Gizmo Turns Old PCs Into Linux-Based Thin Clients 32
An anonymous reader writes "LinuxDevices has published an article about the 'PC Reviver', a small device that replaces hard drives in aging computers with a solid-state flash memory drive that boots an embedded Linux OS. The 'revived' computer can then be used as a thin-client network appliance for Citrix, Windows, Linux, and/or browser-based server-centric computing networks."
I can do that (Score:3, Interesting)
The only difference is I don't think compact flash drives are solid state.
Re:I can do that (Score:1)
I believe any storage device with no moving parts can be termed solid state. Anyone know for sure?
Re:I can do that (Score:3, Informative)
Microdrives are not flash cards, they are hard drives. Even though they have a CF connector.
Flash refers to 'flash EEPROM' which is different from an ordinary EEPROM in that it can be quickly erased (and possibly read/written too) in blocks instead of single bytes.
But my computer still has moving electrons and photons ;)
Re:I can do that (Score:1)
Heh, yeah. I know what the name means. Guess I should have put the "flash" in quotes.
Functionally, they're similar, so I don't really differentiate. When my camera's unloaded, it asks for a CF card and it's satisfied even if I feed it a Microdrive.
I still managed to get modded overrated, though.
*boggle*
Re:I can do that (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I can do that (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't get it (Score:3, Interesting)
Or are you paying for the software on the flash drive, too?
Re:I don't get it (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I don't get it (Score:2, Insightful)
My guess is that many old machines will be plenty fast enough for use as a terminal (which is the intention of this product) with this bottleneck removed.
Now, if their software is well-done it might well be worth the price, in some situations. If you just replace a hard-drive, you still need to install, configure and
Re:I don't get it (Score:3, Insightful)
That said, Linux thin clients (LTSP) can easily boot from a floppy or a PXE network card, without needing expensive, specialized flash drives.
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)
Also, one point of thin clients (which this is designed for) is that you don't have to worry about the users loading a drive with data that needs to be backed up or new software that has to be supported (or interferes with what you are supporting).
Pointless (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Pointless (Score:4, Insightful)
Save them the time to roll a flash-friendly distro?
Re:Pointless (Score:4, Insightful)
Exactly. I have several spare 128m CF cards for my camera. I have the IDE adapter that I bought over a year ago. But I never seem to have time to put together the OS to run on it.
Just need to get a minimal config to run rdesktop, xterm, and VNC. But you also need to mount
It hasn't been a priority, but it would be nice to have a PC/Terminal with no moving parts. Unfortunately, $150 is too much for a hobby project I really don't need. (just want)
Re:Pointless (Score:2)
Re:Pointless (Score:2)
I'm sure you could look at LinuxDevices.com and find a distro you could put on that hardware, and then customize it, etc.
Of, for $150 buy the thing all ready configured for you. You decide how much your time is worth.
Not pointless at all (Score:2, Interesting)
That being said, from a convienece point of view, Win98 boxes just don't work in my (our) environment here (antivirus issues, et cetera) and I would be loathe to have any hoisted upon me. We already have embedded Linux thin clients, and if we could convert older machines at $150 per, that woul
Re:Not pointless at all (Score:2)
Re:Pointless (Score:3, Interesting)
In NIB condition? In lots of 50 or more?
They stopped making full-sized drives under 4 gig years ago. You might scrounge a couple, but to be useful for a real business you need a lot more, and worn-out old drives are going to be an immediate maintenance problem.
Bigger newer drives aren't going to be addressable by older BIOS chips.
Jon Acheson
Re:Pointless (Score:2)
The advantages? (Score:5, Insightful)
I dont think its anything that a reasonably experienced linux user couldnt set up on a usb flash "ala - Mandrake-Move" (cept those older Pentium Class PC's will probably not have USB slots. They seem to be claiming the flash drive has fast boot times. Older 4gb drives might not be comparably quick (although I doubt this there are probably other reasons other than RPM and data-seek times) that make their solution nice and quick.
Now what would be really really nice, is to see something like this using one of those tiny hitachi 4gb numbers....
Nick
Not really pointless, but expensive (Score:4, Insightful)
At home, I have several "older" computers with Windows installed, and they are pretty much used exclusivly as "Remote Desktop termianls" accessing a "server". Being able to eliminate Windows in favor of a quick-booting system would certainly be welcome. And never having to worry about local configuration, local backups, etc. again would be welcome.
But yes, for $150.00, I could set something up myself, but not everyone is as tech-savvy.
Anyone know of a good "do-it-yourself" alternative?
organisation will 500 low usage PC's (Score:2)
They needs to upgrade them to run the new version of XP.
They see this.
They think, aaah, we can controll everything and make sweeping changes and upgrade in minutes.
*knock knock*
Who's there?
Microsoft!
Microsoft who?
Microsoft who just bought you a jag and a place in a university of your choice for your brat kids.
Oh, you'd better come in then.
A Solution in Search of Problem? (Score:4, Insightful)
A few years ago, when a new business class PC would run the better part of two thousand bucks, this would make sense. In today's corporate setting a new PC with Windows licence [dell.com] wouldn't cost significantly more than than the PC Reviver.
If your existing stock of PCs are old enough that this is the only way of making them useful, what other hardware failures are looming?
Damn... $150 for this thing... (Score:3, Interesting)
Ah well... just doesn't seem worth upgrading the other.
kiwi
price is very high. (Score:2, Informative)
http://purchase.winstation.com/mall/Flash_Disk_Mo d ule_Horizontal.asp http://www.disklessworkstations.com/cgi-bin/web/in fo/fdm.html?id=IUiSsDnP http://www.idotpc.com/TheStore/Desktop/890Spec.asp ?Product.id=890&Cate.id=11
And flash it with LTSP ( http://www.ltsp.org ) and you have the same thing. Plug it into an old PC, and you have an instant thin client which doesn't need to boot over the network. The kernel is embedded a
Re:price is very high. (Score:3, Insightful)
Totally agree.
What I'm wondering is if this $150 version is setup to preserve the FLASH? I.e. is there some RAM on board for temp files and the like? Or does it die in a couple years of use because it's been written too many times?
Or does it depend entirely on workstation RAM? (In which case I wonder how much is really needed for decent performance?)
In any case, probably any CD distro would already be setup to not try to write to the boot media so that migh
Re:price is very high. (Score:2)
What's so thin about it (Score:3, Insightful)
PXES (Score:2)