RE: [OT] RE: development environment
At home: P4 2.8HT, 1.25Gb, ~200gb in various drives, 1x17" LCD, 1x19" Trinitron @ 1280x1024(colour palettes on the Sony), leaning required to watch the Simpsons, close to beer supply in kitchen (small apartment). Nice view of the Story Bridge. Lousy Dodo 1/2 meg ADSL :) Big mofo Sony stereo for mp3 goodness, and a tablet for photoshop. At the office: Celery (non D) 2.6, 512mb, 40gb, 17" Samsung LCD (12ms, but nice nonetheless). Enough for work (and quake 3 on Fridays) but nothing to write home about. Various servers ranging from gutless old p2s, to the mighty Darwin (assloads of ram, a couple of xeons, you can hear the fans spool up from the other side of town) IntelliJ, MySQL (lousy opensource zealots ;-)), CVS *shudder* -Josh -- "Until a man is twenty-five, he still thinks, every so often, that under the right circumstances he could be the baddest mother in the world." Josh 'G-Funk' McDonald :: Pirion Systems, Brisbane 07 3257 0490 :: 0437 221 380 :: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -Original Message- From: Peter Crowther [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, 26 April 2005 6:20 PM To: Tomcat Users List Subject: [OT] RE: development environment > From: Patrick Lacson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > I'm curious to what everyone's dev environment looks like. Dev: Athlon XP2200, 1Gbyte RAM, 80G hardware-mirrored HDDs*, Win2K server, dual 1280x1024 TFTs. Netbeans (when I have to), Ant, JUnit, vim, CVSNT, putty. Coffee machine next door - an important piece of most developers' environments. Test: 8-CPU Xeon 900, 2G RAM, 18G mirrored HDDs, Gentoo Linux, headless. Ant, JUnit, vi, cvs, ssh. In a secured machine room. We're hacking with a virtual file system and Tomcat internals, and we wanted a machine where we could do some serious thread and load testing. This came off ebay for about $3k. - Peter * Yes, it's a workstation. No, that's not an excuse for a developer to have the HDD as a single point of failure :-). These HDDs are deliberately from different batches and different sources, so that it's less likely they'll fail at close to the same time. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[OT] RE: development environment
> From: Patrick Lacson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > I'm curious to what everyone's dev environment looks like. Dev: Athlon XP2200, 1Gbyte RAM, 80G hardware-mirrored HDDs*, Win2K server, dual 1280x1024 TFTs. Netbeans (when I have to), Ant, JUnit, vim, CVSNT, putty. Coffee machine next door - an important piece of most developers' environments. Test: 8-CPU Xeon 900, 2G RAM, 18G mirrored HDDs, Gentoo Linux, headless. Ant, JUnit, vi, cvs, ssh. In a secured machine room. We're hacking with a virtual file system and Tomcat internals, and we wanted a machine where we could do some serious thread and load testing. This came off ebay for about $3k. - Peter * Yes, it's a workstation. No, that's not an excuse for a developer to have the HDD as a single point of failure :-). These HDDs are deliberately from different batches and different sources, so that it's less likely they'll fail at close to the same time. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[OT] Re: development environment
* Pentium IV 2.8GHz, 2G RAM, dual 21" monitors (CRT's... they're still far better to me, screw size!) * Windows XP Professional as main OS and Redhat8/WinNT/Win98/Mandrake in VMWare for testing * UltraEdit & Directory Opus - This is essentially my development environment, these two are where I spend 90% of my time during the day * Tomcat locally for all development as well as an instance on the Redhat VM, a secondary PC next to me (lesser hardware specs, but still decent) running Windows 2000 has WebSphere 5.1 which is our production app server of choice * Maxthon and Firefox for testing * Oracle 9i for all database development * SourceSafe for some things, CVS for others (we are moving to all CVS, but SS is still in use right now) That's the important stuff I figure. That's at work by the way, but I have an almost identical setup in my home office (laptop instead of secondary PC is the big difference), configured in a very similar way, so with the full VPN access to work, I can work almost as effectively at home as at work, not to mention work on my own stuff off-hours. -- Frank W. Zammetti Founder and Chief Software Architect Omnytex Technologies http://www.omnytex.com Patrick Lacson wrote: hi All, I'm curious to what everyone's dev environment looks like. Here's mine: hardware Penium IV 2.0Ghz / 1GB Ram OS Windows XP Pro IDE / Tools Eclipse 3.x / Emacs - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]