GNU/Linuxification

hi I am preparing to GNU/Linuxify my fathers business, is there anything i should be aware of? Cheers Andrew

hi
I am preparing to GNU/Linuxify my fathers business, is there anything i should be aware of?
If you're replacing his server, then not really. Samba will do everything you need for a windows domain controller. You can get clever and do things from LDAP, but it's not required for a basic system. If you're talking about his desktops, then be very careful that he doesn't have any custom windows applications that he relies on, or websites that require activeX controls. These may work via WINE, but test *before* you start any deployment. You'll almost definitely be changing office suites, so be prepared for the inevitable "I can't open Office 2007 documents" type of question. In general, users resist change. There's always exceptions, but be prepared for people resisting the change ("it used to work like XYZ, why can't it do that now?" "Can't we have the old system back?" etc). Plan some decent training and set aside time to do it. If the office suite / web browser / email client you're planning on moving them to has windows versions (eg, like openoffice, firefox and thunderbird do), then consider moving people onto these applications first, perhaps one application at a time, and then changing the OS later.

I am rather lucky that I have moved them to open office about 12 months ago with only minor headaches(and it can open office 2007) (it was actually this move that lead to the linuxification in the first place, and a guts full of windows being crap) as far as weird software goes there is just heaps, but for the time being those machines are field instruments and will be keeping windows, do tools exist for importing emails etc from exchange/outlook express to linux mail clients? Cheers Andrew On Sun, Jun 21, 2009 at 4:55 PM, Daniel Lawson <daniel(a)meta.net.nz> wrote:
hi
I am preparing to GNU/Linuxify my fathers business, is there anything i should be aware of?
If you're replacing his server, then not really. Samba will do everything you need for a windows domain controller. You can get clever and do things from LDAP, but it's not required for a basic system.
If you're talking about his desktops, then be very careful that he doesn't have any custom windows applications that he relies on, or websites that require activeX controls. These may work via WINE, but test *before* you start any deployment.
You'll almost definitely be changing office suites, so be prepared for the inevitable "I can't open Office 2007 documents" type of question.
In general, users resist change. There's always exceptions, but be prepared for people resisting the change ("it used to work like XYZ, why can't it do that now?" "Can't we have the old system back?" etc). Plan some decent training and set aside time to do it.
If the office suite / web browser / email client you're planning on moving them to has windows versions (eg, like openoffice, firefox and thunderbird do), then consider moving people onto these applications first, perhaps one application at a time, and then changing the OS later. _______________________________________________ wlug mailing list | wlug(a)list.waikato.ac.nz Unsubscribe: http://list.waikato.ac.nz/mailman/listinfo/wlug

2009/6/21 Andrew Crosby <electrogeek(a)gmail.com>
I am rather lucky that I have moved them to open office about 12 months ago with only minor headaches(and it can open office 2007) (it was actually this move that lead to the linuxification in the first place, and a guts full of windows being crap) as far as weird software goes there is just heaps, but for the time being those machines are field instruments and will be keeping windows, do tools exist for importing emails etc from exchange/outlook express to linux mail clients?
Evolution (from Ubuntu 9.04) can automatically connect to Exchange Servers. Thurderbird can import from Outlook (IIRC, a google should confirm this) -- simon
participants (3)
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Andrew Crosby
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Daniel Lawson
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Simon Green