Windows 8 demo video parody
Lisa Kachold
lisakachold at obnosis.com
Mon Dec 31 11:29:03 MST 2012
I have to differ that Windows AD is the only directory management beast out
there worth using!
This is a matter of running a dumbed down OS; running systems that ensure
you don't need to know anything about the systems you support, and we have
all seen from the Microsoft example, that this is a dangerous and UNSTABLE
INSECURE development model.
The "least intellectual investment" philosophy started in the American
Public school systems, decried in the oft heard lament "Oh! Why do we have
to learn this?" and exploited by Microsoft and Apple, is not a good
business decision, but for some reason large companies continue to make
choices based on "ease of support" perhaps due to the small numbers of lazy
Americans who actually want to work for a living or be paid a great number
of frogpelts for nothing (all while Eastern Indians and Middle Easterners
queue up to take anything and everything that can be outsourced). Suddenly
MicroSnot AD becomes a very good economic choice.
There's:
389 Directory Server: http://directory.fedoraproject.org/wiki/Download
Apache Directory LDAP v3 compliant server http://directory.apache.org
FreeIPA is the upstream project for Redhat IPA, which is now bundled in
RHEL 6.2. There are plenty of production implementations of Redhat's IPA,
if you need specific references, Redhat can likely provide them to you. The
RHEL 6.2 package names for IPA are ipa-*.
GOsa² provides a powerful GPL'ed framework for managing accounts and
systems in LDAP databases. Using GOsa² allows system administrators to
easily manage users and groups, fat and thin clients, applications, phones
and faxes, mail distribution lists and many other parameters. In
conjunction with FAI (Fully Automatic Installation), GOsa² allows the
highly automated installation of preconfigured systems. GOsa² therefore
provides a single, LDAP-based point of administration for large and small
environments, thus making the administration of users and systems and all
related parameters manageable and easy. More info on
https://oss.gonicus.de/labs/gosa
... and a few more?
On Mon, Dec 31, 2012 at 10:56 AM, Michael Butash <michael at butash.net> wrote:
>
> On 12/31/2012 10:17 AM, Nathan England wrote:
>
>> Excellent points. I don't entirely believe 2000 was a bomb. But in all
>> reality, I don't know anyone that used it.
>>
>
> I've seen it used, and used it quite heavily at most environments I was at
> when still doing more systems stuff. 2003 was obviously much improved
> (xp+server stuff) and quickly became defacto, but for at time, it was good
> for passage out of the dark ages of 16bit os's.
>
>
> I saw it on a couple servers
>
>> and replaced it with linux on a few others. It wasn't horrible, but come
>> one! Windows ME on an NTOS kernel? I thought the frequent automatic
>> reboots were a "feature" so I did not have to manually reboot Windows
>> ME! Windows 2000 destroyed the only good "feature" Windows ME had!
>>
>
> Hah! Well like most I started life as a windoze guy, and my first
> experience with "servers" was using win2k server beta's for adventure in
> '99. I was rockin' AD before I'd ever had to futz with NT. Imagine my
> horror when I had to inherit some nt4 domains later!
>
> That said, I learned what DNS, DHCP, LDAP/Kerberos, and IIS were good for
> in windoze land, then later replaced them once I got familiar enough with
> linux. Learning how network services work under linux without some
> prerequisite knowledge is more than a bit daunting, so I was glad to have
> had exposure and understanding from windoze worlds.
>
> All in all, AD still has numerous advantages for directory management that
> simply cannot be _easily_ replaced in linux. 99% of times, I'll still see
> it paired with linux if for nothing else than authentication and user/group
> enumerations (likewise/centrify), and I'm fairly OK with that.
>
>
>> Nathan
>>
>>
> -mb
>
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