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From: Mark Williams <hirm@chariot.net.au>
To : nickelodeon@heaps.fully.cx
Date: Tue, 28 Sep 1999 00:45:28 +0930
Re: Truths.
Before you all get too carried away at flaming Nick.... realise that this is
his attempt to revive this board as its been a little quite over the last
few days.
So go easy on him eh :P
He knows what he has said is a load of crap :P
MWP
> Hello.
>
> The list has been a little quiet lately, so I thought I'd mention a few
> thoughts I've been having over the last few days.
>
> Windows, and Microsoft in general, are actually pretty cool. I don't know
> why all you people are always being derogatory toward them. They've got
> just the right attitude toward software development, developer tools,
> standard setting, marketing policies and a whole gamut of other things
too.
>
> Software development, for example - I don't know why everyone here's been
> going about how crap GUI system configuration tools are. They
enable -any-
> idiot to configure -any- sort of server. Without having to have any sort
of
> system knowledge whatsoever. Now -that- is good business sense.
Microsoft
> have made their certificate, the MCSE, so very easy to obtain that anyone
> with half - or even a third - of a brain, can obtain one with minimum
> effort. I believe Microsoft's aim here is quantity, not quality,
and -that-
> is the key to their success.
>
> Observe and learn, penguin people. The Linux Operating System is taking a
> similar turn. There are god-knows-how-many programmers out there, all
> developing their own little parts of the OS, not communicating with each
> other to any great degree, and ignoring and rehashing and recreating
> standards faster than anyone can keep up. A bit like Microsoft's
> programmers. Good, eh?
>
> BSD, on the other hand, has a ridiculous red-tape-ified system, where only
a
> few privileged humans can modify the source-code, and things have to be
> checked, and approved, and rah rah rah. What a load of complete bollocks.
> And you can't run Linux software on BSD anyway, so don't bother with it.
I
> don't think you can even make it connect to the internet. It's a huge
waste
> of time.
>
> Now. Modems. All this talk about external modems and how wonderful they
> are is making me -sick-. Who the hell wants to see little red lights
> flashing at them the whole bloody time? And they're much slower than
> internal modems, because you plug them into the serial port, whereas
> internal modems plug -directly- into the motherboard, giving the CPU, with
> its huge bandwidth, direct access to the telephone line. Why is there a
> question? I'm puzzled and amused by the naivety of some of you people.
>
> One other point I'd like to make before signing off - security. Windows
NT
> security is eons ahead of Linux's security, for lots and lots and lots of
> reasons.
>
> Here's one.
>
> I want Administrator access, but I don't have the password. What do I do?
> God knows. It's too hard. There's no "crack the password" button and no
> file called "c:\windows\Administrator Password.pwd" so argh!
>
> Linux? hah. I just reset the server, enter single-user mode, and I have
> complete control over my system with Administrator (or root or whatever
you
> twats want to call the Administrator user) privileges. I can even change
> the Administrator password by typing a few simple commands.
>
> Bah.
>
> I think I've made all the points I need to for tonight.
> __
> Nick Morrison
> nickelodeon@heaps.fully.cx
> http://www.fully.cx/where_do_you_want_to_go_today/
>
> --
> Check out the LinuxSA web pages at http://www.linuxsa.org.au/
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>
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