Still pondering whether to buy Windows 2000? There are a billion reasons why you should not wait.
Just Get It
Still pondering whether to buy Windows 2000? There are a billion reasons why you should not wait.
Auntie and Fabio don’t do Winter very well. By this point,
we’ve looted the survival shelter of all the beluga and
smoked oysters, we’re tired of the pretentious petit syrah
we stocked up on in November, and we’ve decided that Martha
Stewart is an unmistakable harbinger of the apocalypse
we didn’t have on January 1.
It’s a good thing Microsoft pushed Windows 2000’s release
back to now. At a basic, instinctive level, you know that
Win2K is fun. It comes with all sorts of new tools, features,
and architectural components. It doesn’t crash as often
as Windows NT (I ran Release Candidates on non-HCL systems
for months without a single bluescreen). It’s more manageable.
And, you can bill more than the GNP of many nations migrating
your customers to it.
So listen carefully: BUY WINDOWS 2000 PRO AND SERVER
NOW.
If you haven’t gotten under the hood of this OS yet,
you’re far behind the curve. Thousands of MCPs have been
working with Win2K since Beta 1 was released some time
during, I believe, the Carter administration. Betas and
Release Candidates were so easy to come by that our cat
received three copies of RC2, with a personal note from
Steve Ballmer.
Buy Win2K because it’s your livelihood. The time will
come when Microsoft totally pulls the rug out from under
NT—no support, no bug fixes, no nada. You must get to
know Win2K. For one thing, your certification will depend
on it. For another, your employer or customers won’t stay
on NT forever. Finally, migrating an organization to Win2K
is such a finicky task that you can’t get away with just
learning about it from a book. If you don’t have hands-on
time with Win2K, you can’t learn enough about it to migrate
to or administer it effectively.
If you were a good student, you could learn enough about
NT to get by on the job until you could round out your
skill set. Win2K is more complex by an order of magnitude.
Don’t even begin to develop migration strategies until
you’ve worked with it on a test LAN for a couple of months.
See how it behaves. See what happens to your bandwidth
when you implement all those nice new features in the
OS. How much of a hit are you prepared to accept in exchange
for implementing IPSec? Program components that don’t
load until the first time they’re used are a nice concept,
but how will users react? Can you create coherent policies
in an organization where business policies change every
time the company’s stock drops? And what do you with that
custom 16-bit inventory application?
If designing an NT organizational structure was a two-dimensional
exercise, architecting a Win2K org is an adventure in
multidimensional geometry, and there ain’t no Vulcan science
officer or perky yeoman to help you come up with useful
plans for all those namespaces. The only way to successfully
master this OS is to live it, breathe it, eat it, and
sleep it.
So you might as well have fun while you’re absorbing
it all. Just remember; the more you know about Win2K,
the more you’ll be in demand, and the better your personal
bottom line will be. Isn’t that why you became an MCP
in the first place?
About the Author
Em C. Pea, MCP, is a technology consultant, writer and now budding nanotechnologist who you can expect to turn up somewhere writing about technology once again.