the whole cake
Well-Known Member
Quit flaming me.
Dude your attitude about linux and any system involving the linux kernel is overwhelming. We do not want to hear about how you think it appears to people.
Now I have worked in secure enterprise environments. The only OSes that arent developed in-house are things like red hat or suse or systems based on those. Usually desktop OSes arent even involved. Almost everything is headless and accessed via terminals. Windows is a desktop operating system. The majority of critical infrastructure systems arent desktops. In short - the world runs on command line
There is a huge industry surrounding securing and rating software for military and/or critical environments. Look at ASOS for example.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trusted_Computer_System_Evaluation_Criteria
In short - the whole 'zomg end users wont know how to use it cos its not windows ahhh' thing is just flame. Seriously TH take it to another thread. I already know all about this stuff.
Dude your attitude about linux and any system involving the linux kernel is overwhelming. We do not want to hear about how you think it appears to people.
Now I have worked in secure enterprise environments. The only OSes that arent developed in-house are things like red hat or suse or systems based on those. Usually desktop OSes arent even involved. Almost everything is headless and accessed via terminals. Windows is a desktop operating system. The majority of critical infrastructure systems arent desktops. In short - the world runs on command line
There is a huge industry surrounding securing and rating software for military and/or critical environments. Look at ASOS for example.
Have a look at all the orange book stuffThe Army Secure Operating System (ASOS) is a family of operating systems intended to serve the tactical needs of the US Army. It currently comprises two systems designed to be certifiable to classes C2 and A1 of the DoD Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria (TCSEC). Both operating systems provide a common user interface, support real-time applications written in Ada, and are configurable and easily portable to alternate hardware architectures. A brief overview of the development is presented, including a description of the hardware/software architecture, the current status of the project, and a review of lessons learned during the three year development
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trusted_Computer_System_Evaluation_Criteria
In short - the whole 'zomg end users wont know how to use it cos its not windows ahhh' thing is just flame. Seriously TH take it to another thread. I already know all about this stuff.