As to the initial question, I'd suggest Supermicro with the new AMD EPYC
Rome CPUs (I should receive them in november-december when NVMe-native
models are ready). Much better than Intel+Dell, though still proprietary.
If you are ok with something more exotic but more open and in server
class, you
On 2019-09-07, James Huddle wrote:
>> I recently purchased a Dell T-330 server that I had intended to
>> install OpenBSD on and use as a serious web server. My goal was to
>> have more control than would be (naturally) given with, say an AWS VM.
>> And by control, I mean what is *not* running on
On 2019-09-07, James Huddle wrote:
> I recently purchased a Dell T-330 server that I had intended to
> install OpenBSD on and use as a serious web server. My goal was to
> have more control than would be (naturally) given with, say an AWS VM.
> And by control, I mean what is *not* running on the
I recently purchased a Dell T-330 server that I had intended to
install OpenBSD on and use as a serious web server. My goal was to
have more control than would be (naturally) given with, say an AWS VM.
And by control, I mean what is *not* running on the box - security-wise.
Apparently, Dell ships
4 matches
Mail list logo