Microsoft Pulls Plug for Support on NT4 611
seymansey writes "According to Neowin.net and News.com, Microsoft has apparently announced that as of the end of June, support for the now aging NT4 OS will be pulled. NT4 Server users have until the end of 2004 for support. Windows 98 users will be the next on the list for axed support too. Of course, Microsoft will still provide its knowledge base, but we wont see any more patches, etc. developed for the OS. After 7 years, it's kind of sad to see NT4 go."
After we finally got the thing stable.... (Score:5, Funny)
Have I got something for you... (Score:5, Funny)
You got it stable? Yeah, and I have a magic-box powered Delorean I'd like to sell you.
Re:After we finally got the thing stable.... (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem with Microsoft stuff has always been that it is easy to use, meaning your average Joe Know-nothing things he's done a bang-up job setting things up when in reality the entire network infrastructure is one big house of cards ready to collapse at the slightest security breech.
That's where
Re:After we finally got the thing stable.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Um... NT and 9x?
About damn time! (Score:3, Funny)
The devil you know (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not convinced this is a good thing. While I generally think MS got Win2K right (though not XP), several people in my office still explicitly request NT4 on new machines. One guy who works on my team is considering this now, after spending a week chasing a bug somewhere on his WinXP box that causes it to reset without warning when running some essential software. Sometimes, better the devil you know really is good advice.
Re:The devil you know (Score:5, Interesting)
We upgraded from 98SE to XP because I wanted an OS that could walk and chew gum at the same time. Let me tell you, mistake, mistake, mistake. Anything that uses the 3d accelleration crashes the system randomly. Which defeats the purpose of having an athlon-XP to work on computer animation now doesn't it?
It's always dual booted, and I have finally gotten the Linux side so stable, my wife only boots into Windows to use M$ office. I have open office on the system, but she keeps mumbling something about layout. She like it because it boots from power switch to login, to KDE finished loading in 30 seconds. I'm digressing...
I never thought I would see the day, but I actually have better driver support under Linux than XP for my machine. I have the firewire card working, with software to OPERATE the firewire card. My printers work without having to reboot to clear a printer-error condition. (A bug in the USB driver for XP.) My DVD playback and surround sound are perfect.
And all this without having to drop another dime on hardware.
Re:The devil you know (Score:5, Insightful)
98SE is a good OS considering it's 16-bit (read: it sucks!).
Very simply put, XP = 2K + crap.
You should have installed 2K, it's the best Microsoft OS so far (I have yet to try 2K3 so currently have no opinion on it).
Re:The devil you know (Score:5, Informative)
see here. [microsoft.com]
Re:The devil you know (Score:3, Insightful)
NEVER upgrade a Microsoft OS! Install from SCRATCH!
Re:The devil you know (Score:3, Informative)
Also, if you have an AIW, did you get the Remote Wonder too? The drivers that ship with the Remote Wonder will force a reboot at least every 4 hours, the latest drivers fix this problem.
Re:The devil you know (Score:3, Insightful)
Let's face it, unless your components were designed with XP in mind, you are stuck in the eternel hell of unsigned drivers, finger pointing, and second-class-citizenship from vendors and Microsoft.
Re:The devil you know (Score:5, Informative)
Start > Control Panel > System
Advanced Tab
Startup and Reovery settings
Uncheck "Automatically restart" under System Failure
Re:The devil you know (Score:5, Interesting)
Unfortunately, in a small company like ours, that simple isn't financially viable. Even if it were, not all of our PCs are used for the same purposes, so we wouldn't want them all to be the same, or even necessarily run the same basic software.
By the way, we develop software that ships on more than a dozen different platforms, including several flavours of Windows, several *nix variations, older non-UNIX'd MacOS versions and more. We're well aware of the strengths and limitations of these platforms relative to one another.
Several of my colleagues would disagree with you, from direct personal experience. For standard networked Dell boxes running Windows+Office and nothing else, sure. From personal experience, Win2K is generally more stable and the one they got right. But certainly for some machines, particularly those with any "unusual" hardware, it's quite common for NT4 to be more stable than 2000.
I'm sorry, you misunderstand me. There is no blue screen. The system either locks up or resets, immediately. This is rare with the better Windows versions, but quite possible technically, and happening with monotonous regularity on this particular system. Or did you think that highly privileged code was immune from bugs that screw up the state of the floating point unit, and device drivers never set threads to run at the dangerously high priorities allowed by the Windows API? ;-)
Upgrades? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Upgrades? (Score:3, Interesting)
Excuse me, what is a 'supported upgrade"? Could you inserted a Windows XP prof CD into an NT4 system and Click 'upgrade'? And would that 'upgrade' your mail, contacts, viruses (?), screensavers, settings, apps etc.?
Microsoft's interpretation of support implies merely a LipService, and a tiny discount on upgrade pricing.
Re:Upgrades? (Score:4, Informative)
Possible (Score:5, Funny)
OR, then not.
After 7 years... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:After 7 years... (Score:3, Insightful)
If:
1) The more recent Linux kernels weren't better in almost all respects,
2) Linux wasn't open source, and
3) Linux kernels came packaged with various servers and network clients many of which are regularly found to contain hideous security holes
I would agree with you. All 3 of these conditions hold for NT4.
Primary link at Microsoft (Score:5, Informative)
--LP
Re:Primary link at Microsoft (Score:5, Interesting)
Other MS lifecycle links (Score:5, Informative)
--LP, who is 'journal whoring', not karma whoring thank you very much
We still have NT4 servers... (Score:5, Insightful)
Now there will be companies like ours scrambling to get 2000 Server or 2K3 server on their servers by the end of next year. And we won't have a choice. Upgrade or lose support. What do you do? You upgrade.
Re:We still have NT4 servers... (Score:2)
-Rob
Re:We still have NT4 servers... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:We still have NT4 servers... (Score:4, Insightful)
Err... maybe the approx. £1000 that forking out for a Win2K server license will cost. Take it from me, but for a small business, even months later you can be feeling the pain of an unnecessary cost like that.
Also, what exactly is wrong with NT4's networking that is fixed by more recent Windows systems? I mean, OK, XP has a hacked Kerberos system which is kind of useful when working with multiple servers (I don't). What exactly are the other improvements that have been made over what NT4 supports?
Re:We still have NT4 servers... (Score:5, Informative)
The latest version of Samba even allows you to set up your Samba server to be a PDC, and directly migrate your users & groups from an already functioning NT Domain.
Re:We still have NT4 servers... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:We still have NT4 servers... (Score:3, Interesting)
what does using Outlook have to do with having Windows as a Server?
AFAIK you can use Outlook with any MTA....and Sendmail is relatively easy to setup, compared with Exchange...
Re:We still have NT4 servers... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:nt4? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:nt4? (Score:3, Interesting)
No money spent, except for what you would have spent anyway...
Re:So let me get this straight (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:So let me get this straight (Score:4, Insightful)
So "Linux for everything" is "bigotry"... but...
It is better than an NT 4 domain for so many reasons. However almost equally important is the fact that Windows Server is the Microsoft solution.
Re:So let me get this straight (Score:3, Insightful)
-j
Re:So let me get this straight (Score:3, Funny)
Down with those homos! Heterogeny forever!
Re:So let me get this straight (Score:4, Insightful)
Neither can NT4, which is what you're replacing....
Re:We still have NT4 servers... (Score:2)
Client migration to Linux is happening slowly, but we've stopped with Win2K and Office97. No Subscription (dis)Advantage for us, sorry.
Upgrade Them! Please! (Score:3, Interesting)
Just over a week ago, I picked up a really clean PC from a curb, where it was waiting for the trashmen to come and get it.
Sure enough, when I booted it, there was a failed Windows 2000 install on the hard disk - the poor thing was just too slow to run it, so it was set out on its way to the landfill.
Later that day, I added a 120GB disk, installed RedHat 9 using the server install of Samba, Apache, Webmin, whatnot - no X, since I don't need it for a server. I sold it f
Re:We still have NT4 servers... (Score:4, Informative)
It'll only keep serving files for a few weeks until the next worm comes along and exploits an unpatched hole in the system. Then what? You upgrade.
Re:We still have NT4 servers... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:We still have NT4 servers... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:We still have NT4 servers... (Score:5, Interesting)
I think it's completely irresponsible, of course. Most meaningful systems have an ROI measured in years. Once the thing starts paying for itself, it sucks to have to yank it because it can't be repaired anymore.
Hell, what's the average lifespan of unix terminal, or a Mini? How about a Mainframe? These things would live for YEARS. We had a System 36 that operated our finance department from 1982 to 1999. That was replaced by an AS/400 that we are probably going to get another 10-15 years out of.
People, business is business. We are not put on this earth to keep the unscrupulous and wasteful fat and happy.
Re:We still have NT4 servers... (Score:3, Funny)
RedHat? Hell I run Gentoo.
And the major reason is that I got sick of reinstalling the OS every 9 months to stay up2date on all the packages.
(Flashback)...
Re:We still have NT4 servers... (Score:5, Insightful)
Sometimes having a server that works isn't enough. Eventually you will need more features or additional security or more hardware/storage. When that time comes, you'll be screwed.
Re:We still have NT4 servers... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:We still have NT4 servers... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:We still have NT4 servers... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:We still have NT4 servers... (Score:3, Informative)
That said, I also can't condone the use of NT4 over the long term, due to the unstable platform it represents. The fact that machines on SP6 still needed their monthly reboot is proof of just how awful the fundementals were.
For this class of business, Microsoft is really
Joe ServicePack is perplexed... (Score:4, Interesting)
Factually speaking, NT4 was the last stable, fast and useful (as in drivers, functionality etc.) OS from MS, that offered a semblance of security.
Anyways, what this means is we have to support Windows ourselves - any difference? I'm more conerned that Citrix stopped support for NT in Metaframe XP - those idiots! For no obvious technical reasons...
Re:Joe ServicePack is perplexed... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Joe ServicePack's views (Score:3, Interesting)
Joe ServicePack has no use for Active Directory, Management Consoles, Bastardized Kerberos, etc.. NT4 security was enough for him.
How often... (Score:2)
Re:How often... (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, they acutally do provide lifetime support for their products. The only problem is that they define when the lifetime of the product is over.
Oh Well... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oh Well... (Score:5, Insightful)
And (drum roll...) the next two Dell file servers we are getting in for pure storage will be "tested" with FreeBSD running Samba. Took me three years - but they are going to let me try it and see if it "works out" for us. The thing that finnaly pushed this over was when me and the big boss was going over the pricing for the servers - I said "remember we have still $1600 worth of M$ that we need to buy" and he said "Oh shit thats right" - and BOOM I went into action and low and behold we are going to try it out and see what happens...
I even went out and bought Using Samba - just in case ;)
Regards,
Duke
This isn't too surprising since... (Score:2)
Pulling support? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Pulling support? No.. pulling LipService... (Score:3, Funny)
LipService!(TM). Beginning today, MS **will stop** saying that NT4 is affected by a worm or virus. They **will stop** using it in comparisons and benchmarks. They **will stop** Subscription (dis)Advantage programs for NT4 - you will have to pay $200 to get into WinXP Prof and then get the support.
All in all, MS **will stop** making quality software like good ol' NT4.
Warning: LipService will be avbl for versions above Win2K only!
sad to see it go? (Score:5, Insightful)
I think it should have gone a LONG time ago, NT4 was tricky as a desktop OS because DirectX was pretty much nonexistant. I think once Win2K (and the first two or three SPs)came about, NT was a goner. The sad thing really is what came to replace NT and the like for the future-> XP, longthorn, etc.
NT (4.0) wasn't that revolutionary, anyhow. kernel is about on par with 3.5, and the OS itself didn't become really stable until SP5 or so (SP4 caused crap (read: exchange) to crap out, IIRC), and by that time 2K was just right around the corner.
I will be sad when 2K goes. in my opinion that's so far the best OS microsoft made. (XP drops low on the list b/c the nasty theme and horrible amounts of crap-service that comes pre-enabled, which (especially sys-restore) slowed your computer to a crawl and more).
Re:sad to see it go? (Score:3, Insightful)
This policy could work to linux's advantage.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Budgets are tight, and MS is expensive, and I doubt they'll be offering the
Re:This policy could work to linux's advantage.... (Score:5, Insightful)
And then your bosses financial department screams at you the next time he can't read their convoluted, thoroughly programmed-to-death excel files. Most People who find staroffice a useful alternative aren't using ms-office so much as halfway to the limits of its functionality. I found this out the hard way: accountants are not Most People. Neither are auditors, and in some cases, even the people in the human resources department. They know crafty Excel techniques which simply don't translate into Freebie Office documents of any flavor, for good or bad.
Desktop evangelism can be dangerous, as it tricks the typical geek into thinking that because Staroffice is good enough a replacement to him for word and Excel (particularly the latter), that it's good enough for everybody. In a perfect world, maybe, but not in a real office with a lot of legacy programming, legacy programmers, legacy users, and genuinely talented Excel weenies. Much less Access weenies.
Same debate? Gimp versus Photoshop. I've had people 'explain' to me why the gimp is a perfectly suitable replacement to Photoshop. For making web graphics, sure. For doing advanced production work for high level print processing? Not only is Gimp not even in the same league, it's not even playing the same game.
Half of the corporate honchos I've had to deal with in regards to desktop issues get irritated that their office PC doesn't have the same annoying shovelware, quirky desktop setup, and bells & whistle proprietary add-ins as their ridiculous and expensive name brand PCs. Visions of apoplexy dance in my head at the idea of explaining to them why the "My Computer" icon is called something else, why it behaves differently when opened, and why the hell I can't load their three-versions-old copy of AOL onto a sweet chromed linuxy desktop, or if I can (via an emulator) why it runs slower, and why there's extra "stuff to click".
These are the same people I had to have meetings with about why the naked dancing chick.exe attachment their cousin sent them doesn't seem to work at the office (all attachments stored at server, released by me as appropriate - e.g. no exes,
I'll pass on evangelizing a more complicated (or even just 'different') user experience to these people, thank you very much.
Re:This policy could work to linux's advantage.... (Score:3, Insightful)
YES for specialists, OpenOffice is not a solution. However, not everyone is a specialist, indeed, most people can barely use the computer, follow printed instructions, or do much to help their cause beyond phoning the helpdesk.
kinda sad... (Score:5, Informative)
After spending two years in MA phone support for NT on laptops I would have to say I am happy the damn thing is finally dead.
Installing NT on anything was time intensive, installing drivers had to go in a particular order or it turned that hardware into a doorstop:
imag0: "You mean to tell me you installed the video drivers before you installed card services and your ethernet drivers?"
Client, quivering after spending the past three hours reloading NT on a laptop: "Uh, yeah."
imag0: "Ok, pull out your boot diskettes again and see if we can repair install..."
A long running joke in laptop support was that NT meant "Not Today". And it was true. Repair installs didn't. Service Control Manager (SCM) was only there to throw cryptic, useless errors at users just long enough to generate support calls and let's not get into how hard Adobe Acrobat and SP4 clusterfucked in some Trident configurations.
Glad it's dead. No love lost here. Burn your cd's and feel happy its gone the way of win 3.11 and MS Bob.
An issue of cost... (Score:2)
While that's true, there's a big difference between using open source software versus Microsoft products when upgrading. Now all of these sites that use Windows NT will be forced to shell out money to get a supported version of Windows (there many not be too many, but they're out there). Hundreds if not thousands of dollars will have to b
Reactos (Score:2)
I look forward to those guys coming up with a workable Windows NT clone one of these days.
Technology push market model (Score:2, Informative)
The sad thing, however, it that in the future, you will be forced to migrate, as your license will be temporarilly.
When you are wise, you stick with NT4 as long as possible (very good with Office 97 for an administrative environment) and leapfrog to the version after Server 2003 or perhaps a later version. This is definitely the cheapest option.
It's about time that temporal l
sad to see it go? (Score:5, Interesting)
as far as support no longer available, Big deal. I can get 3rd party support.
My NT4 servers are going no-where... they all server me very well with 99.9% Uptime and each decoding 24 different MPEG2 DVD quality video streams at once on a Pentium 166.
Until the vendor writes Windows 2000 drivers for these very high end MPEG cards, NT4 is the de-facto standard in cable tv headends for many more years.
sorry, but this is a non-issue for most of us... it doens make the OS magically dissappear.
NT4? Who cares? (Score:3, Insightful)
NT4 came out 7 years ago... and 6 service packs later, they almost have it working. There are still so many bugs with it, I can't keep track. It's a nightmare to maintain, and nothing is kept in a logical place. Even the log-in key-press sequence (ctrl-alt-del) is anti-intuitive. The graphics are horrible and bland. The hardware support is pathetic, even for its day. To my knowledge, you STILL can't access anything via USB on NT4. It's a system-resource hog (that's kind of given, since it IS Microsoft). Can ANYBODY tell me why they're still using it? The cost for maintaining it over 6 months is more than purchasing a new computer with Windows 2000/XP. What can NT4 possibly offer that Windows 2000/XP (or even Linux) can't? All the other options are easier to work with and/or cheaper.
I don't blame Microsoft at all for getting rid of it. I just wish they would have done it sooner... or even never come out with it in the first place. They could have just continued development on it until 1999 and come out with Windows 2000 and actually had a product that made it worthwhile to put on a server (in some people's opinions).
Ctrl-Alt-Del (Score:5, Informative)
Since no user-program can grab ctrl-alt-del keystrokes (yay x86), forcing the user to hit c-a-d before they login proves that the login dialog is actually the system login dialog, and not some trojan somebody wrote to collect usernames and passwords.
Re:Ctrl-Alt-Del (Score:3, Interesting)
Okay, MS pulled the plug... What about vendors? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Okay, MS pulled the plug... What about vendors? (Score:3, Insightful)
Venders are more "bleeding-edge-to-make-money" oriented therefore they tend to concentrate on the newest technologies.
-Rob
Ummmm (Score:5, Funny)
7 years ago, it was kind of sad to see NT4 coming.
You have to hand it to Microsoft (Score:5, Insightful)
Contrast that with Red Hat for example, who are yanking support for their 'personal' operating systems 12 months from the time of their release. It's kind of sobering to think that Red Hat 8.0, 7.3, 7.2, 7.1 are end of lifed in six months from now and 9.0 a mere four months after that.
While this might save Red Hat money in the short term I have to wonder what impact it will have on customer confidence. Even assuming you bought it on the very day of release at best you get twelve months maximum of bug fixes, which isn't very much especially if you were planning on deploying it. If some horrible exploit is discovered ten months from now you're screwed. You might appeal to the community to produce an updated patch, but you still forfeit any QA testing or automated RHN update that you would have gotten before.
But let's face it, only a small fraction of people would be aware of or bother to manually plug new exploits anyway. With time a burgeoning number of exploitable RH boxes will become a prime target for crackers. Too bad for them you say, but often those cracked boxes are used to launch attacks and are therefore a danger to everyone. Look at Microsoft's reputation concerning security of their operating systems and wonder if Red Hat's end of life policy will mean the same for them.
Re:You have to hand it to Microsoft (Score:3, Informative)
Contrast that with Red Hat for example, who are yanking support for their 'personal' operating systems 12 months from the time of their release. It's kind of sobering to think that Red Hat 8.0, 7.3, 7.2, 7.1 are end of lifed in six months from now and 9.0 a mere four months after that.
While this might save Red Hat money in the short term I have to wonder what impact it will have on customer confidence. Even assuming you bought it on the very day of release at best you get twelve months maximum of bug fixe
Re:You have to hand it to Microsoft (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, but some people actually buy Red Hat software. You know, actually put down money on the counter of Frys or wherever in exchange for a boxed set. They're in the same boat as people who've downloaded the OS. If I bought ten boxes to deploy somewhere I would be mighty upset if I got ten months of support for my troubles.
Re:You have to hand it to Microsoft (Score:3, Informative)
RedHat's policy is that if you want 5 years of support, buy a copy of enterprise Linux [redhat.com], otherwise upgrade your O/S every year. Simple.
The nice part about Linux is you aren't locked into one vendor. If you don't like it, run Debian or SuSE or something else!
Red Hat's philosophy is different... (Score:3, Informative)
Red Hat's end-of-life-cycle comes about for maintaining packages that were in the base installation of the product. However, their subscription package (primary service via RHN) allows custom
Kind of sad? (Score:3, Funny)
Hmm, you haven't actually used NT4 lately, have you? =)
USB Errors (Score:3, Insightful)
For awhile it looked like MS would do the samething with USB2 to force people to upgrade from Win2K to XP. But yesterday they released Win2K SP4 to include a USB2.0 driver.
Okay, tar and feather me, but . . . . (Score:4, Interesting)
Yeah, NT is not *nix. Yeah, NT isn't a lot of things. But I've worked with it since SP1, and, you know, once you get used to it, you can get a lot of productivity out of it. So much depends on drivers and, of course, program code. These days, NT lacks some refinement. So does Linux, for that matter. Nonetheless, after 6 1/2 service packs, NT delivered (and continues to deliver) a fair amount of bang for your hardware buck. In some ways, it is refreshing to use a product that is not weighed down with useless features. Our remaining NT servers, running on Compaq Proliant 1600 hardware, are fine producers. And contrary to myth, they do NOT have to be rebooted every day, every week, or even every month. This isn't a Microsoft ad - - I'm leading the charge away from MS products at my company. But I will give some credit where it's due.
No support for Windows 98 OEM either (Score:3, Insightful)
The ones i've found:
Windows Media Player 9
Novell ZENworks for Desktops Management Agent (this REALLY sucks since we're deploying ZFD at our company)
Acrobat Reader 6
Solidworks 2003 Viewer
I'm sure there are many others. A disturbing trend, to be sure. There is actually a workaround to get the ZFDMA working on 98 OEM machines without using the installer, but it's an ugly hack and can't really be automated.
Hitting a Wall (Score:3, Insightful)
This dropping of OSes is just going to cause a pain for support techs and admins dealing with these systems. You can't run anything newer on them without a hardware upgrade, but you can't get anything updated for the old OS, either. Software vendors drop their support as soon as M$ does, not because they are sheeple, but because they know it'll just cause problems. Want to install IE 5.5 on Win95? Good luck finding it. (you can, but not at M$) Want to install the latest Adobe, or MSN, or etc? Nope. And it'll just get worse.
I realize the push to deprecate OSes is for good reasons. They want to get rid of OSes that are buggy and insecure (ok, good call) and they want to push for new hardware in the market and keep sales running. Good ideas in the long run, but there has to be someplace where people just stop buying because it doesn't make sense to keep upgrading. (which I think we're starting to see now)
Won't make a shread of difference... (Score:3, Interesting)
Hell, I know of one deployment of NT3.51 still being supported by a 3rd party!
They just don't get it, do they? (Score:5, Insightful)
This is where MS *always* makes it greatest mistake. They desire to become respected in the Enterprise market, yet these idiots cannot put a leash on their marketing department.
Hint to Microsoft: If you want to be taken seriously, stop changing your OS's willy-nilly. IBM supports OS's and hardware for years after they've gone past their prime. Why? Because their customers still use them. Businesses are built using your software as a tool to get work done. Now just because you decide that hammers are out of vogue, you cannot force everybody to switch over to pneumatic nail-guns. This "ok, ok, ok, we're serious now. We've come up with a great new way to do X" shit has got to stop. DDE, OLE, OCX, ActiveX, COM, DCOM, COM+.
You know, it is possible to run a network with their tools (quiet down, I work for people who have made this decision and pay me to implement it), but for cryin' out loud, business processes change slowly if at all and once that you realize that marketing won't sway established systems to change at the drop of a hat, the sooner that you will find customers that will stick with you for the long haul.
That is until you get greedy and start gouging on licenses...
NT4 was what made me switch to Unix admin (Score:3, Insightful)
Here's a Kleenex (Score:3, Funny)
You need a pet.
Slander and chunks (Score:3, Interesting)
THIS IS WHY SCO SUED IBM
That Microsoft would pull Windows NT 4.0 this or next year has been known for well more than a year. This has been one of Linux zealots' (like me) greatest argument why not move from WinNT to Win03/04, but rather upgrade to a Linux system!
So, in my cold cellar, I have had this vision of Microsoft and SCO executives meeting in high fashion bars and nightclubs in Rio, Monte Carlo, Singapore, and elsewhere to discuss how to kill Linux the best, as otherwise it may well take over a too large chunk of the market when NT is terminated. (If the chunk is large enough, there may well be a fearsome snowball effect) The answer was, however, easy - Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt. The reward for the SCO executives, apart from a few more drinks that night? Well, yes, a bright, rich future at any position in the Microsoft controlled sphere perhaps? Who knows.
Yes, I do believe in my nightmares at times.
Re:Its about time... (Score:2)
Eh? There is no official USB support for NT4 in any service pack. A few peripherals come with a ground up USB implementation for that specific bit of hardware. I seem to recall there is a third party add on that costs money and supports a very limited amount of hardware.
Re:Its about time... (Score:2)
Re:Its about time... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Even more Microsoft sympathy? (Score:2, Insightful)
Some of us actually have to administer a Windows Network, or at the very least know whats going on in the Windows world.
Altp.
What a patronizing dweeb. (Score:3, Insightful)
It is no suprise to most here that poor behavior from any supplier, be it Microsoft, Sun, SCO, IBM, Redhat, etc., is not desirable. It has nothing to do with Microsofts "cause", but a few AC's, being part of that majority which automatically takes for granted what is handed to them by the mainstream, continue to try to make topics that present alternative analyses and experiences look like monochrome religious causes.
NT was one of the first efforts by Microsoft to create a real operating system acknowledg
Re:Cross-platform (Score:2)
Re:Cross-platform (Score:3, Informative)
PPC, Alpha, x86, MIPS
Re:How many will turn to Linux for their file serv (Score:3, Informative)
We did that during the Win2k era. I inherited a sprawling suburb of fiefdoms on NT domains. I set everybody up under the same roof, and migrated them to a single linux PDC, with a dedicated file server. This was back when the PDC software for Samba was still a bit rough around the edges. It was risky, but here I am in 2003, and it's still working.
Since then the Samba system has moved through 3 versions of RedHat, a ref
Re:As a professional and (former) NT only shop (Score:3, Insightful)