Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 6th Mar 2006 21:59 UTC, submitted by crispoe
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RE[2]: argument makes no sense
by rayiner on Mon 6th Mar 2006 22:53
in reply to "RE: argument makes no sense"
RE[3]: argument makes no sense
by someone on Mon 6th Mar 2006 23:01
in reply to "RE[2]: argument makes no sense"
RE[4]: argument makes no sense
by riha on Tue 7th Mar 2006 11:38
in reply to "RE[2]: argument makes no sense"
All Xserves we are selling are running macosX, if they would not run macosX, why even sell them an mac???
Having ssh and httpd is VERY common on servers. Or at least httpd, ssh could be setup in an secure way by using vpn or something, but it is pretty common with servers accesting ssh for their users.
RE[5]: argument makes no sense
by elsmob on Tue 7th Mar 2006 15:35
in reply to "RE[2]: argument makes no sense"





Member since:
2006-01-12
However, OS X is generally used as a desktop OS and not as a Server. Most real world systems don't have any services turned on by default and many are behind NAT routers. This *mimics* (it's already more wide open than most OS X systems) the real situations better.
OpenBSD would be a fine choice for a server, but I don't people are purchasing Macs to use them as servers.