> the previous maintainer.  I tend to dismiss that as incompetence, but it
> could be style differences.
>
>> It is probably even more consistent over years - compared to the move
>> from Windows XP to Vista to Windows 7 to Windows 8.
>
> I can't comment on Windows systems administration.

I was referring to it in a Linux vs. Windows context.

I am "a bit" involved in the Windows administration too although I  
have a colleague who is doing a lot of the ground work.

You will find similar quirks in the Windows world too, whether it is a  
domain setup, naming conventions, directory structures, shares,  
version control setup, monitoring, remote control, firewall solution  
etc - that all has to be added and configured on a "pristine" Windows  
box before you have a working system.

And then you have the next version and "C:\Document and Settings"  
becomes "C:\Users". /home is there since I use Unix. You have to tweak  
the registry to use a file server home under Windows.

Our company setup requires a particular samba share mounted as W: and  
some of the W: directories added to the path, Firefox under C:/Program  
Files (not the default C:/Program Files(x86), you have to create a  
fake D: drive to make a particular program happy..

not to know that will give you a bunch of surprises.

Documentation helps (fortunately we have that, a long Wiki page  
describing how to install and configure Windows machines)  - but that  
is universally true.

At my kids' primary school the teachers started to use USB sticks to  
exchange data - because nobody was able to fix issues with their  
Windows file server, for months.

They had some external Windows admins to maintain the network.

Maybe that is a bright spot if you have a Linux admin: Most of them  
know what they are doing;-)

Regards
Peter

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