On 2018-06-21 09:24, Michael Barnes wrote:
On Thu, Jun 21, 2018 at 7:41 AM, Michael Rasmussen
<[email protected]>
wrote:
On 2018-06-20 16:48, logical american wrote:
On Jun 18, 2018, at 1:38 PM, Michael
Rasmussen<[email protected]>
wrote:
To stress "As others have suggested, you may be able to use a VM" -
at
my final job before retirement (Large bank, Fortune 500, etc)
everything
possible was migrated to in-house VMs.
I want to say mail services were an early migration. In any case,
the
entire mail infrastructure was run on virtual servers.
There's no need for a physical server.
This is your opinion. We're not trying to determine if a VM is
capable
of running *a* mail server. We're trying to determine what the
requirements
of *his* mail server are, because that drives whether a physical
server is
required.
There may be a security requirement such as "no AES key leakage to
other
tenants". In this case, he may not be able to use a VM. There are
people in
the crypto community who believe that any system that needs secure
crypto
should not be virtualized.
I need a secure crypto system, hence physical. Too much can go wrong
with a virtual system. Who really owns the virtual system? Not you!
The secure crypto requirement was not indicated in your original post.
Provide incomplete requirements and get non-applicable replies.
--
Michael Rasmussen, Portland Oregon
Be Appropriate && Follow Your Curiosity
Sadly, this seems to be a growing trend in online forums. The OP was
looking for information regarding leasing space for a physical server.
That
was a pretty straightforward question. There were a ton of replies, not
a
single one of which addressed his actual question. Instead, everyone
wanted
to tell him how wrong he is for wanting what he wanted and give lots of
answers not applicable to his question. Why does everyone today
automatically leap to the conclusion that the person asking a question
is
too stupid to know what he wants? The OP wants a physical server. I'm
sure
he has his reasons. Who are we to questions his reasons? Why must we
waste
bandwidth second guessing him? Can't we just sit back and watch and see
if
someone actually has an answer that applies to his question?
This issue is not limited to this forum. I see it on many other
interest
groups. You ask a question and get 27 answers, none of which actually
address the question. They tell you other ways to do it, tell you how
they
fixed their Chevy when you asked about a Ford, why you are wrong to do
what
you are asking without knowing the whole story, etc.
As far as the "Provide incomplete requirements and get non-applicable
replies." comment goes, he asked about physical hosting of a "small
locked
cabinet (15U) space with 1 power plug 110v AC and a business class
internet
connection." That seems pretty complete for his question. What that
cabinet
does is not part of the question and frankly none of your business.
Why can't we stop overthinking things and just answer the question?
Excellent points. I stand schooled and corrected.
--
Michael Rasmussen, Portland Oregon
Be Appropriate && Follow Your Curiosity
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