Comment Re:Wrong answers (Score 1) 139
You havent read that fortune about how building something idiot-proof makes it only usable by idiots, have you?
I agree 100% with making software more secure right out of the box (the current state, where you install an OS and it inmediatly opens all services know to man at the minimum level of security possible is awfully stupid), and to strive to make software easier to admin, but going from there to absolute no need of trained & skilled personnel, is too much.
NO default will ever be good enough for everyone, NO "easy to use, no need to admin" system is going to be secure over time, no matter what. We have as big as a problem with "fool-proof", "intuitive" things that arent secure and/or flexible enough that with the complexity and absurdly difficult tasks of updating, configuring and understanding all that there is to know to be a good admin. Look at Windows for an example
Keep it simple, but not THAT simple!