> It would be much more appropriate to use the M$ BSOD as a screen saver. I > think that one comes standard with some Linux distros. Then that would > really freak out the M$ account manager - "Do they really have so many > BSODs? Should I make a comment or not?"
Back when I worked at UWS, we (the UNIX admins) installed a BSOD screen saver on an NT file server as a joke. The NT admin spotted it (after about a week) and panicked - he rebooted the machine at least twice before realising what was going on..... I also used to run the BSOD on my Sun there too, which used to confuse the hell out of the windoze weenies as well..... There is absolutely no way that an MS marketing organism would ever find it's way into my data centre, BTW. The fact that they would even anticipate having access is a little odious too. We didn't even let the Sun bods in there half the time without constant supervision. I would certainly not leave an MS one alone in there - they'd be pulling the cables out of everything/rebooting and then blaming it on the competition.... rachel --------------------------------------------- This message was sent using Endymion MailMan. http://www.endymion.com/products/mailman/ -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ More Info: http://lists.slug.org.au/listinfo/slug
