[143687] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: How long is your rack?
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Charles N Wyble)
Sun Aug 14 20:36:45 2011
Date: Sun, 14 Aug 2011 19:36:00 -0500
From: Charles N Wyble <charles@knownelement.com>
To: nanog@nanog.org
In-Reply-To: <eca0dce862e3174879fe80b1005c610f@orthanc.ca>
Errors-To: nanog-bounces+nanog.discuss=bloom-picayune.mit.edu@nanog.org
On 08/14/2011 03:49 PM, Lyndon Nerenberg (VE6BBM/VE7TFX) wrote:
> I hope someone will explain the operational relevance
> of this ...
Small home compute centers/networks need care and feeding as well. I've
learned a lot from this thread. Things like common designs/layouts,
cooling, POE switches etc.
Can someone explain the operational relevance of the never ending v6
threads that are the EXACT SAME ARGUMENTS over and over and over again? :)
> Sun V100 FreeBSD firewall/border gateway
> Sun V100 Plan 9 kernel porting test bed
> Sun V100 OpenBSD build/test/port box
> Intel 8-core Solaris fileserver and zones host
> AMDx4 Random OS workstation crash box
> Epia-EK Plan 9 terminal
> MacBook x Snow Leopard build/test host
> Intel-mumble-ITX Win2K8.2 development host
> Supermicro XLS7A Plan 9 File server
> Supermicro XLS7A Plan 9 CPU/Auth server
> Sun V100 Oracle (blech) new-Solaris test/porting box
> Sun V100 crashbox for *BSD firewall failover tests
> Sun V100 *BSD ham radio stuff, plus Plan9 terminal
> kernal testing.
Sun is good stuff. I like "crash box". Is that like a scratch system?
> <sound-of-pants-zipping-up>
Hah
--
Charles N Wyble charles@knownelement.com @charlesnw on twitter
http://blog.knownelement.com
Building alternative,global scale,secure, cost effective bit moving platform
for tomorrows alternate default free zone.