Pascal,
Thanks again for your well articulated comments and you did represent what I was trying to say very well...
As always, your comments hit the problem squarely on the head....
......
Jaded,
As for the whole virtual domain/IPNat issues.... Well, lets just say I disagree completely.... There is no reason why configuring a Mac OS-X workstation for IPNat should not be point-and-click easy.. Yes there are things that need to be explained, such as private address space, etc.....
I.E:
Enable IPNat? O yes O no
What ip addresses do you want to allow access to the Internet from you LAN
(appropriate easy-to-use selection method)
As for virtual domains, it could be just as easily explained and managed.. And YES, I definately think that Mac users should have access to this..
Remember: OS-X is competing with Windows 2000 *AND* Unix...
It needs to be easier to use the Windows while providing the power of UNIX.... And if it doesn't, it is not going to impress UNIX people and it's not going to impress Mac people....
Right now, if you want to use the features of OS-X that make it competitive to Windows 2000 you have to resort to UNIX....... And it's not a particularly great UNIX when compared to others that have been around for a very long time (although being built on BSD helped a great deal)....
So yes, it's beta... I realize that... But, it's also not as easy to use as NT (when one attempts to utilize competitve features) - to say nothing of MacOS, and it's definately not on the level of say a Sun 1000 workstation..
Casually dismissing these features as something a "mother would not want to do anyways" is what the problem really is..... Apple did it, you are doing it, and so far it looks like thousands of other people are too....
Yes, it's a tall order.... Yes, it's a lot of work.. Yes, it needs to be done.....
- Greg
P.S. THis is exactly what has me aggravated right now... How I read so many posts about "this doesn't need to be in the GUI" or "why would Mac users want to do that?"... It's just not a good argument to make when OS-X is suppose to be everything that MacOS was with the benefits that come with UNIX... This mind-set has got to change if anyone expects OS-X to garner the hearts and minds of native Mac OS folks...
Thanks again for your well articulated comments and you did represent what I was trying to say very well...
As always, your comments hit the problem squarely on the head....
......
Jaded,
As for the whole virtual domain/IPNat issues.... Well, lets just say I disagree completely.... There is no reason why configuring a Mac OS-X workstation for IPNat should not be point-and-click easy.. Yes there are things that need to be explained, such as private address space, etc.....
I.E:
Enable IPNat? O yes O no
What ip addresses do you want to allow access to the Internet from you LAN
(appropriate easy-to-use selection method)
As for virtual domains, it could be just as easily explained and managed.. And YES, I definately think that Mac users should have access to this..
Remember: OS-X is competing with Windows 2000 *AND* Unix...
It needs to be easier to use the Windows while providing the power of UNIX.... And if it doesn't, it is not going to impress UNIX people and it's not going to impress Mac people....
Right now, if you want to use the features of OS-X that make it competitive to Windows 2000 you have to resort to UNIX....... And it's not a particularly great UNIX when compared to others that have been around for a very long time (although being built on BSD helped a great deal)....
So yes, it's beta... I realize that... But, it's also not as easy to use as NT (when one attempts to utilize competitve features) - to say nothing of MacOS, and it's definately not on the level of say a Sun 1000 workstation..
Casually dismissing these features as something a "mother would not want to do anyways" is what the problem really is..... Apple did it, you are doing it, and so far it looks like thousands of other people are too....
Yes, it's a tall order.... Yes, it's a lot of work.. Yes, it needs to be done.....
- Greg
P.S. THis is exactly what has me aggravated right now... How I read so many posts about "this doesn't need to be in the GUI" or "why would Mac users want to do that?"... It's just not a good argument to make when OS-X is suppose to be everything that MacOS was with the benefits that come with UNIX... This mind-set has got to change if anyone expects OS-X to garner the hearts and minds of native Mac OS folks...