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On Thu, 17 Feb 2000, John Chambers,,,781-647-1813 wrote: > Hmmm ... I'd think the opposite conclusion should follow. Most of our > experience so far is that computer system designed to corporate > standards require a great many people around to administer to them. I agree that they're needed. I suspect that the corporate entities as a whole (as distinct from the people within them) are not smart enough to realize this. In today's world, if the systems break and the MSCE button-pushers can't figure it out, the corporation is at a serious competitive disadvantage. If they were to start fresh (scrap the systems, blame and fire the current crop of drones, buy new systems and hire new drones), the cost would put them out of business. In the world of draconian homogenization, though, other corporations are in the same situation. At the level of the individual you'd see everyone suffering; but if the corporate forces have won a complete victory, then the individual is powerless to fight the system. Hmm, it almost sounds like I'm describing the world of "The Matrix", with these corporate entities in the role ascribed to the Machines in the movie. -- John Abreau / Executive Director, Boston Linux & Unix Email: jabr at blu.org / URL: http://www.blu.org ICQ#28611923 / AIM abreauj ----------------------------------------------------------------------- "Working with NT is like trying to tune a watch wearing oven mitts. You can't get your fingers inside like you can with UNIX. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- - Subcription/unsubscription/info requests: send e-mail with "subscribe", "unsubscribe", or "info" on the first line of the message body to discuss-request at blu.org (Subject line is ignored).
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