On Sat, Apr 25, 2009 at 12:53 AM, Gerald Smith <[email protected]> wrote: > Hello Gentlemen! > > The dire and dirty deed is duly done. I have set up a personal SAGE Math > server, and it should be currently running > at https://67.23.33.110:8000 > This is a MOSSO cloud server at RackSpace. RackSpace has a good rep, and > what they offer and the > price cannot be beat, and I did a LOT of looking! Basically, on the cloud > server I have access to 40 gigs > of disk space and 1 gig of RAM, and SAGE seems to be running just fine. RAM > is the real sticking point as > having access to that much RAM on a server is typically $100 to $150 a month > and can run up to $200. At > RackSpace, those resources are available for $46 a month and can be upgraded > or downgraded on a month > by month basis as needed. There is an additional charge for bandwidth usage; > $0.22 per GigaByte out and $0.08 > per Gigabyte going in. Despite making heavy use of bandwidth over many > hours setting up and testing the server, > I still managed to use less than a gigabyte and it was mostly coming in, so > I don't expect that to add a lot to the > cost. This is pricey compared with setting up a MOODLE server but a lot > cheaper than I was expecting to have > to pay for a working installation. I figure that in practice it will > probably come to $15 to $20 a week once > I get my Math Bear Education Initiative on Second Life really going to > town. > > Please check it out if you wish.The admin password is "tachyonics". So far, > I have NOT been successful in getting any other accounts set up. > I am not at all sure just what I am doing wrong. I followed the examples in > the manual and entered what I thought were all the > correct commands, and SAGE seemed to accept the new users, but when I ran > the notebook server the new accounts were simply > ignored and I was stuck with the admin one only.
Precisely what command do you run in order to start the sage notebook server? -- William > I have also put up 5 > example worksheets to show various aspects of SAGE. I have not > yet attempted to implement any special forms of security, though I have so > far not succeeded in SSH-ing into the server. I have had to > use the special control panel accessible through RackSpace's website. They > have very good customer service with prompt access to > technical support via live chat. That guy went to www.sagemath.com and > checked out the program, and said I should have no trouble > setting up SAGE as long as I knew something about setting up such things > under linux. I went ahead and signed up for the account, > but I really don't owe them anything until I have actually used their > resources and you can keep track. > > You basically have your choice of many flavors of Linux and I chose Debian > (lenny). They set up the operating system for you. > You can set up as many servers as you like and add or delete them as you see > fit. First I used apt-get to install everything from > the Debian repositories that was latex related and IMHO, likely to be > useful. Then I downloaded the appropriate precompiled > Debian 5.0 64 bit binary build and plopped it into a folder I had prepared > for it. I took about half an hour. When I ran it, it gave me > one of those dire messages about being compiled on a different machine and > missing something which could make SAGE fail sometime. > I just removed the indicated file and ran it anyway, willing to take the > risk, as my use is primarily educational rather than oriented towards > serious > number crunching. If I do run into problems later on, I will go ahead and > install from source. I am not as yet really concerned about security > as I also have a SAGE server running on my computer (VISTA via VMWare) and > it isn't accessible to anybody but me. I will keep anything > important stored on my private SAGE server. I will introduce what ever > security measures seem reasonable once I get things going. I need to look > into that. I am not sure what all the security measures RackSpace has going > but that may be a factor. Right now, feel free to play with it as you like. > I would very much appreciate an informed opinion on the functionality of my > toy and security issues. And I offer my special gratitude to the "Dr. > Frankenstein" > who brought this particular magnificent mathematical monster to life, our > good Dr. William Stein! > > Cheers to All and Sundry, > > Jerry (a.k.a. MathBear) > > P.S. For your bemusement, I included a snapshot of my mascot for my > educational complex. This is the actual form I wear on SL when I am being an > educator. > ________________________________ > From: William Stein <[email protected]> > To: [email protected] > Sent: Wednesday, April 22, 2009 11:44:44 PM > Subject: [sage-edu] Re: Grant for a sage server > > > On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 9:35 PM, Pong <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> Hi Rob, >> >> Thanks for letting me know. So sagenb is supported by Sun and NSF >> now? > > Yes, by Sun, NSF, and Univ. of Washington (who pays the bandwidth). > >> In that case, I certainly don't feel gulity to have my students >> sign up and use it then. > > Go for it. > >> Haven said that I'm still interested to hear from Jerry on what's >> the progress on his idea. So Jerry, feel free to contact me offline. > > William > > > > > -- William Stein Associate Professor of Mathematics University of Washington http://wstein.org --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "sage-edu" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/sage-edu?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
