hmmmmmm you got me thinking I am getting ready to put a web sight online for my 
ministry do you have to have a super fast connection like above dsl to host 
your own web sight I was told you had to have a t1 line or faster. so in your 
case you buy the domain name then instead of going to some ones place to host 
it it goes to your house to that computer wow how hard was that to set up I am 
sure it wasn't cheap then again you said you bought most of the equipment cheep 
and rebuilt can you do any thing lile that with say dsl or do you need t1 what 
speed do you have and second do you have to buy a special account like a 
commercial account or can you do it with say my dsl is qwest 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Robert C Wittig 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Sunday, February 18, 2007 9:27 PM
  Subject: Re: [LINUX_Newbies] Re: hi


  dave fales wrote:

  > wo was it hard to get the iu servers running if I can ask on those
  > servers you have labeld The rack... 2 -1U, 2 -4U, plus a few 1U odds
  > and ends what is it purpose is it the computer that controls your
  > whole network I have serched on line and found pro web sights on
  > computer netowrking but is there any sights you know of that are
  > simple to understand on building a network

  Ok, 1U and 4U are just shorthand, to describe the thicknesses of the 
  individual computers and other appliances in a rack. I think, off the 
  top of my head, that 1U represents about 1 3/4" of height.

  Looking at the rack in the photo, and starting at the bottom...

  The thin 1U at the bottom is a SuperMicro server, dual PIII 1,000 MHz 
  CPU's, and 1 gig RAM, named supermicro.robertwittig.net. It is home to 
  four websites, robertwittig.com, robertwittig.net, robertwittig.org, and 
  no-friction-cafe.com, and handles email for those four domains. It is 
  running OpenBSD 3.9 operating system.

  The 1U server above it, is not running... it is a back-up computer, that 
  is configured the same as supermicro.robertwittig.com, and can be put 
  on-line when needed, if/when the main server requires maintenance.

  The white 4U computer above it is a Desktop machine, running FreeBSD 6.0 
  at the moment, but with removable hard drive cages, it also runs an 
  OpenBSD Desktop installation. Basically, it is a 'practice box', where I 
  test things before putting them 'live' on a working machine, and for 
  learning and studying things.

  Above that, sits a small 1U power panel, to protect against power 
  surges. Also, on the floor behind the rack, is a UPS (Uninterruptable 
  Power Supply) so that the servers and other machines can be shut down 
  properly, in the event of a power failure.

  On top of the power panel, is a 1U Compaq KVM switch, so that I can 
  control the array of computers from a single Keyboard, Video array, and 
  Mouse.

  Above that, the blue Netgear ethernet hub, to connect all the computers 
  to the Internet... there is a single cable running up to the attic 
  workshop from the DSL modem/router, which is in my office, downstairs, 
  along with my two main computers... this Red Hat machine I am typing on 
  now, and a Windows 2000 Graphics Workstation.

  Above that, the black 4U machine, is a Windows 2000 file server, and is 
  connected to the Compaq SCSI array. I picked that up, along with about 
  50 SCSI drives, when the University of Chicago was upgrading their 
  servers last winter, for the cost of carfare down there and back, and 
  the muscle to lug the huge, heavy suitcase-with-wheels across Chicago on 
  public transit in the dead of winter.

  The Skeletek frame cost me $90.00 on eBay, from a store here in Chicago.

  -- 
  -wittig http://www.robertwittig.com/
  . http://robertwittig.net/
  . http://robertwittig.org/


   

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