Any detail in the WSJ article about the survey methods and what constitutes a security hole? Alan At 03:50 PM 5/17/2001 -0700, you wrote: >The problem with comparing linux to windows is that places too often compare >windows itself with no apps on it to an entire distro where 98% of all the >security holes get patched within minutes and the other 5 percent are games >or something else that really doesn't matter all the much for a server and >the are either not being supported or just tell people it will be fixed in >the next version. Meanwhile it shows up on the numbers as never being >patched bringing the avarage of everything else down. > If you you compare windows against just a very stripped down version of >linux so that you have equal functionality on both sides, I would bet the >linux would come with flying colors, or compare a windows machine loaded >with all the server software and other programs and all the bugs and >security holes that machines has to an equivenent machine running linux and >the security holes that goes with that machine. I would bet that linux >still comes out on top. > >It's really not fair when you have to factor in holes for multiple versions >of software that can't even run at the same time (sendmail, postfix, >wu-ftpd, proftpd... etc etc) that often come with a distro. >Plus the fact that the often lump all security holes found in all distro in >the "linux" catagory, often times counting the same security hole more than >once. > >Brian Cluff - /------------------------------------------ |Alan Dayley www.adtron.com |Software Engineer 602-735-0300 x331 |ADayley@adtron.com | |Adtron Corporation |3710 E. University Drive, Suite 5 |Phoenix, AZ 85034 \-------------------------------------------