Those are the exact things that used to piss me off when installing/updating NT/2k servers. 35 hundred reboots and 4 hours later you might have a base install. Then apply the service packs, reboot some more. Then install software, reboot some more. What a freakin' nightmare! Every Linux server I built took exactly one reboot when the install finished. Software installation, configuration changes, and updates required exactly 0 reboots. Upgrading the kernel is the only exception which rarely if ever is needed in a corporate network environment.
And for those that complain about boot times on the dinky little PCs they should have to sit through all the reboots required to get an NT server up to date on a larger intel based server with a couple of SCSI cards and maybe a couple of onboard SCSI controllers with RAID arrays and tape drives attached. You're lucky if you are through all the BIOS checks in 10 minutes let alone waiting on the OS to load.
Then the arrogance of the software police showing up to collect the MS tax really made me happy. We were only several hundred thousand dollars short one year, and not even on purpose.
[ October 07, 2002: Message edited by: void main ]