Lemme guess... those same folks are die-hard Netscape fans, too? Am I right?
A couple things.
(1)
Check statistics on hacks. See which OS is hacked the most.
Every OS gets hacked, has holes, and needs to be patched regularly to secure infrastructures.
(2)
IIS is the 400-pound gorilla.
In school, we learned networking on Novell's NetWare, and any webserver stuff I was lucky enough to experience was Apache. Care to guess how many times I've ever used that? Not once.
is where you get Chili!ASP for Apache (and other webservers), but teaching a student on another piece of software other than the one that is used in the VAST majority of companies for networking (IMHO) is just doing them a disjustice.
In my case, I studied theory and worked through hypothetical problems on paper and in the classroom, but when it came time to get down to some hands-on application, I really wish that we had worked with Microsoft products. It would have made my transition into the working world much easier.
Really, it's a symptom of the "working man" syndrome in academia, and the general loathing of "corporate america" that leads to this shunning of the most popular products in today's economy. I guess I can see the basic drive of the movement, but just disagree wholeheartedly with the application of it.
**kachink**