HP Launches Moonshot 168
New submitter linatux writes "HP has announced their 'Moonshot 1500 server' — up to 1,800 servers per 47U rack are supported. The tech certainly seems to be an advance on what is currently available — will it be enough to revive HP's server fleet?"
From Phoronix: "Moonshot began with Calxeda-based ARM SoCs, but in the end HP settled for Intel Atom processors. Released today were HP's Moonshot system based on the Intel Atom S1200. Hewlett-Packard claims that their Moonshot System uses 89% less energy, 80% less space, 77% less cost, and 97% less complexity than traditional servers."
Does it compute? (Score:5, Insightful)
Low power and massive amounts of parallel cores is alright, but does it compute? How do these low power servers benchmark against EC2 or equivalent? This article didn't talk benchmarks. Maybe you get all these gains in consumed power, cost, space etc... because it is 90% less powerful than competitors.
Re:Does it compute? (Score:5, Informative)
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Today you can have blade system with 2000 core per rack with AMD, why if cores matters would you limit yourseld to Intel CPU?
I imagine that the power draw and corresponding cooling requirements of that rack stuffed with AMD cores will be significantly higher than the Intel one.
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I imagine that the power draw and corresponding cooling requirements of that rack stuffed with AMD cores will be significantly higher than the Intel one.
You're imagining a workload where the CPUs are busy all the time, which is the opposite of pretty much everything but scientific computing.
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What sort of workload is concerned with stuffing a rack with 3000+ cores only to have those cores idle?
Besides, you don't need scientific computing workloads to keep the CPU busy. Isn't that what virtualization and over-provisioning is about?
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Except for a few problems:
Hadoop tops out around 4000-6000 nodes, then you run into serious scalability issues in the jobtracker and HDFS scalability. Granted, with HDFS federation and YARN these should improve, but today you can't build this wider than a few racks without spending a good chunk of time doing some significant hadoop engineering.
Second, disk. Where's the disk? Hadoop needs disk. Hadoop likes disk. Disk likes hadoop. Hadoop likes lots and lots of disk. Nice, you've built a 6 watt SoC. N
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I hear the Freewinds runs on circular logic. Screw nuclear power, you've got free energy forever with that stuff!
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You are here to practise mind control, vacuuming-out of wallets and bank accounts, and that disarming, boyish Tom Cruise grin.
BTW, I have a friend who says your friend is not necessary. My friend says each of us has senses and a brain, and it is up to each of us to use these as tools to discover Truth, and that each of us is responsible for his or her own liberation.
Furthermore, my friend says anyone claiming to offer you salvation provided you take their word *on faith alone* is a charlatan.
My friend's nam
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Nice way to sidestep the point.
The Buddha asked us to use our minds and senses to discover truth. The Buddha: "Don't believe what I say because I say so; you must test it for yourself, before it can be true."
L. Ron asked us to believe in funky space aliens a zillion years old. L. Ron: "Believe what I say. Because I say so. And don't listen to yourself."
If both of these guys showed up at my doorstep today, I know which one I'd be more inclined to invite in for tea.
There's also the inconvenient little fact th
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volcanoes with nukes in them! that's totally science!
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Actually one of the fundamental creeds of Scientology is "what is true is what's true for you." - L. Ron Hubbard
Ron was not talking about liberation, you idiot, he was talking about how to brainwash people like you.
Basically, Scientology believes in the same things as Buddhism, except it's also based on science.
Dog vomit like this is just plain fucking twisted.
Buddhism says Truth is all around us and we have only to see it with our own eyes and senses. Scientology says it's all a lie, and that they're the only ones knowing the truth.
Scientology says there's a bunch of secrets you have to pay them for. Buddhism says there are no secrets.
Night and day.
And there is no "science" in Scientology. It's complete batshit
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Scientology is a slave cult, pure and simple. It has no place in a world of free and thinking beings.
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Wow, you can quote Wikipedia. So can I:
In other countries, notably Canada, France, Germany and the United Kingdom, Scientology does not have comparable religious status although Churches are allowed.
In any event, all you've really shown is that some countries recognise Scientology as an official Collective Fantasy with a Distinctive Name/Logotype.
(In other news, a court can just as easily rule that the sky is green. Which, as we all know, instantly causes the heavens to change colour in order to comply.)
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One other thing:
The script you're obviously working from also supposes that I'll be impressed by the phrase "real religion" or "bona fide religion".
Since I know that *all* religion is *false* religion, what you've really just said to me is, "Scientology is a real, bona fide, honest-to-goodness pack of fantasy and lies". Which is a statement I can find little fault with.
Nice to see that we agree on that point, at least.
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"No place in a world of free and thinking beings" - you could equally say that for any religion, Christianity, Judaism and Islam among them.
I do. (Especially the Abrahamic religions.)
I'm sorry if I wasn't clear about this.
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"No place in a world of free and thinking beings" - you could equally say that for any religion, Christianity, Judaism and Islam among them. At some point I hope that humanity will grow up and not need a father figure any more. That will be the indication of our adulthood. Unfortunately, I don't see this happening in my lifetime.
There's nothing wrong with father figures provided they're not imaginary.
Too little, too lame (Score:2, Informative)
HP tried this with Transmeta a while back, and produced blades that completely sucked - WAY too slow. Individual machines on blades are dead, unless you need HPC type power, and Atom ain't that. If you need to squeeze 1800 limp servers into a rack, VMWare and its children are already there.
Sorry HP, you suck. Go back to making shitty printers, and then get out of the way. Hopefully your corpse will provide the fertilizer for some new market leader to grow from.
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Hopefully your corpse will provide the fertilizer for some new market leader to grow from.
I hope this is a reference to ender's game trilogy. Let me know!
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And yes HP, go back to making those shitty NonStop printers [hp.com].
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There's a difference between a microserver and cramming 1800 of them into a rack. A product like this comes down to cost efficiency. Is this cheaper than an equivalent amount of Intel/AMD based computing? If it's not cheaper on the hardware, how much floorspace does it save? How much does your floorspace and electricity have to cost to make this worthwhile? What's your workload that requires this thing?
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If it's not cheaper on the hardware, how much floorspace does it save?
None!
Seriously every time these articles come up, I look and see how it compares to CPU/U for a cheapie standard 1U Supermicro quad socket (or the 2x4 dual socket things). Mostly because there's a company I've used before which will give out automated quotes online for these particular machines.
Invariably, the standard one beats the fancy systems in cost per core, computation per core and computation per U. Power per core is usually high
"will it be enough to revive HP's server fleet?" (Score:2)
Whenever slashdot asks "Will it be enough?" what do we say everybody? NO! We say N-O. No.
HP has been attracting fail like it's a government project with unlimited funding and no congressional oversight. I mean seriously, we may be breaking into new physics here with the strong attractive force that all things HP have to all things Fail. And no technology is going to fix that, because the ultimate source of the bogon radiation is (wait for it) HP senior management. They'll figure out a way to screw this up,
Re:"will it be enough to revive HP's server fleet? (Score:4, Funny)
So...former HP customer, or former employee?
Re:"will it be enough to revive HP's server fleet? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm guessing you haven't actually used HP servers or compared them to the competition. In my experience they completely kick Dell's butt, and give IBM a real run for their money, at much lower cost. I evaluated a ProLiant Gen8 and the manageability features were pretty impressive. The thing can update it's firmware and send SNMP traps, etc, from bare metal, without an OS.
Granted, HP had some crappy CEOs, and on the low-end consumer stuff they race to the bottom with everyone else, but their servers are serious and arguably industry-leading. They also sell more PCs than anyone anywhere, unless you start counting every iPod touch as a "computer."
Re:"will it be enough to revive HP's server fleet? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'll absolutely second this - HP's servers kick ass, quite frankly. They've had a few pretty major problems in recent years (P400 and P800 array controllers were absolute pieces of shit from a reliability standpoint, and the P410 STILL doesn't work quite right with SATA drives, though it rocks with SAS disks), but overall the engineering that goes into HP servers puts them well ahead of their competition, from what I've experienced. I've used Dell, IBM, white box, and HP, on the scale of "hundreds to thousands" of each brand, stretching back 10+ years.
The HP's have been more reliable, more configurable, more robust (yes, this is different from reliable), more manageable, and FAR better supported. There's a reason companies pay a premium for HP hardware, and it's because it pays for itself many over during the life of the hardware.
There are companies and applications that don't need that kind of reliability and run on shoddy white-box hardware... think Google, Facebook, etc. There are others, particularly stateful services like telephony and conferencing, that depend on reliable hardware. For those like that, servers like what HP provides will always be in demand. So long as HP maintains their focus on engineering in the server space, they won't be going anywhere soon.
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more robust (yes, this is different from reliable)
What is the difference between robust and reliable?
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A good example is something I've experienced multiple times. A hard drive in an array fails hard. In a Proliant, you get a red light and the machine keeps running. In a Dell or IBM, it takes down the whole disk bus and you have to take time pulling individual drives a
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I dunno.
The HP P4000s SANs are pretty nice when compared with comparable equipment.
Of course, they got them by buying LeftHand.
But yeah, long gone are the days of the solid Laserjet 4250 days with millions of prints that made them worth refurbishing.
Will the upgrade be called... (Score:2)
The Money Shot?
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Re:Will the upgrade be called... (Score:4, Funny)
I have a more powerful device in my pocket.
I thought you were just glad to see me.
Specs for the interested (Score:5, Interesting)
Each pluggable unit support 1x 2GHZ intel atom S1200 series cpus (2x core, 4x thread), up to 1 dimm @ 8gb, and one SFF sata drive. That gives you 90 cores/180 threads, 360GB's in 4.3u.
For comparison a 6RU cisco UCS chasis can put down up to 160 Cores / 320 threads, 4TB of memory. Those are high performance Xeon cores. Not sure on the $$$ per compute/memory between the two.
The really big question is are there enough use cases for that many "thin" servers. At 2 cores and 8GB of ram you are very thing by modern standards and there is 0 opportunity for vertical growth.
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I don't really understand the market for something like this either. When the S1200 was launched, Intel was careful to point out that if you try to scale it up as a cheap alternative to E5/E7 Xeons, the economics and power consumption of the S1200 (let alone the complexity of an order of magnitude more servers to manage) is not favourable. Totally understandable, as Intel would be foolish to cannibalize their own Xeon market.
Having said that, I do like the S1200, but more for something like a low traffic VP
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What I find curious about HP's design is how half-hearted it is about being a heavily-integrated blade box:
For 60k, you'd expect the chassis to handle more than just power and cooling(and it does apparently handle networking between the server modules and between the server modules and the switch modules, and I assume that HP's chassis management software is baked in in various places); but every single node still has its own dinky little hard drive, just waiting to die, and RAM is also per-node and cannot
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For comparison a 6RU cisco UCS chasis can put down up to 160 Cores / 320 threads, 4TB of memory. Those are high performance Xeon cores. Not sure on the $$$ per compute/memory between the two.
With cheap commodity 1U boxes, you can get 64 ahem modules in 1U, or if you prefer 256 in 4U, along with 2TB of RAM (512/U is cheaply achievable). Not as good as Xeon cores, but completely thrash Atom clock for clock, and they clock higher. You can also fit in 64T of disc.
It will set you back about $40k for that lot, as
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450 servers, not 1800 (Score:5, Informative)
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Someone at Phoronix really needs to learn basic math. The Chassis is 4.3U and hold 45 of these Moonshot servers, so a 47U rack could fit 10 chassis' for a total of 450 servers.
Yeah, I think they got confused between threads and servers. Each server has a 2 core CPU, each core can "handle" 2 hyper threads. So 450 servers * 2 cpus * 2 threads = 1800
Not nearly as impressive.
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Moonshot? (Score:1)
Wait, what? Complexity metrics? (Score:3)
Wait, what? How in the world did they measure this? I'm seriously curious as to this dubious number.
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"[...]and 97% less complexity than traditional servers."
Wait, what? How in the world did they measure this? I'm seriously curious as to this dubious number.
"Now with 67.3% more dubious numbers than traditional advertising copy!"
Not at all Ridiculous (Score:2)
"Hi, yeah, could I get a number 2 with a coke? Oh, and large fries. And can you reduce the complexity on that? By how much? I don't know, 100%? Oh, you can only do 97? Ok fine, I'll take that. Oh, and a chocolate shake."
Has Slashdot officially become a paid shill? (Score:1)
Come one, I call shenanigans on this one. Seriously, a site where the majority of the submissions seem to take at least a day or more to propagate to actually being posted has a post about a random new HP product where the only really informative link is to what basically amounts to a press release hosted on their own site?
I understand things are tough all over and you gotta make money to survive, but do they really think their readers are that stupid?
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I doubt they would pay to have a post go live at midnight.
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mid-afternoon in GNU Zealand :-)
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I don't know about Slashdot's priorities when it comes to deciding what makes the cover, but I submitted in good faith.
I'm not a fan of HP by any means & we have truck-loads of their servers at work. The concept for this sounded interesting & maybe there is a place for it in the 'cloud'.
What we really need at work is big kick-ass servers like IBM's new Power 7 machines (IBM - please direct debit my account ASAP)
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Ok, mod me into oblivion if I'm wrong, I guess every blue moon there is someone with a 5 digit id as a "first time submitter" ;) I was just rather surprised they posted a story with a link to their own article that was posted a few hours before the referencing one... last couple of times I had a story posted it was at least a day after I submitted it. And of course the HP AD I SAW next to it didn't help the situation one bit...
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:-) 1st time accepted, 2nd or 3rd submission I think. Sad how the quality of stories seems to have declined over the last few years, but the quality of the posts & the turns they take still sometimes surprise me. Without their seasoned contributors, this site would fade away in no time. I hope the people running it recognise that.
Plenty of use cases (Score:1)
Re:Only thing about Atom proccessors (Score:5, Insightful)
And we all know that datacenter servers are used only for running the front-end of 3D games. Oh no, this product must be DOOMED!
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Lots of datacenter servers are mostly used for holding a connection open while it waits for the database to spit back a resultset. Hense products like these.
Or waiting for the drive to send a file to the NIC (Score:3)
Re:Only thing about Atom proccessors (Score:4, Funny)
And we all know that datacenter servers are used only for running the front-end of 3D games. Oh no, this product must be DOOMED!
Alternatively, it could be also QUAKEd.
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Show me all the ARM Cortex CPU's with hardware virtualization support and ECC memory controllers.
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"Moonshot" refers to their business strategy. This is a 'moonshot', high-risk, high-reward, but more than likely to just go into the crapper like pretty much everything except their calculators and printers.
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I think SOC for data centers makes a lot of sense.
Microcontroller and SOC tech is still catching up to current CPUs, but they have a major advantage of cramming just about everything on the mobo into the chip.
In a decade or so we may well be looking at today's data centers the way we currently look at ENIAC.
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The one potential spoiler for SoCs is virtualization.
Sure, the motherboard of your generic dual xeon/opteron box looks a bit untidy(and I suspect that we'll see further integration here, and already have seen some, goodbye discrete northbridge...); but if you divide the number of wasteful little discrete packages across the number of VMs the machine is running, it starts to look a whole lot better.
This isn't a 'bah, integration, it'll never happen!', it has been happening fairly steadily in PCs more or less
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When you're talking about 6watt CPU's packed together as close as possible, I think PoP RAM makes perfect sense.
Just think how much space is wasted by RAM sockets PCB traces and how much power is wasted driving high frequency data lines between chips.
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Certainly, for very low power processors, PoP makes sense(at least until you hit the ceiling on how much RAM you can actually fit on top of a very low power processor, the 8GB SODIMMs in these little HP boxes generally have 16 little BGAs, all not significantly smaller than the CPU itself, on the card). My question is whether, given how easy it is to slice a larger CPU into smaller virtual CPUs, the 'lots and lots of teeny CPUs' architectural strategy is actually a good one, or just a good one until it fina
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It's a lot easier to slice up a large CPU in to several smaller virtual CPU's than it is to use several smaller CPU's to emulate a large CPU.
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And even their printers are crap now days.
Re:Only thing about Atom proccessors (Score:5, Informative)
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Is it 64 bit?
Re:Only thing about Atom proccessors (Score:4, Informative)
Is it 64 bit?
Internally yes, with some instructions processing 128-bits. The address buss is 40-bits wide, limiting? physical memory to 1TB
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That's like saying the Atom is 128bit, because it has 128bit SSE registers.
The Cortex A15 is an ARMv7. All registers are 32bit, apart from the SIMD NEON ones which are 128bit. Sort of like the 128bit registers in SSE.
It's a 32bit core with a 32bit memory bus and a single 32bit 800mhz memory interface.
ARMv8 is 64bit. It has 64bit registers
That's the Cortex A53 and A57.
Why didn't you just say "The Cortex A57" instead of spinning lies about the A15?
Re:Only thing about Atom proccessors (Score:4, Informative)
Atom processors are notoriously slow. You can't play 3d video games on them.
Yes, you can. :-)
I managed to play Orbiter [ucl.ac.uk] on a reasonable resolution (1280x1024x16) and got an acceptable (barely, I admit) framerate on my Atom 330 box. That it's my Media Center and torrent server, by the way.
Granted, the Game of the Year will not run on this setup. :-)
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Nops, it's a standard Intel motherboard with a I8294G graphic chipset. Barely acceptable, but it does the job. And, as you said, as a desktop machine it's a pain in the mouse's ass.
I had a harsh time, however, until I manage to install and configure the correct drivers and codecs. Win7, as it's installed, does a shitty job on the Atom 330. You need to use the Intel network driver (and turn off all hardware aid!), and do not forget to install the Atom 330 optimized codecs - otherwise you will not be able to
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Re:Only thing about Atom proccessors (Score:5, Funny)
Nazi is a proper noun and thus must be capitalized.
Re:Only thing about Atom proccessors (Score:5, Funny)
And yet you don't know how to spell "capitalised". Bloody colonials...
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Nazi is a proper noun and thus must be capitalized.
Certainly. But attributive words preceding a proper noun are also capitalized. So it is "Grammar Nazi," not "grammar Nazi."
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Have fun.
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I can't help thinking here that HP screwed up their courage, took a deep breath, and did the wrong thing. Seems to me the prevailing argument ended up as "PC compatible" thus going with the weak-and-hot atom. But these servers are all going to be running Linux, so where's the argument for PC compabitility?
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atoms run linux just fine.
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I think his argument boils down to "ARM runs linux better".
Whether that is true or not is up for debate.
Re:English - do you speak it? (Score:5, Funny)
Would somebody please find the marketers/editors that wrote this and shoot them? THXBYE
Hi. I'm part of the engineering team tasked with tracking down and eliminating people upon request, who have managed to slight someone else on the internet. We've logged your request and will get to it as quickly as possible. However, due to our limited budget and the unexpected popularity of our service, the high volume of requests will delay our response time. We currently estimate that we'll be able to service your request on October 27th, 2238, at 8:00 pm.
Also, our records indicate that you have an appointment with us on June 27th, 2027, at 3:35pm. Please be prompt. The internet as you know it depends on it.
Re:English - do you speak it? (Score:5, Interesting)
Acquire startup funding and open a website for sponsors and volunteers. You could run it on TOR and pay the volunteers via bitcoin.
Donations are weighted depending on the amount donated, people could vote for the target they most wanted addressed first. The balances could just continue to grow until a volunteer accepts the job. Of course it would have to be a COD service and some sort of clear proof would be required, but it's certainly not outside the realm of possibility.
You could probably even get corporate sponsorship.
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But in all seriousness, this is a great idea for crowd sourcing.
It was a joke... the idea of someone taking it seriously is rather chilling. That it's been up-modded doubly-so.
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if you've done nothing wrong you have nothing to fear.
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If either side gains, then the retaliation swings the line of power back and forth like a pendulum.
And before you know it there's a clone war, brothers kissing sisters and lil furry creatures saving the galaxy with rocks.
We must hold the line firm!
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a third?
maybe we need to construct an Ark?
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Subject: I want one or two
Start with a HP Proliant Microserver 40L [hp.com]: all in all, a 4 bay non-hotswap low power home NAS for about $200 (HDD-es not included) - or make it a media center, or whatever you fancy at that spec.
I reckon you can have one or two at that reasonable price.
Sounds sweet!!
Biggest advantage... the microserver does not sound at all... it's virtually silent
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nope (Score:2)
not really, a mainframe of S390 era had very few cores. mainframe architecture isn't about a bunch of systems network connected all running separate OS instances. It's instead a "star architecture" of processors connected to "peripheral processing units" to offload IO work.