Hello! On Sun, 26 Feb 2012 11:28:01 +0200 McLone <mcl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 22:00, <v...@ukr.net> wrote: > ta sho ty paryshsya z tymy 48mb > vykyn' cey hlam :-) > vin tobi tilky svitla zhere tak, > sho yakas' stara zaniuhana AMDshka > abo p3 z normalnym keruvannyam zhyvlennyam > i normalnym blokom zhyvlennya vzhe davno by > okupylas' til'ky po zhyvlenniu. > > Hocha... Hiba p4 abo amd64x1 cymy dnyamy > nerealno otrymaty v podarunok? navit' yaksho ty zhebrak. > Ya dumaju sho realno. > > i she: > Skil'ky vartue tviy chas? > v $ za godynu > skilky ty vytratysh v kw/h i chasi na borot'bu > z cym hlamom i 48mb ram? Thanks for a just another useful "buy new hardware" tip. ;) I know this PC is very old and that nowadays I can get more powerful machine for as little as 0USD (or even 0UAH), but that's not the point. I have several reasons to tinker with this one: 1. I have got it. So I do not have to go somewhere for another one. 2. I like when old junk hardware works. 3. Stuffing this small home server with a bunch of services yields some useful skills of system tuning. It also gives a more clear idea of the hardware capabilities actually needed for different applications. 4. I do not really care about consumed electricity at the moment, because I pay a fixed price for my room which includes more or less the maximum amount of energy I can consume. Anyway, a rough estimation of consumed electricity costs gives in my case ~6 USD per month. 5. Sometimes it may be also fun to tell people about the hardware you run your services on. People often complain about the performance problems they experience when running torrent-client with several simultaneous downloads on their PCs. And when I tell them that I run a torrent client with ~250 torrents on 64, 48, 32 MB of RAM, they usually: do not believe --> sh*t brix --> start thinking about their own system tuning. Now that is what I consider useful. So this is not about "wise" usage for production of any kind, but rather about "training", "gaining experience", "giving people good examples", "testing", "finding the *real* miminum hardware requirements" and having fun, of course :) P.S. Regarding your question about the value of my time in USD per hour: I didn't bother to calculate it before your question, but now it turns out to be as cheap as 0,85$ per working hour. :) So spending some free (or even working) time to read some documentation or to play with some pieces of rusty iron does not cost me much. ;) Regards, Vladimir ----- <v...@ukr.net>