
VIA Epia SP 13000 Review 189
Nehemiah writes "Epiacenter.com just published a review on the brand-new VIA Epia SP 13000 mini-itx mainboard.
It's the first VIA Epia board with the CN400 chipset and, together with the new epiOS Linux distribution that is announced in the review, it seems to have a very good performance during MPEG2/MPEG4 playback."
Why epiOS? (Score:2, Interesting)
Or, more to the point what the hell is it anyway?
If it is what I think it is, which is a distro that is taylored toward EPIA, why make a whole distro and not just a tarball of linux drivers and tools?
Re:Why epiOS? (Score:2)
All that's really involved in creating a "new" distribution is changing a few strings. Very, very, few distributions are from scratch these days.
I think the idea in this case is that it's better to put a disc in the box that says "Install me", rather than a bundle of packages that may or may not work, depending on what system you're running.
In any event,
Re:Why epiOS? (Score:5, Informative)
There are also some "positive" things that come out of the VIA -- Like the CLE266 being one of the best-supported video cards by the DirectFB project. That said, I'm actually very, very happy that there are places like the EPIA Wiki [epiawiki.org] to walk you through how to get all of this stuff working on your own distribution instead of being railroaded into using VIA's. Mine runs Freevo on Gentoo, which suits me just peachy.
I'm sure VIA just baked everyone else's Linux patches into a single distribution to roll out with their hardware -- Not that there's anything wrong with that, of course -- But I would undoubtedly have preferred VIA to have spent more time contributing to the success of existing, frequently-used projects (similar to how they did for Xine to get it to run with their mpeg4 acceleration, I guess, although preferrably in a more package-neutral manner) for their hardware than building their own distribution on the backs of all of the fine folks that have worked so hard to make these adorable little boxes go.
Re:Why epiOS? (Score:5, Informative)
The driver situation for the EPIA boards has been less than desirable. The VIA engineers were very supportive of linux and wrote drivers for all the chipsets on their boards, including accelerated XFree86 drivers, video out, hardware video encoding, etc. They were even cool enough to release the source to everything the were allowed to (some stuff was restricted because of third parties). But they did a poor job of keeping the binary driver packages up-to-date, and couldn't seem to decide which distros they were going to support, so you had the situation where this driver was packaged for these three distros, and that driver was packed for these other 4 distros.
Eventually, some people got frustrated and forked the code, vastly improving it - this is the Unichrome project. But they also considered it to be in development, and so only made the source available. And there was still the hassle of dealing with the few closed source drivers. The best distro by far for EPIA became gentoo, probably because it was easier to maintain and use an up-to-date source package than a binary one, and most of the EPIA community gravitated over there.
I don't know why the other distos didn't include unichrome drivers - perhaps they were just waiting for them to stop being beta. (Some may include them now, it has been at least 6 months since I checked). Anyway this appears to be a simple gentoo live-CD with the drivers in question. And that kicks ass. An OS that works out of the box will save newbies all sorts of time - I spent a couple weekends just figuring out where to find the newest versions of all the various drivers. And it really isn't a whole new distro - it is just a live-CD of existing distro. Considering how easy people have made it to roll your own live-CD, it makes a heck of a lot of sense for somone to do this.
Because... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Because... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Because... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Because... (Score:2, Redundant)
So yeah MPEG playback is a good idea...
Re:Because... (Score:2)
Re:Because... (Score:4, Funny)
This is news to me.
Re:Because... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Because... (Score:5, Informative)
It is a strong selling point for these boards and one of their main draws.
-Charles
But does it run? (Score:2, Funny)
Legacy Ports (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Legacy Ports (Score:3, Informative)
Not available in USB!
-Z
Re:Legacy Ports (Score:2)
Rejoice! Thanks to the miracle of modern technology, now you can use that Model M with a USB only computer!
IBM model M ps/2 cable to USB adapter converter [clickykeyboards.com]
Warning, link contains pictures of a Mac Mini using a genuine IBM Model M.
Re:Legacy Ports (Score:3, Informative)
It's more than just a keyboard, it's a weapon of self defense!
Re:Legacy Ports (Score:3, Informative)
It can be fixed easily [geocities.com] with a couple of pull-up resistors on both data lines. The site also mentions some motherboards & USB adapters that work fine without the mod.
Re:Legacy Ports (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes i know that you get get usb->serial converters and usb->parallel converters. And for notebook/desktop applications that makes sense. However these boards are obiously not mainstream. They are often used for development/prototyping and for low power applications. The needs for that market are different.
At least that's my take on it. I for one am glad to see not EVERYONE is going "legacy free."
Re:Legacy Ports (Score:2, Insightful)
We build about 20 different products using the Via EPIA CL ITX motherboards, and on every single one of them, we use four RS232 serial ports and the parallel port. The OS, like a lot of real-time OS's, we use doesn't support USB keyboards so we have to use PS/2-style keyboards. I
Annoying but not surprising (Score:2)
Personally I'd rather have a couple of extra USB2 ports and an extra network port (though you can add the network port via USB, or you can add a wireless connection via USB since there's no PCMCIA.)
Re:Legacy Ports (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Legacy Ports (Score:2)
All hardware people I personally know detest it, especially for keyboards. They often cause issues at boot-time, tend to interact badly with motherboards, etc. For example, a mouse I've personally saw at a customer triggered wake-up a few seconds after the machine was powered off, even though all relevant settings in the BIOS were disabled.
PS/2 (and even DIN) connectors just work. Reliably.
Re:Legacy Ports (Score:2)
Therefore, I didn't buy the Mac Mini. However, I have seriously started looking at an EPIA based system with the Nehemiah core. Solid performance, and all my devtools are supported. Apple
Would this work in a car? (Score:2)
PVR? Really? (Score:2)
First, just how well is Linux supported by this? Are there open-source drivers for the MPEG2/4 decoding hardware?
Second, there is mention of the idea of using this as a PVR; does this board have the huevos necessary for real-time encoding? I understand that the epia line is pretty wimpy in the CPU department, and MythTV, at least, requires more than I think this board can do. It has M
Re:PVR? Really? (Score:2)
I am aware that KnoppMyth has supported this hardware for playback. Again whether it is an out of the box install and run situation I can't comment on, I don't have one, so I have not tested it. You are welcome to check over at and persue the forums to see if your question is addressed.
MythTV recomends a 450mhz
Re:PVR? Really? (Score:2)
Not true at all. It's also relevent to people who don't want a $50 purchase to dictate all the other hardware and software they are allowed to run. Allow closed source drivers and it's easy to end up in a situation where your video card needs kernel X but your sound card drivers only work with kernel Y and that bug that causes your system to crash once a week
Re:PVR? Really? (Score:2)
The goal of the Home Theatre PC next to the TV is to provide as little interference with watching what you have recorded as possible.
As has been mentioned before, this board provides a small form factor device that by design does not require a large number of loud fans to keep quiet.
Capturing video, whether by a card that does the mpeg encoding in hardware, or through the cpu, tends to generate quite a bit of heat that needs to be removed from the sys
Re:PVR? Really? (Score:3, Informative)
I created a mythtv box from an EPIA MII12000 (1.2GHz). I put it into a georgeous Silverstone LC06 [silverstonetek.com] case. I switched the fans with silent ones, chose silent optical/HD drives. The end result is just awesome. In fact the 12000 is way overpowered for what I am doing - thanks to onboard encoding in the Hauppauge PVR card I use, and decoding in the EPIA motherboard - and the CPU sits at 10% most of the time. The 800MHz CPU would have been a bet
Re:PVR? Really? (Score:2)
now thats a case [silentpcreview.com].
Re:PVR? Really? (Score:2)
Re:PVR? Really? (Score:2)
Have you considered the (admittedly expensive) Pentium M board from AOpen?
Mini, slightly off-topic rant:
I love Athlon chips, but I hate the fact that for a long time just about the only chipset option available for them was from Via, and they always seemed to be buggy. I think this is why so many people are prejudiced against Athlons and recommend Intel for stability.
A few
Re:PVR? Really? (Score:2)
I use a via epia m10k [byopvr.com] in one of my PC PVRs [byopvr.com] and by using a pvr250/350 it handles recording and playback pretty easily.
(gratuituous self links)
The EPIA VIA M-series (and higher like this SP) have a mpeg decoding accelleration (not full on decoding) but it down help.
E.
Re:PVR? Really? (Score:2)
Mac Mini vs EPIA (Score:4, Interesting)
But, by just about any standard (MPEG playback, video performance, processor speed, form factor size), the Mac Mini beats the Mini-ITX hands down. Okay, I put nicer hard drives in the Mini-ITX boxes than I get in the Mac Mini.
After using both systems as desktop PCs, I can say that the Mac Mini feels like a Ferrari, while the Mini-ITX boxes feel like a Ford Focus. Apart from the fact I actually *like* the Gnome desktop better than OS X, I can still use the Mini to run all of my favorite Unix apps. And, unlike the VIA Mini-ITX boards, where there's a ton of hardware that I can't get to work right (CLE-266 chipset with MPEG decoding), everything on the Mac Mini JUST WORKS.
I don't know. I'm thinking my days running Mini-ITX boxes is over. The Mac Mini has really won my heart, and I can't see why anyone wouldn't consider it for their small form-factor computing needs.
I'm a bit tempted by the promise of a Linux distro tailor-made for the EPIAs, but I kind of have a distro (OS X) tailor made for my current-favorite SFF box.
Re:Mac Mini vs EPIA (Score:2)
Ah, I see, another member of the Apple-sponsored "JUST WORKS" marketing campaign.
Everything always "JUST WORKS" on machines with preinstalled supported operating systems, whether it's OSX, Windows, or Linux. Things can stop working once you start installing third party apps or new hardware, on any of those systems, including the Mac Mini.
Re:Mac Mini vs EPIA (Score:2)
Yes, it is a bummer that there are no major vendors doing this and marketing it, but Mini-ITX are kind of specialty systems. There are plenty of bigger vendors that sell other Linux systems (including small ones) preinstalled.
Re:Mac Mini vs EPIA (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Mac Mini vs EPIA (Score:5, Insightful)
Horseapples! Where are you getting this stuff? Notebook drives are tougher in every way than their desktop counterparts - they have to be. I suppose that some super-cheap notebook drives that aren't rated for continuous use may exist, but I'm not aware of any, and that certainly doesn't apply to the reputable brands. I've got several tiny little servers that have been running laptop drives for years with no problems. (One's an Epson "cash register" 486, another's a Toshiba Libretto 50J, and others are even stranger.)
And although hard disks aren't my specialty, I know more than a little about them, having been a program manager for both Latitude and Inspiron at Dell, and spinning up a company to build high performance storage-over-IP solutions based on high-end commodity RAID controllers a few years ago. The only real downside to Notebook disks is their relatively slow transfer speeds, since the disk mfrs for unfathomable reasons don't put serious controllers on the notbook mechanisms for a year or two. In many cases (especially if you're RAIDING them) this is more than made up for by their lower seek times - the heads don't have to move very far, and because they're smaller and less massive, they respond quicker.
I'm looking at building a custom small, low-power, super reliable RAID array for a client right now, and I'm actually looking even smaller - at the 1.8" mechanisms like the ones in a lot of the new MP3 players. The result will be *far* more reliable than any desktop drive could ever be - I could not possibly neet this customer's requirements with desktop drive hardware...
Re:Mac Mini vs EPIA (Score:2)
Re:Mac Mini vs EPIA (Score:2)
I've been using laptops for over ten years as my primary machine. On most of my machines, when I give them up the lettering on the keyboard has been worn off. But I've never had a hard disk go bad. Filesystems problems -- plenty. Hardwar
Re:Mac Mini vs EPIA (Score:2)
Umm, why don't you run yellow dog linux [yellowdoglinux.com]? Then you can run all your favorite linux apps with your favorite desktop environment.
Re:Mac Mini vs EPIA (Score:2, Insightful)
I am about to begin work on a ubuntu derivative that has CLE266 support built in. Hang out on the unichrome list for more help on getting your working.
LinuxBios (Score:2)
Can I run LinuxBios on this? If so, where can I buy one pre-loaded?
Nothing beats this bad boy (Score:2)
I'm not related to Newegg in any way. I just run one of these at home as file/web/dhcp server, and I think it's freakin' insane that you can buy this kind of barebone so cheap. Add HDD and RAM and you're good to go.
Re:Nothing beats this bad boy (Score:2)
I wish someone made a barebones system with a really small case (like the Casetronics Travlas) for a price like this. I don't want any 5.25" or 3.5" slots at all; just a slot for a laptop drive at the most. I want to build a system to put in my car, but the cost of the cases suitable for this purpose is extremely high. I also want to build a small diskless HTPC to run MythTV on (with the encoding being done on my main computer), but again the cases sui
Mini-ITX (and ATX!) with no fans (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Mini-ITX (and ATX!) with no fans (Score:3, Informative)
Hush are much too expensive, IMHO. My EPIA board with fanless 12 V DC-DC converter and brick transformer is absolutely silent, and costs less than 400 bucks, including 512 MB RAM. It's not the fastest platform out there, but as a non-gaming desktop box, it's perfectly usable.
I'd rather a Epia DP review (Score:3, Interesting)
I'll also believe them when I see them: despite much fanfare, the Nano-ITX boards are still largely vapourware.
EpiOS download? (Score:2)
Still no cpufreq support? (Score:2)
Although the boards are marketed towards users who build machines that are always left on, they skimped on some obvious features needed by most users in this market.
Re:#$@#$ fans (Score:3, Informative)
Re:#$@#$ fans (Score:5, Informative)
What's the fanless obsession anyhow? (Score:3, Interesting)
Sure, dust is a consideration over time, but even without the fan too much dust tends to impair the heatsinks' dissipation rate as well...
Re:What's the fanless obsession anyhow? (Score:2)
In any case, another reason not to use fans is that they fail frequently, lowering overall reliability.
Re:What's the fanless obsession anyhow? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:What's the fanless obsession anyhow? (Score:3, Insightful)
If the fanless obsession were really more widespread, it would put pressure on CPU makers to invent better heat dissipation mechanisms, and to generate less heat in the first place!
Re:#$@#$ fans (Score:5, Interesting)
>Mini-ITX form factor?
That's a very good question. I've been on a quest for some years now, for a system that can be mounted in a shallow 19" rack form factor, that has no fan whatsoever but enough power to run audio applications. I can't even find good compromises, although I make do with my Antec Sonata, Zalman coolers, etc.
Shuttles are *way* too noisy, which was upsetting because they were recommended to me on the basis of them being very quiet, so I bought one, yuck.
Dell desktop machines are surprisingly quiet, I've discovered.
The Antec Sonata case is still not quiet enough to be called "silent" but it's pretty good. The hardest part of putting my system together has been finding a fanless 1.5v AGP video card. ASUS PxPN00 boards have no fan on the bridge chip, which is nice. Seagate SATA drives with the SNXXXX model numbers are pretty quiet, especially in the Antec case.
But as far as Mini-ITX, except for the 533 C3 boards, they all have fans.
Re:#$@#$ fans (Score:4, Interesting)
I do agree Shuttles are pretty noisy. They went to the trouble to using a heat pipe system and then attach a noisy fan to the exhaust end of the heat pipe and call it "quiet", while I can easily hear it ten feet away.
I think the Mac mini is pretty quiet, maybe not quiet enough for audio use though.
Maybe your next best bet is to assemble a hush box to put a computer into.
Re:#$@#$ fans (Score:3, Informative)
Re:#$@#$ fans (Score:2, Informative)
Re:#$@#$ fans (Score:2)
you can buy fanless geforce 6800's [newegg.com] btw.
Re:#$@#$ fans (Score:2, Informative)
Re:#$@#$ fans (Score:4, Informative)
This is simply not true. Besides, you can make them fanless by applying a Zalman northbridge cooler (as seen on the net). I haven't done any burn in testing with mine though. One hint: putting them in a wooden enclosure like a wine-box does not do any good. If you need to do stupid things like that you *need* a fan. And a fire-alarm (though you can get the motherboard/cpu to shut down, it has temperature sensors). Yes, I tried.
Re:#$@#$ fans (Score:2)
Sorry you had bad experiences with Shuttles, unless you're expecting 0db or something...
FWIW the quietest drives i've ever had are Maxtor 6Y200P0's. You cant even tell theyre on unless you hold them.
fanless agp (Score:2)
-1 Flamebait (Score:2)
Re:#$@#$ fans (Score:2)
Re:#$@#$ fans (Score:4, Informative)
You can also get a fanless 30W PSU for both. 30W is enough to drive the motherboard, the cpu, and a harddrive.
Re:#$@#$ fans (Score:5, Informative)
fanless power supplies (Score:2)
Re:#$@#$ fans (Score:2)
If you have a large enough heatsink made of sufficiently conductive material you can have any system fanless. just because you buy it with a wussy little heatsink that needs a fan shouldn't stop any decent geek from rigging up something better.
An audio workstation (Score:4, Informative)
I got VIA 866 MHz cpus, topped 'em with a respectable sized heatsink (with fans) on a full size 370 motherboard, mounted each in mid-size tower case with a seagate barracuda 80 gig drive and a 150 Watt power supply. Now assuming that the CPU might get enough cooling from convective air flow in the case, and that the power supply would never be taxed (at full speed, the system draws maybe 30 Watts), I wired in a switch to cut off the cpu and power-supply fans if so desired.
Once built, I ran some screensavers that pushed the cpu to 100% usage for eight hours (using slackware bootable cd) with no fans whatsoever. All the boxes survived without problems.
Since building them (2-3 years ago now), I eventually used one as a firewall/router - running openBSD. That one suffered a cpu/motherboard burnout after ~4 months of running 24/7 fanless. I dropped the hard-drive in a sibling, and left the fans running - up for ~6 months now without incident.
Another is currently being used to do audio recording with a Demudi install. Having burned out one of the boxes, I am more cautious, running the fans except when recording with microphones. With the fans off and ~6 feet between the box and the microphones, thermal noise from the pre-amps and electromagnetic noise from the radar station on the mountain is louder than the noise from the spinning barracuda.
The 866 MHz VIA is fast enough to handle about 12-14 raw tracks in ardour before running out of cycles (without extra effects). I plan to do final mixing and mastering on a faster dual-pentium box once all the raw tracking has been done.
This may not be adequate for a living-room media center, but it works for me as an audio workstation. I thought others might want to know about it.
Re:#$@#$ fans (Score:2)
Re:Is this the best you can do? (Score:4, Interesting)
And anything newer than that, how do you know it won't last? For that matter, do you not realize that most of the components are identical? Apple doesn't usually make their own hardware, they buy it, and they buy it from the same people the PC manufacturers buy it from.
Stop spreading stupidity.
Re:Is this the best you can do? (Score:2)
Re:Is this the best you can do? (Score:2)
Regarding longevity, I wonder if it depends on a person's Mystical Breakage Probability Field. In my decade+ of using PCs and UNIX workstations, the only components I've had fail were a 13 year old full-height SCSI drive, a super-cheap Pentium 75 motherboard, and a who-knows-how-old stick of generic RAM purchased used. Other people I know have had similar experiences with a hard drive here or a RAM stick there--really nothing extraordinary.
However, occasionally I'll read a post about someone defending ex
Re: proscribed mac minis... (Score:3, Funny)
[grammar Nazi mode=ON]
From Merriam-Webster online:
Re:Is this the best you can do? (Score:3, Insightful)
proscribe [reference.com], 1: To denounce or condemn.
Here's a quick hint for you, don't use words you can't spell. Maybe you meant to say prescribe, to set down as a rule or guide; enjoin, to order the use of (a medicine or other treatment).
Now that I've gotten that over with: Mac minis are expensive and proprietary. The memory is not even a user-serviceable part, in terms of your warranty. (Look it up!) The ONLY good thing about it is the cool form factor. It has very limited expansion (even down to having only 1 1
Re:Is this the best you can do? (Score:2)
You've gotta admit the package is cool. Might not be the best comp, but I could see parking one of these on top of my "real" computer with a KVM attached...
I've spent 500 bucks on stupider things..
Re:Is this the best you can do? (Score:4, Informative)
Quick correction Re: Mac Mini and memory upgrade. Opening the case does not void the warranty. Also, installing memory does not void the warranty if you use an Apple approved memory part.
I'm in agreement overall with your assesment, if you are comparing the mini with a general purpose computer. On the other hand, I think the mini should be viewed primarily as no more than a particularly powerful console box.
I honestly wonder what would happen if
Re:Is this the best you can do? (Score:2)
3. Profit!
Re:Is this the best you can do? (Score:4, Informative)
here's a quick hint for you: don't offer 'facts' if you can't check out your facts first before blathering on.
about Apple's warranty:
http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=30
and http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=25
of course, that doesn't mean they _want_ you to do it; the case is difficult to open but it can be done if you're patient and careful: http://www.russellbeattie.com/notebook/1008276.ht
[rant] it's NOT just about looks: the mini target audience is for "adders" and "switchers" who want a computer that just works, i.e. they want their software to work - iPhoto, iTunes, iMovie, iDVD, GarageBand, Safari/Mozilla, as opposed to learning how to be a systems admin to care for their Windows computer. sure you can get a PC for less, but then you still have to buy XP and all the other software. and it's still XP. They're buying the whole ball of wax for the "computing experience", a consistent, friendly, useful experience, so your statement, "...most of the software that most people want to run out there runs either on Linux..." is crap, since there's no decent equivalent to the iLife suite in Linux(or Windows, provide links if you can.) and due to the nature of Open Source, there will be differences(some significant) in UI for linux apps.
don't forget, all macs COME WITH iLife - you don't have to buy it, install it and learn five different ways to do the same thing(i'm thinking of the OS file browser provided to all apps and navigating directories in Explorer)...
you do non-technical readers/users a disservice by not providing proof of your statements - and your lack of experience with the Mac shows. the mac "experience" is something you realize when the computer and the software don't get in the way of what you're doing. i've got a dual-boot windowsXP/gentoo machine i built myself and several Macs. I've been using, programming, designing and destroying software professionally since 1985; i've used punch cards, TTYs, mainframes, supercomputers, PCs, i've designed my own user interfaces when there wasn't even X/OpenGL(remember the Sun1? the DEC Gigi? character graphics on a vt100? i do.) - so i have a lot of choices, my opinion? the user experience in windows is abysmal(sp?) when compared to the mac, so i'll take the mac every time. when you can get a complete, consistent set of programs that do what is included in iLife for Linux/FOSS, it _will_ be a great day indeed. until then you're saddled with inconsistent applications user-interfaces for both linux and windows. ( p.s. i like MythTV, Gimp(especially with the recent UI hacks...), blender, firefox/thunderbird and use fluxbox, but they're just short of the integration achieved on the mac.)[/rant]
here's a review of the mini that i feel is fair and balanced:
http://www.sfftech.com/showdocs.cfm?aid=659 [sfftech.com]
to sum up the mini-memory issue: there are _many_ reviews elsewhere and it has been discussed at length in many forums that you can install your own memory, it's just if you break the lid doing it they won't replace it.
back on-topic: the EPIA series are able performers if you're not a demanding user(the dual cpu board displayed at Cebit looks promising); OK, yet another flavor of linux, why?.
a great place for EPIA info is: URL:http://mini-itx.com// [mini-itx.com]
Re:Is this the best you can do? (Score:2)
Guess what? The programs on the mac aren't consistent either. Even they have their own programs that look different from the rest of the OS, IE quicktime. For that matter Apple can't be bothered to follow anyone else's look and feel guidelines, so why should anyone care about theirs? Clicking on the close gadget
Re:Is this the best you can do? (Score:2)
and who made you the arbiter of "respectable" computers? there's plenty of crap that's put together with screws, so what makes a respectable computer? it's a computing _appliance_ not a hacker's dream. are you just afraid that your choice of platform is less secure and less usable than a mac, and that's why a mac is crap?
"Clicking on the close gadget of a non-foreground iTunes window will raise the window! Idiots." - i just opened up itunes
Re:Is this the best you can do? (Score:2)
Re:PDA/Smartphone Optimized Sites and Pron (Score:2)
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION (Score:2, Flamebait)
A simple look [networkmirror.com] at the site will show it's very plain and shows very little work done besides straight mirroring/copying slashdot.
Registered through: GoDaddy.com
(http://www.godaddy.com [godaddy.com])
Domain Name: NETWORKMIRROR.COM
Created on: 01-Apr-05
Expires on: 01-Apr-06
Last Updated on: 01-Apr-05
April 1st, eh? Look at thi
Re:ADDITIONAL INFORMATION (Score:3, Insightful)
The mirror concept is similar to (but different from) mirrordot. Hosted servers cost bucks (this isn't sitting on the end of a dsl line to my mom's basement
However, unlike merely copying somebody else's work and presenting as my own, I'm providing a service to reach sites that are responding slowly when slashdotted.
It's all still very experimental.
Re:ADDITIONAL INFORMATION (Score:2)
I will point out that, unlike you, I do have a publicly published email address.
Also, my posting history, which is similar in length to your own, speaks for itself.
Re:Mirror, mirror... (Score:2)
Re:Mirror, mirror... (Score:2)
Re:Some notes for editors and submitters (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Some notes for editors and submitters (Score:2)
BTW funny stuff about the submitters. If you're expecting stories to get any kind of verification I think you're going to be disappointed. Hell the NY Times can't even get that done. Why would you think that slashdot would be able to?
Re:Some notes for editors and submitters (Score:2)
Re:Some notes for editors and submitters (Score:2)
I can understand that something can't be 100% verified. That is fine.
The grandparent, however, rightly complains that the
slashdot.org more and more feels like some fucked-up wikinewsia - you can post corrections, you can give suggestions, you can curse, but it'll always have new lame stories with tons of stupid
Re:Decent DVI Video (Score:2)
Re:Decent DVI Video (Score:2)
The new Pentium-M based mainboard [aopen.nl] from AOpen is a positive exception. I think, I'll wait for this one.
Or buy a Mac Mini instead. Quiet. Fast. With DVI (not the first time, that Apple shows the PC makers how to build a sensible PC).
Bye egghat.
Re:Flaky LAN drivers under FreeBSD? (Score:3, Informative)
I'm using FreeBSD 5.X on an old EPIA 5000 board with VIA VT6102 Rhine II chipset and the vr driver. Yes, I get sometimes vr0: rx packet lost messages on the console. This was only a problem for me while using NFS in UDP mode (I'm running diskless, so NFS reliability is pretty important!). Switching to TCP NFS solved all problems for me. The problem is not so bad as it sounds.