Don Harrop wrote: > > All the Unicies share a lot in common. Most of my background is with > Linux flavors but recently I've been interviewing for a job as an HP-UX > admin so I've been playing around with it to see the differences. Not > many in my opinion. Why people are demanding 3+ years experience in any > specific flavor of Unix (Solaris, HP-UX, Linux, whatever) just seems > stupid to me. They're not THAT different. Well, for admin jobs anyways.. As a guess, right off hand, I would bet its because many of the problems users run into may be very related to the hardware itself. For example, resolving the cause of a problem with a hard disk will most likely lead the admin down very different paths when you compare a Linux box with a Solaris box. On the other hand, someone with strictly solaris experience might have zero experience setting up BIOS on a PC. For programmers, it doesnt make that much difference, your right. But for admins, who's job is often to fix the mistakes made inteligent people (like programmers for example) who are capable of making REAL mistakes and not "the mouse isnt plugged in" mistakes, hardware level experience is probably quite critical. If nothing else, it certainly makes a huge difference in how quickly problems are resolved, as the "ive seen this before" factor often changes a 5 hour diagnosis into a 5 minute one. -- jkenner @ mindspring . com__ I Support Linux: _> _ _ |_ _ _ _| Working Together To <__(_||_)| )| `(_|(_)(_| To Build A Better Future. |