Originally posted by: mechBgon
I take it you don't manage an Active Directory domain? Even the jump from Win2000 Pro to WinXP Pro as the client OS is quite noticable in the dabbling I've done so far. Win9x/ME are an absolute no-go from a management standpoint.
Keep thinking merely as a home user, and keep looking at just the GUI, and maybe they will all keep appearing to be the same thing in fancier and fancier clothing. But that's a superficial viewpoint.
You managed an active directory with 95?
Thats a nice switch in topics. Servers and industrial grade software doesnt have much to do with Windows 95.
And real system administrators use Netware or Windows Server 2003 or similar to manage their network directorys.. not Windows 2000 or XP.
And besides since when did Netware not interact well with Windows 95?
You only brought up yet another shortcoming to upgrading your entire OS for menial things.
With MS, you upgrade from 2000 to XP for better network support (or so you stated). Netware just install the client software.
What you mention is yet another way MS forces people to upgrade, but the way they push corporations into doing it and other companys.
Want any new network admin software or features? Upgrade your servers and your desktops to the latest MS OS.. just for incremental changes.
In Active Directorys case, it was a push MS endured for years to catch up to Novell.
Netware client didnt require a whole new OS for this. Why does MS?
Shouldnt need to move to XP from 2000 as you said for easier management.. it doenst make sense at all besides to fill MS's coffers.
All we accomplished here was move from the way that MS pushes home users to move to the 'new' OS (hardware and software support, which amounts to about 1MB of additional coding by itself in many cases). To explain how they force corporations to move to new OS's.. easier/better network management.
Novell, for years.. without needing Windows 2008.. worked great from DOS to XP, just install a client. No special OS needed.
Win9x/ME are total "Go's" from a mangement standpoint once you remove your mindset from a MS centric world.
Theres no reason they can't be. Unless you demand on AD.
I personally dont like being locked on the MS platform myself, which is why I prefer Java or .net.
Write a program in java.. works on 95-XP. Write an app in .Net.. you need 2000 or newer.
Kinda nice that MS doesnt support programs written on their .Net platform doesnt work on all their OS's huh? Not really. Its about the money, which explains your ease of running your active directory on XP over 2000.. and needing Vista to play Wing Commander 10.
All these things are done to fill their coffers, adding firewire or support for DX11 in Win2000 is easy to do.
I'm sticking with my original premise on MS OSs- Progress to me means doing more with less. Not more with more.
Shouldnt require Windows XP to get good network management when Novell (and others, jsut using them as an example since I've taken courses here at the university in both Netware/Windows networking) has been doing it across all OS environments.. and MIXED environments for years!
Cutting W9x/ME support from networking is not progress.. Esp when your name is MS and you created those very OS's..