@voretaq7 Excuse me? Nobody gonna be taken the crown of this tabbycat's head! ::two snaps in a circle::
@ChrisS And for those of us afflicted with the bug to stay self employed, we are very aware of the tax burden that most people have whisked away from them by employers.
Also you guys apparently Sunday is NYC Pride. This is like the first year in...really as far back as I can remember... that I can actually plan to NOT be in manhattan for it so I don't try to walk across town and stumble into a parade!
I've never felt the need for a parade to celebrate being who I am - there's no "Straight Pride" parade (and if there were it would be treated the same way as a "White Pride" parade), so why should there be a "Gay Pride" parade.
Hey guys, I know this is the wrong room to ask, but i thought there would be that kind of knowledge floating around... But I am about to build a server, i'm going to buy a motherboard next week, and i have a quick question...
@MichaelHampton it's summer, schools out, so i have lot's of time, and i'm thinking of spending around 350, i looked over the prices etc, it landed in that sort of area
This reminds me of something I wanted to ask here... I'm not sure how to turn it into another epic Server Fault question... But as professionals, how do you balance the desire to learn, tinker, but also maintain stability?
@ewwhite I learn and tinker in labs. Not generally on the production systems. (Unless something's horribly broken and I have to in order to get it back up.)
(my personal desktop would actually probably handle most of the things you're looking at. A low end xeon box can probably do a lot of those cheaper and better ;p)
Tinkering is bad as a sysadmin, but it's also good... The desire to build a server makes sense from a learning and playtime perspective, but makes no sense in a production/stability/availability standpoint
@coding_corgi: now, I'm building a ATX based system. I can get a (monster of a case) that can handle an EATX motherboard, and put anything smaller in it
@MichaelHampton: point really being, as long as its a standard form factor (which any DIY system will be) it should fit in any case for a bigger standard form factor
The Compact Electronics Bay Specification (CEB) as well as EEB, MEB and [https://ssiforum.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=55:ssi-releases-eeb-2011-specification-to-rev-10&catid=8:news&Itemid=68 TEB] ("Thin Electronics Bay") are standard form factors for dual or multi processor motherboards defined by the Server System Infrastructure (SSI) forum. The specification is intended for value servers and workstations based on the Intel XEON processor.
The width × depth of a SSI CEB motherboard are , while SSI EEB is and SSI MEB is .
The SSI CEB specification was derived from ...
@JourneymanGeek For instance, SSI EEB is about the same dimensions as EATX, but the screw holes are in different places. So you need a case with holes for SSI boards.
@coding_corgi no "..." - You purchase machines assembled by reputable manufacturers, that come with a guaranteed service warranty (the bottom end of the standard is "4 hour parts-on-site"), that way when (not if) things break you have (a) the tools to fix the problem quickly, and (b) someone to point at if you can't fix it because the manufacturer breaches their warranty contract.
@ewwhite yeah... back in the late 90s. Hasn't been true for the better part of this century.
If we're going to stay stuck in the past let's run 110V power to all the servers and connect them to the light switch. Carpeting in datacenters is perfectly acceptable. Fire suppression should be water sprinklers...
Hey guys, I know this is the wrong room to ask, but i thought there would be that kind of knowledge floating around... But I am about to build a server, i'm going to buy a motherboard next week, and i have a quick question...
We found it cheaper just to go to Petland and buy hamsters in bulk. When one dies from exhaustion we just replace that one with a fresh one and burn the bodies weekly.
that's the answer to any question that starts with "I'm thinking about building a server (from parts, by myself, without a manufacturer supported warranty)"
@coding_corgi Because of all the reasons I just gave you, and all the reasons in the multiple questions on Server Fault about "Should I build it or buy it"
@coding_corgi So don't build one from scratch if you're going to be using it as a production server. The manufacturers got it right when they built them more than likely and hardware compatibility would be no issue.
@coding_corgi Well excuse me. SF is for "professionals" in the field that need help. I wouldn't expect a 12 year old building a hobby server to be in the "professional" forum....
@MattBear I started with advice to get him on the right path, however, he wanted to be a smart alec about it and not explain his requirements and constraints...
I was just reading the Terms of Service, and noticed something:
Subscriber certifies to Stack Overflow
that if Subscriber is an individual
(i.e., not a corporate entity),
Subscriber is at least 13 years of age. No one under the age of 13 may
provide any personal information to or
on...
@MattBear "Server Fault is a question and answer site for professional system and network administrators".....it was a safe assumption he was asking because he was a professional system or network administrator...
@coding_corgi Like I said, I'm going to give you the benefit of the doubt and assume that if you are 12 you're using your parents' account, with permission :)
@coding_corgi Considered a HP ProLiant MicroServer? Most places offer £100/$100 cashback and the older model are getting cheaper because the most recent one was released...recently.
@coding_corgi Don't knock till you've tried, the G8 ones look very nice. Okay, the CPU is isn't that great, but as long as you don't want to virtulise on it you should be fine. I've got two in my home lab and they do file and web services nicely.
@NathanC when we started our account, we had the free trial, but once it was over it was set to continue paid... we maxed out the trial in about 4 days