[Suns-at-Home] Raw Power

Jerry Kemp sun.mail.list@oryx.cc
Wed, 18 Jul 2007 12:13:50 -0500


I would second the SunRay recommendation.  I have an 8 processor E4500 
in my home with SunRay's for me and my wife.  The SunRay's work very well.

The E4500 OTOH, is very noisy and generates a lot of heat.  As time goes 
by, it is becoming more and more a winter only machine.

Jerry


Craig Dewick wrote:
> On Mon, 16 Jul 2007, Andre van Eyssen wrote:
> 
>> On Sun, 15 Jul 2007, Ben Lewis wrote:
>>
>>> Having acquired a E3500 and an Ultra 1 in the last couple of months I 
>>> find myself only really switching on my Ultra 5 to actually do 
>>> anything useful.
>>>
>>> The E3500 has much more power and the Ultra 1 is much quieter than 
>>> the Ultra 5 but somehow it feels like my "home machine".
>>>
>>> Is there a size-power-cpu-ram-diskspace to usefulness equation that 
>>> I'm not aware of?
>>
>> Yes. The more CPU, RAM, Storage and network connectivity a box has the 
>> more potentially useful.
>>
>> This is an easy one to spot. The Ultra-5's CPU is far faster than the 
>> Ultra-1, no doubt it has a better framebuffer and will be much 
>> snappier to use.
>>
>> The E3500 takes half an hour to POST, so if you're switching machines 
>> on-and-off the wait would drive you nuts.
> 
> I noticed this when I set up my E450 last year - POST takes a good 10 
> minutes or more depending what diag level, etc. I have it set up for. 
> It's supremely quiet apart from disk noise, and it replaced about four 
> small server boxes (a couple of t105's and some older systems) I had 
> running in my rack with one single, relatively more energy-efficient, 
> quiet, powerful system that's simple to move around when that need arises.
> 
>> Personally, I'd try to score a SunRay thin client or two and plug 'em 
>> into your 3500. The performance may surprise you.
> 
> How freely available is the software, etc. to run SunRay's like that? 
> Has sun closed off access to it just like they've done with SunSolve and 
> access to Solaris patches, etc.?
> 
> If the software is freely available, that's good as SunRay's (esp. the 
> earlier ones) show up on Ebay all the time now at cheap prices.
> 
> Craig.
>