Peter J. Schoenster wrote:
> Well the gui was what led me to believe that CF was something
> that could be used by anyone with a mouse. And I was wondering
> if that might be where it was heading. I had just read this:
Cold Fusion doesn't have a gui interface even if you have Cold Fusion Studio
(which I have). The next versions might be more gui oriented, but even at that,
unless you are doing something real simple, you need to know at least some
programming logic.
I think the trend is to make the day to day operations of a system, something
that an average technically inclined staff member can handle. The reason for
this is obvious, techies are expensive and an operating system will take off
easier if they do not need a specialist on site all of the time. From my own
experience, if you configure the network properly, it can run on it's own for
quite some time without intervension. I took off for two weeks, and a network
of 25 stations, including 4 NT servers was still huming when I got back. Before
I started work there, the system crashed every few days...
p.s. I don't run Exchange, I run MetaInfo's Sendmail and have configured
Sendmail on a unix box ages ago.. (just don't ask me to do uucp address
translations).
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