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Date: 2008年1月19日 19:25:34 -0500
From: "W. Chris Shank" <shankwc@acetechgroup.com>
> Desktop Linux is no easier to administer than Desktop Windows. Both
> are fairly straightforward if you spend the time to get things setup
> right before it hits the users desk.
Short version:
I think setting up a desktop "right" is a bit easier on Linux than
Windows, but I agree if you've done it beforehand on either they are
about the same to administer. But Windows is more fragile and harder to
fix than Linux.
Long version:
I'd argue that trying to support end-users in any GUI environment is
going to be a giant PITA unless you can remote-control their desktop one
way or another. (I used to work on a helpdesk, it was a heck of a lot
easier to say, "Open a DOS prompt and type..." than to describe how to
go click some obscure control, or even worse get the user to explain
what they were seeing. But I digress.)
The thing I haven't seen discussed is the fact that if the end-user
manages to break it (which Windows makes trivial since you basically
*must* run as Administrator unless you have a *lot* of time to debug
things or are <shudder> using Vista), Linux is a lot easier to recover
and find and fix an actual root cause. Most of the time, the "fix" for
Windows is to reboot and if that fails reinstall. That's utterly
insane, but a very many "techs" are conditioned to it. In my
experience, it's rare to find a root cause for a problem on Windows and
rare not to on Linux.
Linus is inherently easier to recover because you can:
* access it without the GUI, when that's what's broken
* access it trivially with any number of recovery or LiveCDs (you can do
this in Windows too, but it's not nearly as easy)
* move a hard drive to another machine and it'll likely Just Work
* not have to deal with the Registry (yeah, yeah, we've beaten this to
death recently)
My very small scale solution to all of this is to run W2KPro in VMware
server under Ubuntu. This works great since I get awesome and complete
cross-platform remote control (VMware fat console), hardware
independence for the picky Windows side (it's a VM), Linux power and
stability for the base platform (Ubuntu LTS), Windows "bare metal
restore" backups (i.e., copy the VM dir!:), and Windows "upgrade"
back-out protection (a VM snapshot). I can't stress enough how happy I
am with this solution, but I only use it for a very small number of
nodes thus far (4) and I doubt it's scalable though I really haven't
given that much thought.
[...]
Date: 2008年1月20日 15:40:53 -0500
> The need to do too many frequent upgrades has been one of my biggest
> beefs with desktop Linux in commercial environments. Even with Ubuntu
> - you really need to upgrade every 6 months, ...
That's what Ubuntu LTS releases are for. While 3 years is a bit less
than the recent MS major release cycle <snicker>, it seems pretty good
to me.
My 0ドル.02,
JP
----------------------------|:::======|-------------------------------
JP Vossen, CISSP |:::======| jp{at}jpsdomain{dot}org
My Account, My Opinions |=========| http://www.jpsdomain.org/
----------------------------|=========|-------------------------------
Microsoft has single-handedly nullified Moore's Law.
Innate design flaws of Windows make a personal firewall, anti-virus
and anti-malware software mandatory. The resulting software arms race
has effectively flattened Moore's Law on hardware running Windows.
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