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On Wednesday 19 November 2003 14:24, Francisco Reyes wrote:
> My primary concern is the network card. Since these small machines only
> have one PCI slot I will add one card for the internal network and then
> would need the onboard card to connect to
> also you can get PCI doublers... no idea how well they work,
> but! anyone had
> experience of them?
You can always get the Intel dual/quad server NIC's. Even come in dual gig-e
flavor!
Brent
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The C137 (in my case, black with a 90W PSU). It wil accomodate a flex ATX
board, as well as the smaller Mini ITX board. If you order the dual riser
card, they will throw in an extra extender with it (since they assume you
will be running an ITX board in it)
Case Outlet doesn't appear to carry t
On Thu, 20 Nov 2003, paul van den bergen wrote:
> I have a bunch of these (8000s actually) for a testbed network. work like a
> treat... go fanless if you can...
Where did you get them from?
How much?
> I did have some hassles with the onboard via network connection not coping
> with long vlan
On Thu, 20 Nov 2003, J. Seth Henry wrote:
> Guys,
> Case Outlet*, and perhaps others by now, have the Travla Flex ATX / mini ITX
> case that will accomodate two PCI cards. I have an 933MHz EPIA board with two
> 3c905TX-C NICs, and have seen a substantial improvement in performance over
> my old Ne
Guys,
Case Outlet*, and perhaps others by now, have the Travla Flex ATX / mini ITX
case that will accomodate two PCI cards. I have an 933MHz EPIA board with two
3c905TX-C NICs, and have seen a substantial improvement in performance over
my old Netgear router.
Trust me, the onboard NIC's are cr
I have a bunch of these (8000s actually) for a testbed network. work like a
treat... go fanless if you can...
I did have some hassles with the onboard via network connection not coping
with long vlan tagged packets... Not sure if this is still an issue, but the
vlan man page lists compatible d
On Wed, Nov 19, 2003 at 11:39:01AM -0500, Francisco Reyes wrote:
> On Wed, 19 Nov 2003, Scott Mitchell wrote:
>
> > On Wed, Nov 19, 2003 at 04:11:46PM +0100, Nico Meijer wrote:
> .
> > > It was a ME6000 (fanless 600Mhz machine):
>
>
> > I'm using a USB Ethernet adapter for the 'outside'
On Wed, 19 Nov 2003, Scott Mitchell wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 19, 2003 at 04:11:46PM +0100, Nico Meijer wrote:
.
> > It was a ME6000 (fanless 600Mhz machine):
> I'm using a USB Ethernet adapter for the 'outside' interface on my ME6000,
> since I needed the PCI slot for the wireless card.
Wh
On Wed, Nov 19, 2003 at 04:11:46PM +0100, Nico Meijer wrote:
> Hi Francisco,
>
> >Anyone used a mini ATX machine with FreeBSD?
>
> It's mini ITX and yes, just did one yesterday. Small, quiet and
> beautiful. ;-)
>
> It was a ME6000 (fanless 600Mhz machine):
> http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/getmsg.c
Hi Francisco,
Anyone used a mini ATX machine with FreeBSD?
It's mini ITX and yes, just did one yesterday. Small, quiet and
beautiful. ;-)
It was a ME6000 (fanless 600Mhz machine):
http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/getmsg.cgi?fetch=794445+0+/usr/local/www/db/text/2003/freebsd-questions/20030928.freebsd-
Anyone used a mini ATX machine with FreeBSD?
Have a client that has a space limitation and a mini atx machine like
http://shentech.com/shutspacskvi.html
Would be perfect for him.
My primary concern is the network card. Since these small machines only
have one PCI slot I will add one card for the
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