Agree with Rob :-)

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From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Friday, May 17, 2002 9:24 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Webservers

On Wed, May 15, 2002 at 11:46:41AM -0500, Robert Buel wrote:
> That would be true if both NOS's required equal intuition to
> master...but they don't...I can stumble around in MS and see
> configurational windows--and usually find what I'm looking for...but on
> a 'NIX box, you have to specifically enter in commands (read: know the
> commands)to configure each aspect of the NOS. Sure, there are windowed
> GUI interfaces available, but then, it becomes Windows, doesn't it?

No, it just has a GUI.  That's like saying 95 and 2000 are the same OS.
They aren't but they look the same to the uninitiated.


> I agree that once you have mastered the NOS's, that the effort to
> achieve that is, in fact, equal. It's just that the newbie would find it
> easier to have a visual representation and configurational groups to
> learn from--i.e. "figuring it out" is easier. 

For newbies, maybe.  It's not really that easy, though.  You have to go
through a bunch of menus to get anything done, and remembering a series
of 10 buttons to press is harder for me than remembering what command
does something and then looking it up on a man page.


> I think that better analogies might be:
> >Driving with an automatic versus a stick shift. 
> >Using a manual camera versus an automatic camera

I think the only reason these analogies hold up is because UNIX lets
you get into the guts easier.  Once you've got a UNIX box up and tuned,
it can be as easy to use as Windows.


Rob

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