Actually, there is little industrial need for multi-boot systems -- except maybe in educational labs. The main use is personal computing. Dual-booting is actually an inelegant hack dictated by poverty. However, heterogeneous networking is a *very* marketable skill. The problem is getting access to a heterogeneous network -- you have to be an idiot to give carte blanche access to a production network. Would there be any interest in replacing a Thursday meeting with a combination LAN bash and hands-on heterogeneous networking seminar? Maybe over a long weekend? We could cooperate with ASLUG and maybe get some corporate sponsorship. I'm writing a dissertation, but there's a lull right now so I can put in a few hours of committee time. > > The problem with a dual boot is that it stops the learning process. > It is > > far more instructive to accomplish the interaction between the linux > server > > & the NT server(samba/smb) - setting up the various network services > > (dns/dhcp/wins) on each and seeing how each handles clients > differently, > > using the Windows NT as a password server for the linux - i.e. - > merge the > > best of both worlds. > > > > Just a theory. > > > > Craig > > > > Um... I think that is after we get the dual boot to work......... > Actually what you say seems to be on the advanced side, and even > though appealing, I wonder if there is much market for such. > > Help me out here, what would you say? > > Keith > > -----Original Message----- > > From: plug-discuss-admin@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > > [mailto:plug-discuss-admin@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us]On Behalf Of Todd > > Hought > > Sent: Thursday, February 15, 2001 8:30 AM > > To: plug-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > > Subject: Re: NT5 dual boot > > > > > > Sometimes doing a install on multiple machines isnt really an option > > (resources, might be a production network, etc. etc.) and Since playing > > around with Samba's services and getting it just a little bit > > wrong can be > > catastrophic for a windows network. I did it once, it was ugly. > > But if you have th resources, play with having multiple machines > > if you can. > > It's quite fun to try out all the things that Linux can do really > > well, samba > > being one of them. > > -T > ---- > The process of setting up samba and authenticating against a windows NT > server is totally instructive - especially in terms of having a machine > account. Also, can be instructive on PAM, shares, etc. > > Microsoft DNS is extremely clumsy, but set it up to be a 'slave' > DNS server > and see what happens...it's very educational. I can tell you that I have a > number of computers around my house including some Macintosh computers and > having them all integrate - I'm using linux to host my HP LaserJet 4M and > having the Mac's and Windows computers print thru the linux box is an > entirely valuable education. All of my documents are stored on a Windows > 2000 computer and the Windows computers, Macintosh computers and linux > computers access that share. > > Having a dual boot computer would have prevented any of that laboratory > experimentation. When you can put together a decent enough system > for $600, > use a switch to share the keyboard, monitor & mouse, a dual-boot system > seems rather trivial. > > Craig