>
> On Thursday 05 December 2002 10:38, Kirk Strauser wrote:
> > At 2002-12-05T04:13:45Z, Lord Raiden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> [snip]
> > Out of curiosity, why would you *want* to pull drives
> > from the fileserver and put them in a different server/workstation?
>
> To share the files of co
At 2002-12-06T03:06:06Z, david <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Thursday 05 December 2002 10:38, Kirk Strauser wrote:
>> Out of curiosity, why would you *want* to pull drives from the fileserver
>> and put them in a different server/workstation?
> To share the files of course!
How silly of me!
From: "david" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Kirk Strauser" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, December 05, 2002 9:06 PM
Subject: Re: Anyone seen a fire server?
On Thursday 05 December 2002 10:38, Kirk Strauser wrote:
>> At 2002-12
On Thursday 05 December 2002 10:38, Kirk Strauser wrote:
> At 2002-12-05T04:13:45Z, Lord Raiden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
[snip]
> Out of curiosity, why would you *want* to pull drives
> from the fileserver and put them in a different server/workstation?
To share the files of course!
To Unsubsc
At 2002-12-05T04:13:45Z, Lord Raiden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> The advantage being that you can both hot swap the drives,
Ummm, you can do that with many normal SCSI systems. For example, I'm
currently working on an older IBM Netfinity server with hot-plug drives in
the front of the case.
Hi all. Got a really interesting question. Someone mentioned this to me
and I have yet to find evidence of it so far. Apparently some company out
there makes a network file server of sorts that's not your typical network
file server. What it is, is the box itself is a multi-port network hub