This is a bit off-topic but the sort of news that appears on the list from time to time. It's about an article in "Computer Edge," a free weekly that's distributed in various offices of computer and network related corporations around Denver, Colorado, US. It is also dropped at newsstands around the Denver area, home of at least two large computer/networking corporate business parks that have been recieving much business that was formerly done in Silicon Valley (California) and Portland (Oregon). NORAD is also near here.
In the article, "Linux: Not Yet Corporate-Ready" (Robin Hohman), the author wrote "...that Linux needs to grow in three key areas..." "...scalability, security and applications." The author wrote that these are the areas that Linux needs to catch up to Windows NT and UNIX in before it will be accepted by corporations. The rest of the article went on to cite testimony from various networking "experts" as to Linux's shortcomings, showing a lack of knowledge in network systems and a willingness to defame it without such basic knowledge. There you have it--ignorance (and fear on the part of many MS "experts" is our worst enemy in some corporate circles. I've seen it firsthand while working contracts for businesses in the Denver Technology Center, i.e., new, complete images being reinstalled on NT servers at least once per week, other network operating systems of only 2 or 3 hundred workstations going down, on average, once per week... BTW, the same article cited another expert (Dr. Subo Guha) as saying that "ISPs are looking at using Linux for Web hosting,..." Well, ain't that some leading edge (or Computer Edge) news? I'm talking the very edge, man! Heh, heh,...bwahahahaha! It's time to attend some shows with Linux systems and conduct some surveys around Denver, isn't it? The Web address for the publication mentioned above is www.computoredge.com. Art