Brian; I checked it out and the Dell GX270 is an *awesome* box and would be a shame to throw out. It has a slick-looking small form factor case.
If you've *got* to have a stylistic look, get sexy mice, keyboards and flat panel monitors, and hide the CPU cases (people don't interact much with cases, anyway). The Dell you mentioned would make a *great* LTSP client. If you want to make it more reliable, you could unplug the hard disks to reduce power consumption and noise. You could add memory to one of them and use it for a server for at lease 5 terminals. A 2.2 GHz celeron is no slouch. Tom > I am pondering replacing one of our currently deployed Dell Optiplex > GX270 (Celeron 2.2, 256 MB RAM) with a true diskless thin client in > order to give the Dell to a staff member. I looked at > disklessworkstation.com and like the HP Compaq T5500 quite a bit. > > I would like to re-use some old hardware, but because of stylistic > concerns (these are public Internet kiosks in a newly renovated student > union and the management likes that techy look) I can't. > > I wonder if anyone has any experience with the HP Compaq machines or > other LTSP thin client or could think of a reason why I wouldn't want to > replace the existing machines. -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Thomas L. Griffing Red Hat Certified Engineer Pondus Solutions, Inc. [EMAIL PROTECTED] ------------------------------------------------------- SF.Net is sponsored by: Speed Start Your Linux Apps Now. Build and deploy apps & Web services for Linux with a free DVD software kit from IBM. Click Now! http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=1356&alloc_id=3438&op=click _____________________________________________________________________ Ltsp-discuss mailing list. To un-subscribe, or change prefs, goto: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ltsp-discuss For additional LTSP help, try #ltsp channel on irc.freenode.net
