Hi :)
Before Linux most of those servers would probably have been using Unix. A fair percentage moved
from Unix to Bsd too. There are apparently other unix-based OSes out there and a few other odd
ones that form almost all the remaining percentage.
Regards from
Tom :)
--- On Wed, 18/4/12, Ken Springer <snowshed1@q.com> wrote:
From: Ken Springer <snowshed1@q.com>
Subject: [libreoffice-users] Re: beware of the m$ subsidiary
To: users@global.libreoffice.org
Date: Wednesday, 18 April, 2012, 18:48
On 4/18/12 10:05 AM, Tom Davies wrote:
Interestingly apparently many US government agencies and departments use Gnu&Linux for most
of their server-side and infra-structure but had to cave into users demands for MS on their
desktops.
MS has always been the choice for the OS in almost all cases, AFAIK, but the actual programs used
varied widely years ago. My agency generally preferred Word Perfect as the word processor, but
when (I think) a government wide survey was taken as to an across the board single word processing
program to aid document sharing, WP lost out to Word. Lots of unhappy people in my agency who had
to redo all their macros, templates, etc.
That surprises me not as far as the servers go. It seems the general impression of US Fed
employees is they are, in general, not terribly bright in a lot of areas, where my experience is
just the opposite. Especially the tech guys. They are well aware of the advantages of Linux.
The agency I worked for didn't use Linux on any servers, AFAIK. Not because they may not have
wanted to, but the support load the tech people had to provide so far exceeded their abilities to
do a good job, they were always making decisions in a direction of having everything the same, to
at least try to give everyone the help they needed.
The problem, despite the big government hoopla, is there's just not enough human beings to do the
job well for the tasks assigned. (Not going into the question of efficient operations, etc, as
much of that is caused by people outside individual agencies, not the average employee.)
The average employee is prevented, intentionally, from having anything more to do with the servers
other than using them to store their data on. I was a supervisor, and I was at my last unit for 5
years before I even knew I could do that. No one bothered to tell me I actually had access to the
server's hard drives for file storage. Our unit didn't even have a dedicated IT position, it fell
to the administrative officer (total department personnel size of 1) as one of many collaborative
duties, and when he passed away, it was given to me as a similar collaborative duty. I was Chief
of Maintenance (total dept. size of 3), as well as Environmental officer, Safety Officer, Fleet
Manager, and I don't remember what else.
-- Ken
Mac OS X 10.6.8
Firefox 11.0
Thunderbird 11.0.1
LibreOffice 3.5.1.2
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Context
- Re: [libreoffice-users] beware of the m$ subsidiary (continued)
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