Mercutio
Fatwah on Western Digital
Actually that could very well be a winner. I hadn't even looked at Silverstone. Most of its products would be well out of my price range.
Thanks for suggestions all.
Thanks for suggestions all.
I finally got the go-ahead to do new classroom systems. My older machines are nearly six now.
Surprisingly, the C2D E6300s I bought all that time ago are still perfectly adequate for everything that happens in our classrooms. At the time, I felt like I might have over-specified just for buying something that wasn't a Celeron, but the Celerons of 2006 were single-core slugs that I'm sure would never have lasted this long.
I only had to pull seven motherboards out of those machines during the six year span.
I had to replace five Antec PSUs. All of the ones that died are an unusual size and shape that was only found on the first generation Antec NSK3800 chassis. Not even one of the full size ATX PSUs used by the second generation version failed.
My problem is that hard drives are starting to die. They're failing to restore or requiring long disk checks after frequent crashes. The work I have to do in order to put a system back after a drive replacement is expensive and time consuming, since no one makes an automated deployment system that can handle triple-boot Windows installs.
So I need to figure out what I'm going to do for my next set of machines. I have a budget of about $550 per computer for hardware.
I know the people I work with would rather have all in one machines, but that's not going to happen.
ITX? I could probably swing that if I wanted. I'm not sure if I want to bother. I'd prefer that the computers be quiet or silent, and those aren't traits I associate with ITX-size traditional PSUs.
I'm tempted to ditch DVD drives, but some of our classes actually do use them, and technically some of my off-site classrooms are used for other sorts of instruction as well. I might be able to get away with USB optical drives but I'm afraid they'd get stolen.
SSD? Maybe? I know I'm going to need at least 160GB drives for these computers.
Would I be better off just using laptops? This is an idea I'm considering as well. They would be quiet, portable and certainly perform well enough at this point, but of course there are security and reliability concerns, particularly with inexpensive models.
The plan for these machines is to dual boot Windows 7 (and probably Windows 8, eventually) and to run VMs for XP and Vista - both of which are still necessary for our course offerings. Because of that, I suspect I'm going to be interested in extra CPU cores and RAM. I don't have a firm handle on whether or not I can get away with using VMware Player for my environment; I might need to use VirtualBox instead. I really want to get away from multiboot configurations, but I'm not sure I can get away from it.
Do you get paid on commission? :scratch:Does your class require a physical machine in front of each student? What I'm getting at is why couldn't you build a single ESX server to host all the student machines and provide hardware thin clients to access the VMs via RDC, PCoIP, etc? Then you can create templates for each OS type you need and just power off and power on the different OSs as you need them. No need for complicated multi-boot situations. No need to manage VMware player or VirtualBox on each system. Backups happen from the central location. If budget allows, build a second ESX setup in case one or requires maintenance.
Do you get paid on commission? :scratch:
I get sales calls from VMware sales once or twice a week, even though I've never paid for anything but VMware worstation and my IT budget doesn't even make a blip on their radar.
Do you get paid on commission? :scratch:
I'd love to do some kind of thin client system. It would make my life a zillion times easier. But no, it's not happening. Too much of our training works from the assumption that everyone has a local machine where they can store data and make individual, persistent changes.
Plus my boss doesn't even really understand the difference between say 3G and 802.11. I'd be explaining virtualized hardware three times a week from now to 2014.
Too bad you can't teach him the difference between, you know...stuff, and stuff.
This time you advanced 550$ each, but are we still talking about ~150 systems?The whole setup runs to a total of ~$580.
Anyway, I have at this point taught 122 kids to put these things together. I have 31 more kids to do. I'm thinking that 150 systems is a good number,...
Considering the amount of shit I got for wanting to have clients without CD burners, I'm not even going to try to make the case for thin clients.
CD burners are for retards. There are tools to make bootable USB sticks for all operating systems.
Apparently it's SOP when teaching rooms full of secretaries and mid-level managers Microsoft Office to save the files they make in class on CDs that they can take with them when they leave.
CD-Rs are $.15.
8GB USB keys are 5$ each.
CD-Rs are $.15.
You make up the difference in price per terminal and ease and flexibility of management.
I know the president of our company often bring investors/potential big customers to the servers' room where all the rackmounts are. I suspect that it's why my proposal of replacing their 75 servers with a 6 blade servers setup didn't pass ; it would look much less impressive during the company tour.
Any attempt to push a centralised server solution is vain then?
I advocate that less heat would be generated, giving us more time to react in case of a failure of the cooling system, but so far I haven't found an open ear.
I have the regret to announce you that you're working with retards. All of them. Look somwhere else and move on. Apply for mining companies (not coal). Pays well.