Editor's Forum
Web servers span a range as wide as UNIX itself. Slick
commercial
bundles of hardware and software reside at one end of
the spectrum,
anxiously waiting to plug you and your organization
into the joys of the
electronic global village - for a price, of course.
Huddled at the
opposite end of the spectrum are the freeware alternatives
- solutions
that for the most part cost only time, patience and
a few extra grey
hairs. Which end of the spectrum seems most attractive
to you will
largely depend on the nature of your requirements and
the size of your
budget. Our October theme articles examine some of the
issues relating
to building Web servers in what might be called the
low-rent district,
along with a variety of related concerns. You will also
see continuing
discussions of Web-related topics in the upcoming months.
Web
technologies are moving too rapidly to restrict our
coverage of the
topic to one or two issues per year.
If you have not already implemented a Web server for
your organization,
you probably will in the near future. The Web is a technology
that has
caught the imaginations of individuals and businesses
alike with an
almost unparalleled force. The Web is here to stay.
Similar to a strange
substance growing in a petri dish, however, its shape
and color are
likely to change. It is this evolution of the Web that
will probably
generate the greatest challenges for you.
As system administrators, your task in the coming months
(and years)
will be not only to implement rapidly evolving technologies
at a
breakneck pace, but also to put those technologies into
some form of
long-range system architecture that makes sense administratively.
The
road ahead certainly has its share of potholes. Your
management may
assume that you will fill the potholes along the way,
making for a
smooth organizational ride. Interestingly, however,
much of the stuff
needed to fill the potholes, such as robust security
solutions and a
rational national encryption policy, is yet to be invented.
In the
meantime, you will need to find some virtual pothole
filler to keep your
systems (and your organization) from breaking a figurative
axle.
One of the challenges facing system administrators along
this road will
be to maintain a sense of perspective while being prodded
by unrealistic
project schedules. In some respects, the Web can be
likened to a pop
singer - an instant success after only thirty years
in the business.
Another view might be that the Web is the Internet after
a makeover. A
new hair style and professionally applied makeup, but
still more
wrinkles underneath than we might want to admit. Those
wrinkles
constitute the underlying culture of the Internet, a
culture that is not
wholly consistent with the current business-centered
Web glitz. How
these forces will resolve themselves over the next several
years is
unclear. What is not unclear, however, is that your
task will be to keep
the systems running, performing core operational tasks
well, regardless
of the outcome of the culture clash.
Sincerely yours,
Ralph Barker
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