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1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1"?>
2<!DOCTYPE preface PUBLIC "-//Samba-Team//DTD DocBook V4.2-Based Variant V1.0//EN" "http://www.samba.org/samba/DTD/samba-doc">
3
4<preface lang="en-US">
5<title>Foreword</title>
6
7<sect1><title>By John M. Weathersby, Executive Director, OSSI</title>
8<blockquote>
9
10<para>
11The Open Source Software Institute (OSSI) is comprised of representatives from a broad spectrum of business and
12non-business organizations that share a common interest in the promotion of development and implementation
13of open source software solutions globally, and in particular within the United States of America.
14</para>
15
16<para>
17The OSSI has global affiliations with like-minded organizations. Our affiliate in the United Kingdom is the
18Open Source Consortium (OSC). Both the OSSI and the OSC share a common objective to expand the use of open source
19software in federal, state, and municipal government agencies; and in academic institutions. We represent
20businesses that provide professional support services that answer the needs of our target organizational
21information technology consumers in an effective and cost-efficient manner.
22</para>
23
24<para>
25Open source software has matured greatly over the past five years with the result that an increasing number of
26people who hold key decisionmaking positions want to know how the business model works. They
27want to understand how problems get resolved, how questions get answered, and how the development model
28is sustained. Information and communications technology directors in defense organizations, and in other
29government agencies that deal with sensitive information, want to become familiar with development road-maps
30and, in particular, seek to evaluate the track record of the mainstream open source project teams.
31</para>
32
33<para>
34Wherever the OSSI gains entrance to new opportunities we find that Microsoft Windows technologies are the 
35benchmark against which open source software solutions are measured. Two open source software projects
36are key to our ability to present a structured and convincing proposition that there are alternatives
37to the incumbent proprietary means of meeting information technology needs. They are the Apache Web Server
38and Samba.
39</para>
40
41<para>
42Just as the Apache Web Server is the standard in web serving technology, Samba is the definitive standard
43for providing interoperability with UNIX systems and other non-Microsoft operating system platforms. Both
44open source applications have a truly remarkable track record that extends for more than a decade. Both have
45demonstrated the unique capacity to innovate and maintain a level of development that has not only kept
46pace with demands, but, in many areas, each project has also proven to be an industry leader.
47</para>
48
49<para>
50One of the areas in which the Samba project has demonstrated key leadership is in documentation. The OSSI
51was delighted when we saw the Samba Team, and John H. Terpstra in particular, release two amazingly
52well-written books to help Samba software users deploy, maintain, and troubleshoot Windows networking
53installations. We were concerned that, given the large volume of documentation, the challenge to maintain
54it and keep it current might prove difficult.
55</para>
56
57<para>
58This second edition of the book, <emphasis>Samba-3 by Example</emphasis>, barely one year following the release
59of the first edition, has removed all concerns and is proof that open source solutions are a compelling choice.
60The first edition was released shortly following the release of Samba version 3.0 itself, and has become
61the authoritative instrument for training and for guiding deployment.
62</para>
63
64<para>
65I am personally aware of how much effort has gone into this second edition. John Terpstra has worked with
66government bodies and with large organizations that have deployed Samba-3 since it was released. He also
67worked to ensure that this book gained community following. He asked those who have worked at the coalface
68of large and small organizations alike, to contribute their experiences. He has captured that in this book
69and has succeeded yet again. His recipe is persistence, intuition, and a high level of respect for the people
70who use Samba.
71</para>
72
73<para>
74This book is the first source you should turn to before you deploy Samba and as you are mastering its
75deployment. I am proud and excited to be associated in a small way with such a useful tool. This book has
76reached maturity that is demonstrated by reiteration that every step in deployment must be validated.
77This book makes it easy to succeed, and difficult to fail, to gain a stable network environment.
78</para>
79
80<para>
81I recommend this book for use by all IT managers and network administrators.
82</para>
83
84</blockquote>
85
86</sect1>
87
88</preface>
89