Re: [PHP] PHP Work in New York

2002-02-12 Thread NDPTAL85

 On Tuesday, February 12, 2002, at 04:30  PM, George PHP wrote:

 So you want to say that PHP is going nowhere in the
 States? Maybe we should be doing ASP!

 I suppose that's a matter of opinion.  One thing's for sure:  where I 
 work, ASP is the official scripting language.  If my boss really knew 
 the difference, I'd have to use ASP instead.  I get around it by not 
 bringing the subject up and by keeping my head down.

 I was talking with John Maddog Hall last week and he shared another 
 story of some guys he knew (back in the mid-90s) who had the same 
 situation as me -- they basically were told to set up a server.  No 
 other instructions.  So they set up a Linux box, recognizing its 
 virtues and technical prowess.  When Maddog asked them what their boss 
 thought about that, they sheepishly replied that he didn't know -- they 
 figured they'd wait a YEAR before telling him so that they'd have a 
 good point if it came down to an argument.

 Much as I'd love to evangelize my open source philosophy and the merits 
 of my Linux/MySQL/PHP installation, it's going to have to wait until 
 I'm done with this project.

 Erik


You know at most places thats a great strategy for getting fired? Have 
any others? :)





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I'd love to go out with you, but my favorite commercial is on TV.
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Re: [PHP] What is the different between Apache and IIS?

2002-02-19 Thread NDPTAL85

On Tuesday, February 19, 2002, at 07:52  AM, Jack wrote:

 Dear All
 I had Setup a Website in a IIS Server 4.0, but i just want to know what 
 is
 the different between the Apache Server and IIS server?

 Thx
 jack
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Day and night. Both are webservers. IIS is made by Microsoft and only 
runs on Windows. Apache is made by the Apache organization and will run 
on Windows, but is most commonly used on Unix based OS's such as 
Solaris, BSD, Linux, AIX, HP-UX, IRIXetc. There's also 
security/stability issues to take into account. Both webservers have 
exploits, but IIS tends to have more and more serious ones. IIS is also 
not as scalable as Apache. On the other hand IIS is easier to configure 
and setup for beginners. In the end either one can and will work just 
fine if the administrator (you) knows what they are doing.





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