By the way, MS's marketing material may tout Pro-only features related
to Active Directory and domain membership... But you won't be allowed to
join any of the existing domains on campus and Truman ITServices would
probably give you trouble if you tried to create your own domain (using
2000 or .NET server). So those features won't do you much good on
campus.
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
On Behalf Of Sean Foy
Sent: Friday, May 17, 2002 10:38 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [tslug] Re: Misc Questions


As for Windows,

If you'd have bought Win9X, then go with Home. If you'd have gotten NT
Workstation or 2000, get Pro. The MS web site has detailed information
about all the features, if you're looking for something in particular,
but the above is a rule-of-thumb.

So if you want, e.g., SMP support you must go with Pro. If you want IIS,
MS's (notorious but prolific) web/ftp/smtp/(nntp on 2000 Server/AS and
.NET servers) server, you need Pro. If you just want to play games
you're probably fine with Home Edition.

FWIW, XP Pro (Corporate Ed.) seems to be most popular in the dorms. Most
of those installations would be of questionable licensing status... The
availability of the CD image might be the biggest reason for the
popularity, but there it is. -----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
On Behalf Of Ian Monroe
Sent: Friday, May 17, 2002 4:40 PM
To: Truman State Linux User Group
Subject: [tslug] Misc Questions


I'll be attending Truman next year and I have a few questions.

In general, how Linux-friendly is Truman? I plan on having a multiboot
computer, but, for instance, can I print to the dorm printers from
Linux?

I plan on buying a computer this summer. Is it necesary to get XP
Professional or is Home good enough? Would prefer Home for the obvious
matter of $100, but I understand that in some networks it's better to
have Pro.

Thanks,
Ian Monroe
http://mlug.missouri.edu/~eean




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