[SunRescue] Re: Looking for SS20
Ken Hansen
rescue at sunhelp.org
Sat Mar 3 07:23:15 CST 2001
Just a note to some of the follow-ups to my previous post - I was discussing
the <b>spending of cash</b> on an SS/20, <i><b>not the usefulness of an
SS/20 or other "mature" platform</b></i>.
I quote from my previous post:
I would be very hesitant to open my wallet and spend *cash* of
any magnatude on SBUS SPARC hardware.
and also note, nearly every paragraph for each platform discussed talks
about the <b>value</b> of the box, not the <b>usefulness or functional
value</b> but the financial value.
I apologize if that was not clear in my original posting.
Ken
(Who does see much value in the functions performed by my SS/5 110, SS/10 &
SS/20, and even my SB 3GXen, BTW)
----- Original Message -----
From: <paul at anastrophe.com>
To: <rescue at sunhelp.org>
Sent: Saturday, March 03, 2001 1:31 AM
Subject: [SunRescue] Re: Looking for SS20
>
> well, my only comment is, remember the name of this list - sun rescue.
it's
> all about those folks who are 'into' cool sun hardware, old or new. i
happen
> to think the sparc 20 was an extraordinarily cool piece of hardware, and
to
> this day it makes an absolutely dandy, kickass internet server. i run my
> personal domain - and 70 other domains for friends, family, co-workers, on
> an integrix sparc 10/20 clone, with an SM71 and 256megs of ram. go ahead
and
> beat up on www.anastrophe.com, www.parkingquest.com,
www.cameronwasson.com,
> etc., responsiveness is dandy. For the ISP I ran several years ago, we ran
a
> similar integrix clone, quad hyper 100's, 512M ram - and that box served
> about 12,000 user accounts, banging on it for SMTP, ftp, pop3, imap, http,
> dns, it ran it all, and worked like a champ.
>
> today, i'm running a system that's reached about the same number of
> accounts, but it's on dual e4500's, behind redundant big/ip traffic
> directors. it's a little bit snappier, with four 333mhz ultrasparc cpu's
> with 4meg cache each, but for internet services, you can hardly tell the
> difference.
>
> oh my, listen to me yammer on about my beloved sparc servers. i'm typing
> this message through the webmail interface on anastrophe - the actual
typing
> taking place on my home PC, a nice athlon 1Ghz win98 system. why? i like
to
> play computer games. i also have to reboot the fucking thing every day or
> two, or wait for it to just lock up on me. i'll never run peecee hardware
> for production servers. if sun went belly up, i'd buy a dozen sparc 20's
and
> internals, and just keep rolling along for another decade. put yer data on
> some netapps, and scale, scale, scale.
>
> i'll shut up now.
>
> Ken Hansen writes:
>
> > Bill,
> >
> > In my opinion, an SS/20 only makes sense if you have a
> > reasonably well-stocked parts bin, and don't need to go out and
> > look for HDs, RAM, or CPUs. The way the market is right now, I
> > would be very hesitant to open my wallet and spend *cash* of any
> > magnatude on SBUS SPARC hardware.
> >
> > Any box based on a Sun4c CPU (IPC, SS/1/2/etc) is not worth
> > dollar one to me, that is not to say they don't have usefullnes,
> > but I think the folks that buy these units now are going to be
> > the last owners of them.
> >
> > I liken this to the market for 80486-based PCs.
> >
> > Sun4m boxes have a bit more time to be marketable, but honestly,
> > I'd have to think real hard before I open my wallet for anything
> > less than a *real nice* SS/20 (like the 2x SM50, 128 Meg RAM, 2x
> > 1 Gig HD, 4 Meg VSIMM and CD-ROM equiped SS/20 I got for about
> > $250 a few months back). The 2x SM71s were a nice upgrade, and I
> > think that box will be my "beater" for trying things out.
> >
> > Sun Ultra 1s are still quite usefull, and they will be
> > marketable for 12-18 months, due mainly to their spiraling value
> > and binary compatability with newer machines.
> >
> > Ultra 2s are the new SS/20s AFAIAC, and will hold their value
> > for 2 years plus, since they are so powerful, and deployed in so
> > many applications as servers... At 2x300 MHz Ultra SPARC CPUs,
> > these units can handle most anything thrown at them, esp. I/O
> > related activities.
> >
> > I can't speak to the Ultra 5, 10 and above systems - I've just
> > not dealt with them to have any sense of value/lifespan/etc.
> >
> > Sun Blade 100s are the crack cocaine of the Sun market, and once
> > I can get one with a decent discount (educational) I'll be on
> > that unit right away. What I really like is the low-cost of
> > add-ons, like RAM, HD, etc. I suspect that a $1K server will
> > decimate the Cobalt Cube/RAQ market, and their technology will
> > evolve into a pure software offering, based on Sun's new
> > generation of hardware...
> >
> > Well, those are my thoughts, I'm sure some folks will difer with
> > me, but hey, that's why were here, right? ;^)
> >
> > Ken
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: rescue-admin at sunhelp.org
> > [mailto:rescue-admin at sunhelp.org]On
> > Behalf Of Bill Bradford
> > Sent: Friday, March 02, 2001 2:38 PM
> > To: rescue at sunhelp.org
> > Subject: [SunRescue] Looking for SS20
> >
> >
> > I'm in the market (possibly) for a SS20, if anybody has one
> > barebones,
> > let me know.
> >
> > bill
> >
> > --
> > Bill Bradford
> > mrbill at mrbill.net
> > Austin, TX
> > _______________________________________________
> > Rescue maillist - Rescue at sunhelp.org
> > http://www.sunhelp.org/mailman/listinfo/rescue
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Rescue maillist - Rescue at sunhelp.org
> > http://www.sunhelp.org/mailman/listinfo/rescue
>
>
>
>
> ---------------------------------
> Paul Theodoropoulos
> paul at anastrophe.net
> Senior Unix Systems Administrator
> Syntactically Subversive Services, Inc.
> http://www.anastrophe.net
> Downtime Is Not An Option
>
> _______________________________________________
> Rescue maillist - Rescue at sunhelp.org
> http://www.sunhelp.org/mailman/listinfo/rescue
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