On 12/31/2012 10:17 AM, Nathan England wrote:
Excellent points. I don't entirely believe 2000 was a bomb. But in all
reality, I don't know anyone that used it.

I've seen it used, and used it quite heavily at most environments I was at when still doing more systems stuff. 2003 was obviously much improved (xp+server stuff) and quickly became defacto, but for at time, it was good for passage out of the dark ages of 16bit os's.

I saw it on a couple servers
and replaced it with linux on a few others. It wasn't horrible, but come
one! Windows ME on an NTOS kernel? I thought the frequent automatic
reboots were a "feature" so I did not have to manually reboot Windows
ME! Windows 2000 destroyed the only good "feature" Windows ME had!

Hah! Well like most I started life as a windoze guy, and my first experience with "servers" was using win2k server beta's for adventure in '99. I was rockin' AD before I'd ever had to futz with NT. Imagine my horror when I had to inherit some nt4 domains later!

That said, I learned what DNS, DHCP, LDAP/Kerberos, and IIS were good for in windoze land, then later replaced them once I got familiar enough with linux. Learning how network services work under linux without some prerequisite knowledge is more than a bit daunting, so I was glad to have had exposure and understanding from windoze worlds.

All in all, AD still has numerous advantages for directory management that simply cannot be _easily_ replaced in linux. 99% of times, I'll still see it paired with linux if for nothing else than authentication and user/group enumerations (likewise/centrify), and I'm fairly OK with that.


Nathan


-mb
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