I used to follow a project called LTSP (Linux Terminal Server Project) and it's 
educational cousin K12LTSP.  They use diskless PCs as Linux "terminals."

I'm on the clock right now and don't have time to Google the current status...

______________________
Dave Manginelli
Programmer/Analyst
Benefit Communications Inc.
2126 21st Ave South
Nashville, TN  37212
615-292-3786 ext. 606

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Jack Coats
Sent: Tuesday, October 18, 2011 11:38 AM
To: NLUG
Subject: [nlug] Once upon a time...

Once upon a time SUN had a way to 'net boot' machines, typically desktops.  
Then it used the local
disk for swap and cache of data and programs only.  It used LMRU algorithm's to 
figure out what to
dump out of cache when it got full.  I was impressed if you put in a 
non-formatted disk it would partition
and format it on the fly as needed.

The good thing was that when files were updated/changed/written locally, they 
would be written back
to the server (home directory mostly).  If a local disk died, just replace it, 
reboot the machine then
it would run slowly (building the cache, just like when the machine is 'new') 
but it would run and
did apparently speed up as more was put into cache.

My question is, is there such a thing available on Linux?

I have heard of kiosk machines that did everything over the 'net, but this with 
local cache had some
of the best of both worlds.

><> ... Jack
http://appsumo.com/~uvlm<http://appsumo.com/%7Euvlm> <-- Enter to win 50G 
Dropbox for life
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