Linked by Brian Snipes on Sat 10th Apr 2004 07:28 UTC
Recently I got the opportunity to setup a new lab for a small school. The server runs Linux and the workstations run WindowsXP. There are 3 levels of access on the workstations (admin, teacher, and student) and security on the workstations is based on Windows policies applied at logon.
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I agree. I would willingly pay for a distro that had a nice admin utility for Windows and Linux (similiar to LDAPAdmin and NetWare Administrator). It would need to be able upon installation to join an existing system and provide login credentials on its own via its copy of the network directory - not by forwarding them to one master server. Administration of the system must be easier to make inroads in businesses. Webmin is full featured but NWAdmin beats most (if not all) utils for User and Group administration.
I agree. I would willingly pay for a distro that had a nice admin utility for Windows and Linux (similiar to LDAPAdmin and NetWare Administrator). It would need to be able upon installation to join an existing system and provide login credentials on its own via its copy of the network directory - not by forwarding them to one master server. Administration of the system must be easier to make inroads in businesses. Webmin is full featured but NWAdmin beats most (if not all) utils for User and Group administration.
Brian