In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Jonathon McKitrick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> mentions: >On Thu, Aug 31, 2006 at 09:58:59AM -0700, Matthew Dillon wrote: >: that 75% of the interest in our project has nothing to do with my >: project goals but instead are directly associated with work being done >: by our relatively small community. I truely appreciate that effort >: because it allows me to focus on the part that is most near and dear >: to my own heart. > >Big question: after all the work that will go into the clustering, other than >scientific research, what will the average user be able to use such advanced >capability for?
My own plans are to use it for old hardware. (and as a long time linux user.. check out how the other 1/2 lives, dragonbsd has a lot of the flavor linux did back in the day) Kind of have a feeling it won't work too good for old hardware, but I have a couple old machines around here. (actually, all my machines are old) being able to offload as much as possibe between them appeals to me, at least on a personal level. I looked at the condor project, Dr. Dobbs did an article on it years ago. Seemed promising but then read that it was restricted in the types of programs it could run. Would be really neat I suppose if it became so common instead of "PC anywhere" you just logged in, plugged in to your "machine" and worked from there, sort of like how we might use the 'screen' utility today but the whole image could move. Heck, maybe even a mozilla "CPU" plugin at some point 15 years from now? I bet render farms would be interested as well. Oh, and of course, being able to take a machine down appeals to me. I did a web application once that spanned several computers, we used LDAP for configuration and basically copied everything all the time. Was a lot of work. I can appreciate the problems involved. Jamie -- http://www.geniegate.com Custom web programming [EMAIL PROTECTED] (rot13) User Management Solutions
