> I agree with all of you that this is a good way to _simulate_ a cluster,
> but my comment was that it isn't a good way to _replace_ one. In any
and my point is that that depend son what you want to do. For example, if you want to
teach networking, a cluster of virtual machines will work well.
IBM's making money out of virtual clusters these days, replacing clusters of real Suns
and such with a single real maching runnning (potentially) tens of thousands of
virtual machines running Linux.
--
Cheers
John Summerfield
Microsoft's most solid OS: http://www.geocities.com/rcwoolley/
Note: mail delivered to me is deemed to be intended for me, for my disposition.