Computers

Geek Porn

All geeks drool over various bits of kit and, knowing full well they are totally impractical for their own particular circumstances, still wish it was theirs.

Here are a couple of my recent geek porn moments.  Yes, I fully understand that they’re completely impractical for my requirements.  I also understand that they’d be wasted in any role I could find for them.  But, that doesn’t change the fact that they’re seriously cool bits of kit and if someone wanted to give me one I wouldn’t turn them down.

SGI Octane IIIFirst up, how about a super computer in your own home (or office)?  Enter the Silicon Graphics Octane III.  Look a bit blade-like?  Yep, it is.  Chunky?  Apparently dimensions are roughly 1ft x 2ft x 2ft so, yes, a little bit.  But check the specs:

  • Up to 20 Xeon Quad Core Processors
  • Up to 960GB (yes, that’s a G) of Memory
  • Up to 10 SATA hard drives
  • Graphics with your choice of NVIDIA® Quadro® FX1800, FX3800, FX4800, FX5800. NVIDIA® TeslaTM C1060
  • Up to 4 1000W power supplies

…and yes, it’ll run Vista and Windows 7.

In reality it looks to be set for three distinct roles with each role having different capabilities based on the way the slots are used – as a “deskside cluster” based around either Xeon or Atom processors and as a “graphics workstation” with fewer CPU cores but having graphics capabilities and other features.  I couldn’t see any mention of pricing but I’d hazard a guess this is in the category of “if you have to ask, you can’t afford it”.

For my second item of drool today, here’s a nice little number in red.  Stuff-all processing power but if you really need some storage for your warez and torrent downloads, this might just suit your requirements:

backblaze-cheap-cloud-server-storage2

Yep, serious drive storage and what is apparently a not so serious price.  It’s a full 4RU rack case storage unit designed to be stacked in a standard 19″ rack and provide OMG levels of storage space.  What’s really great in this case is that the guys who created it (BackBlaze) have released a complete how-to as open source hardware.  They include parts lists and instructions on how to put it all together.

What have they done?  Basically, they put a relatively standard computer (motherboard, cpu, etc) in a case together with up to fourty five 1.5TB hard drives and some software to tie it all together.  Seriously nice bit of kit, and, IT’S RED!!!

Snow Leopard – Five Nice New Finds

Snow Leopard Box ShotIt’s almost a month since the release of Snow Leopard, Apple’s latest release of it’s Mac OS X operating system.  Allowing for shipping, I didn’t get my copy until a few days later.  Not wanting to tempt fate, I waited for the weekend when I had a chance to do a full image backup as well as my normal Time Machine hourly backups.

The actual upgrade went off fine.  I upgraded over the top of my current install and didn’t see any “deal breaker” problems resulting.

There’s already a significant tonnage of stuff about Snow Leopard so I’m not going to go into general reviews or benchmarks.  I’d expect my experience to be much the same as already reported anyway.  Instead, I wanted to touch on five small, new, features that I really like.

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Windows Home Server – Read Only Permissions

Windows Home Server LogoMy SBS server developed a hardware fault recently.  While I diagnose the fault I needed to move data from the SBS box to my Windows Home Server box.  I wanted this to happen fairly quickly and didn’t want to copy via network (network being part of the fault) so I used an external hard drive.  Copied the data from SBS to external drive and then from external drive to WHS.

This is where I ran into a problem.  Just copied directly to the DATA drive on WHS and then found that permissions on everything I copied was stuffed up – mostly, files were read-only or restricted.  WHS seems to lock out most of the permissions controls you’d normally use on SBS to fix this sort of problem and I was at a loss as to how to fix it without access to this mechanism.

WHS - Computer - Drives

Don't copy from external drive straight to the "DATA" drive

Copious Google searching didn’t really find a solution but I picked up enough hints from various sources to try some things.  What worked?  Use the WHS console to create the share you want.  Set permissions in the WHS console.  Then, instead of copying directly to “DATAsharesyour new share” you need to copy to the network share name (e.g. \serveryour new share).

Copy to the network share (even though you're on the local computer)

Copy to the network share (even though you're on the local computer)

There you go.  Hope that saves someone else out there some time and trouble.

Life with Mac – The Tweaks

Reset ButtonNo matter how good an operating system gets in a default install, there’s always little things that niggle or don’t work quite the way you expect.  While I’ve tried to embrace “the way of the Mac” and not uneccesarily load up my MacBook there’s some things I just couldn’t seem to live without.

After a couple of years using Vista I’d come to like the sidebar for it’s ability to provide information “at a glance”.  In particular, it’s nice to be able to see basic system performance information like CPU load, RAM usage and system temperature – knowing this stuff helps understand if a system performance issue has an obvious cause.

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Life with Mac – Stuff that didn’t work

discAs much as I’d love to say that everything Mac is going swimmingly, there’s been a few obstacles to true OSX bliss.

My day to day life includes the businesses that I’ve been running for years (one of them over ten years, the other one about four years).  They are established and have fully developed processes that are followed by everyone.  While I can adjust some of these processes to take into account my Mac, there are limitations on what I can impose on others.

In a previous post I talked about what worked out well for me.  This post, however, is about the parts that didn’t work, what I’ve done to work-around for now and what I plan to put in place to completely resolve the issues as I move forwards.

The first obstacle has proved to be email.  I’ve used Microsoft Outlook for many years (and Outlook 2007 for the past couple of years).  With this kind of longevity of use I’ve arrived at ways that I handle email (and contacts, calendars, to-do lists) that are dependant on Outlook. More →