Cjolley, thus brings the topic, back on topic.
Thank You.
The Pundit in that Rag has it wrong. There is only one thing that will make Linux viable in the Enterprise. That will be Enterprises using it. There are places in nearly every Enterprise that use Linux. That doesn't qualify it as a replacement for Unix or Windows.
If you expect to see Microsoft's market share evaporate, think again. Expect it to increase with Win2K3 over the next two years. Win2K3 has turned the head of more than one Windows/Unix administrator.
If you think you'll see Unix developers drop what they are doing en masse and staple a penguin poster on their cubicle walls, you'll have a long wait ahead of you.
The real loser is going to be Unix in the end, not Windows, and the numbers bear that out.
Thank You.
The Pundit in that Rag has it wrong. There is only one thing that will make Linux viable in the Enterprise. That will be Enterprises using it. There are places in nearly every Enterprise that use Linux. That doesn't qualify it as a replacement for Unix or Windows.
If you expect to see Microsoft's market share evaporate, think again. Expect it to increase with Win2K3 over the next two years. Win2K3 has turned the head of more than one Windows/Unix administrator.
If you think you'll see Unix developers drop what they are doing en masse and staple a penguin poster on their cubicle walls, you'll have a long wait ahead of you.
The real loser is going to be Unix in the end, not Windows, and the numbers bear that out.
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