Of course the tragic thing about all this is, most network professionals won't have experience of RM CC, given its exclusivity to academia (and probably a small market percentage at that,) so by schools insisting on getting staff with CC knowledge, they're blocking out loads of possible network professionals from getting a job they're capable of doing, and who could probably replace RM CC with a cheaper and easier solution anyway! Novell is dead simple to lock- down effectively, in my experience. All students have 'user' rights, not 'power user' like some of the staff, and the student container's workstation profile is locked down hard, whereas the staff one isn't. On 6 Nov 2004 at 8:25, Grainge, Derek wrote:
CC3 is Campus Connect - RM's version of Microsoft networking, as modified by them. It includes things like building menus into the network card boot prom, or modifying the boot version of windows on the local drive so you get menus appearing before login; and access to software is menu controlled.
Given it's all MS-related it's not surprising to see IIS popping up....
-----Original Message----- From: Paul Sutton [mailto:zen14920@zen.co.uk] Sent: 05 November 2004 19:27 To: suse schools Subject: [suse-linux-uk-schools] RM CC3 NETWORK
Hi
Just seen a job advertised for an ICT network technician, one of the requirements is a knowledge of RM CC3, could someone please fill me in on what this is, I did go a google search, and did not really find very useful information.
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