Eventually everyone is forced to upgrade to the latest offerings from M$. Some are dragged kicking and screaming, while others leap before others dare.
W2k is a grown up OS, it offers many new facilites/services such as AD, but these require considerable planning and management.
There are deployment, planning and operations guides available from MS.
Even on an NT4 network, no BDC is a bit dangerous as you risk losing everything, but for 10 users it is hard to justify the cost so you have to weigh up downtime vs productivity etc.
Why does your Ops manager want to upgrade, what extra functionality is he looking for?
I would suggest that you get him to get the W2k MCSE certification before you agree to implement AD.
Of course there is nothing that is forcing you to have a domain at all (although it is a bit limiting). You can install a W2k server in a workgroup as a standalone server and use the local account policy of that server to manage these users as peers. You could install printers, file shares and with terminal services implemented, install client apps so that people can dial into the server from home.
With no backup server, you will need a good backup system and tested disaster recovery plan.
I always make my servers dual boot with a duplicate image of W2kServer, so in the event of a software failure you can at least get the server back up quickly.
Hope this helps
AJ
Eventually everyone is forced to upgrade to the latest offerings from M$. Some are dragged kicking and screaming, while others leap before others dare.
W2k is a grown up OS, it offers many new facilites/services such as AD, but these require considerable planning and management.
There are deployment, planning and operations guides available from MS.
Even on an NT4 network, no BDC is a bit dangerous as you risk losing everything, but for 10 users it is hard to justify the cost so you have to weigh up downtime vs productivity etc.
Why does your Ops manager want to upgrade, what extra functionality is he looking for?
I would suggest that you get him to get the W2k MCSE certification before you agree to implement AD.
Of course there is nothing that is forcing you to have a domain at all (although it is a bit limiting). You can install a W2k server in a workgroup as a standalone server and use the local account policy of that server to manage these users. You could install printers, file shares and with terminal services implemented, install client apps so that people can dial into the server from home.
I always make my servers dual boot with a duplicate image of W2kServer, so in the event of a software failure you can at least get the server back up quickly.
Hope this helps
AJ