Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Quote from: mk162 on December 20, 2012, 01:18:28 PMi checked the power usage of the server and the cooling fans for it. Servers are energy hogs.Sounds to me like you had something way over kill. My server is about as big as a tall coffee cup and draws near nothing for power.
i checked the power usage of the server and the cooling fans for it. Servers are energy hogs.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on December 20, 2012, 01:52:37 PMQuote from: mk162 on December 20, 2012, 01:18:28 PMi checked the power usage of the server and the cooling fans for it. Servers are energy hogs.Sounds to me like you had something way over kill. My server is about as big as a tall coffee cup and draws near nothing for power. Well, technically that isn't a "server"... that's a NAS at best.
Quote from: Gilligan on December 20, 2012, 05:46:22 PMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on December 20, 2012, 01:52:37 PMQuote from: mk162 on December 20, 2012, 01:18:28 PMi checked the power usage of the server and the cooling fans for it. Servers are energy hogs.Sounds to me like you had something way over kill. My server is about as big as a tall coffee cup and draws near nothing for power. Well, technically that isn't a "server"... that's a NAS at best.Ya man I dunno how it serves me web pages from anywhere in the world then. Or how it serves my files from to me from anywhere in the world. Or how it serves all our computers files. Or how it's actually got the term server in the product name at all. You certainly know more than HP and Microsoft, right? Haha
I'm sure given it's a real server he can also run AD, real DNS, terminal services, maybe he could opt to run Exchange on that server.
I go into many offices that label a box a server, but putting a fancy sticker on it doesn't do much for what it can do on the inside.I'm with Foo though... I'll stick to the *nix boxes for quasi servers if not all out full blown enterprise class ones. I am still having a hard time wrapping my head around why MS thinks it's necessary to run a full blown GUI on a "server" when one should never really be physically logging into it.
Quote from: Gilligan on December 21, 2012, 02:22:23 PMI'm sure given it's a real server he can also run AD, real DNS, terminal services, maybe he could opt to run Exchange on that server.I used to run Advanced Server on a $400 Compaq computer. I guess thats a "real server" by your standards. Listen I know the difference but the fact is anything that serves a file could really be qualified as a server.
Quote from: Gilligan on December 21, 2012, 02:22:23 PMI go into many offices that label a box a server, but putting a fancy sticker on it doesn't do much for what it can do on the inside.I'm with Foo though... I'll stick to the *nix boxes for quasi servers if not all out full blown enterprise class ones. I am still having a hard time wrapping my head around why MS thinks it's necessary to run a full blown GUI on a "server" when one should never really be physically logging into it.I will tell you why MS has a GUI and this is just 1 example. It's because secretaries with mild computer knowledge may get appointed to run a network or portion of it. When I attended school to get my MCSE I was often in class with several people from the company Eastman (Kodak). This company was notorious for being a company that promotes within and these people know windows desktops. They wouldn't know the first thing about any flavor of Nix or how to use it and you know it. Teaching them would glaze 99% of them over before the first break in class. But teaching them Active Directory, permissions, sharing, etc wasn't near as hard with a GUI for them. Doesn't make windows better, but in that circumstance it sure does.
Actually that is what I would call a quasi server... same software but not on enterprise class hardware therefor it's really not as stable as it should be to be called a true "server". FYI, I run a quasi server at my house and shop.QuoteSince you are the worlds for most expert know it all you should lobby for a definition change. I mean I have seen some enterprise stuff pretty unstable before, are those quasi servers too? The definition doesn't suggest it's stable or not, it suggests it's function. So you could make about anything be a server if you like. In fact you should be smart enough to know stability often comes from the load on it/number of users/what it is serving. A "server" serving files to the size of most of the shops here could be very stable with very little resources, and you know it. Quote from: Gilligan on December 21, 2012, 03:04:52 PMBut not a single one of those tools should be run from the server itself. You should be running those tools from another machine and connecting them to the server.Should be? People always do things they "should" right?Quote from: Gilligan on December 21, 2012, 03:04:52 PMWhich of course *nix has those exact same tools. If you can't teach them to run the tool in *nix, then you can't teach them to run it in windows either. I would also suggest that that statement is completely accurate. Those people likely had/have no business in those classes, and you know that.Of course nix does, but people don't do well always with change. I mean there are people that shouldn't screen print, embroider, run a business, walk in the street, or otherwise but they do. That's life.
Since you are the worlds for most expert know it all you should lobby for a definition change. I mean I have seen some enterprise stuff pretty unstable before, are those quasi servers too? The definition doesn't suggest it's stable or not, it suggests it's function. So you could make about anything be a server if you like. In fact you should be smart enough to know stability often comes from the load on it/number of users/what it is serving. A "server" serving files to the size of most of the shops here could be very stable with very little resources, and you know it. Quote from: Gilligan on December 21, 2012, 03:04:52 PMBut not a single one of those tools should be run from the server itself. You should be running those tools from another machine and connecting them to the server.Should be? People always do things they "should" right?Quote from: Gilligan on December 21, 2012, 03:04:52 PMWhich of course *nix has those exact same tools. If you can't teach them to run the tool in *nix, then you can't teach them to run it in windows either. I would also suggest that that statement is completely accurate. Those people likely had/have no business in those classes, and you know that.Of course nix does, but people don't do well always with change. I mean there are people that shouldn't screen print, embroider, run a business, walk in the street, or otherwise but they do. That's life.
But not a single one of those tools should be run from the server itself. You should be running those tools from another machine and connecting them to the server.
Which of course *nix has those exact same tools. If you can't teach them to run the tool in *nix, then you can't teach them to run it in windows either. I would also suggest that that statement is completely accurate. Those people likely had/have no business in those classes, and you know that.
<gun shot sound> And they're off!