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Thread: Why Linux Will Or Won't subtract

  1. #1
    Philip Pierson is offline Senior Member
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    Default Why Linux Will Or Won't subtract

    Linux is a strange animal, I played with and off-topic after 2001. It's back to the hard to use evil in the world for simple to use and does not correspond to a part of the world. It was always nice stable and flexible. It has always been excluded from "works" with the consent of not having things integrated business. What do you all say about this? What is your opinion on this?

  2. #2
    Eugene Jovita is offline Senior Member
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    Server systems, not desktop systems are very luxurious, and is often quite difficult to handle, even with all the fancy graphics tools. I use Windows NT Server 4 and my company is on its second series of Small Business Server (SBS 2003 in 2005 and stirred to SBS 2008 in 2009). In 2007, I tried to go to the Apple Leopard Server for recharging base and the confidence that the arrangements and Apple GUI management tools will be easier than Microsoft.

  3. #3
    Konrad Egan is offline Senior Member
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    Linux is an opportunity here. SBS is extremely expensive, and the full versions of Windows Server are even more. The device was actually a lot cheaper than the operating system, and support for Dell customer agreement (an exceptional server support, among other things). Linux can do what I do with SBS? Possibly. I use the Exchange e-mail and calendar, and there is an open source Exchange server, which is a technique, but I'm sure there are quite a huge open-source e-mail and calendar servers out there.

  4. #4
    Dexter Jane is offline Senior Member
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    This is where Linux will triumph in department stores. Small businesses without IT resources and just a business owner who also manages the back office, is likely to remain with no server or in any way (peer-to-peer applications and online), or use a solution from Apple or Microsoft. Large companies, but with great budgets, is a habit for Linux, with its scalability, and absolute invariance of the license fees to zero, which on a per user can be in the millions of dollars to Microsoft .

  5. #5
    Janilla Donald is offline Senior Member
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    Office applications were treated with Citrix, the window of Windows in which users can not jack up. Remember to mention my technique a little 'back, I'd put it creates a way to make certain Windows boxes could be hurt? Yes, Citrix is able to do this. And, of course, Citrix, we have a persistence of the UNIX / Linux host, with a feature of the windows, not security.

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