> 
> This is an honest query from someone who does not 
> understand how the real world works.  In my job, the OS
> is totally transparent to the users.  It was VMS, now 
> it's NT (with obvious hardware replacement).  What the 
> user sees (and what my graduate school books say 
> management should focus on is the users)

Must be lousy books.

> applications.  The user never sees the server.  And
> from what I've seen as the sysadmin, the problems
> are almost always in the server applications, not the
> OS.  Since we didn't develop the applications, when
> they break, as they so often do, we call our support
> team in DC, who calls the contractor who made the
> application.
> 
> Bottom Line:  The OS does its job.  The applications
> are errant, and its the developers that get the calls.
> If our computers don't work right, our first step is 
> reboot Win95 (clients) or NT (server), wherever the
> problem is.  90-95% of the time this fixes the
> problem (this is not just an OS issue - the application
> programmers didn't make their code clean up resources
> when it crashes).
> 
> Big Questions: 
> 1.  Why such an uproar over OS's when most problems 
> are in the applications (except when NT munched 
> itself one week after I took over).  
>

It also matters how the OS handles the errant applications and such.  I'd
say the uproar over stability, scalability, efficiency of an OS is
justified.

> 2a. Why does it matter if the OS is a big name like 
> Microsoft, or a free OS like Linux, freeBSD, etc?  
>

It doesn't matter to open-minded individuals who want to get the job
correctly.
 
> 2b. Do companies call Microsoft or Caldera or RedHat 
> if some application misbehaves?
>

Yes, they try.
 
> 3.  Do companies have IS departments to fix problems, 
> or do the IS people call Microsoft?

Yes, and yes.  When they run into an MS problem where the code needs to be
fixed they call MS and they wait a year or two and maybe it gets fixed.

  If a company has
> an IS department with trained professionals, why
> would the company switch from one OS (say Unix) to 
> another OS (NT)?  This seems counter-productive and
> expensive to me.
>

>From Unix to NT:  because they've fallen to the MS marketing machine.

>From NT back to Unix:  when they realize they've made a mistake by
installing NT and they want something reliable, scalable, etc.
 


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