On Sat, Feb 12, 2000 at 03:55:11PM -0800, Zachary Amsden wrote:
> > : Maybe if you are talking about huge disk cages, and the cost was amortized
> > : over a bunch of disks it would be feasible, but if you are talking about
> > : single drives, this is sheer madness.
> >
> > To you, perhaps. I'll tell you this: I run a software business on Linux.
> > I can get 20GB drives for $200. If I could get 20GB drives with Linux
> > running on them for $300, I'd be buying them like cupcakes.
>
> Why? So you can log in to your disk drives and run emacs?
Because if the drive spoke GigE instead of IDE or SCSI ribbon cable, and
ran Linux, then it's effectively a standalone Linux box.
Imagine hot swappable web server hard disk. Plug your disk straight into
the switch, telnet in, configure apache, upload content, done.
I believe it's possible, but I think Larry's estimates of 50% extra cost
($200 -> $300) are off the wall. The Itsy shows you can make Linux boxes
small enough, but the pricetag (several thousand $) also shows that it's
economically impractical.
> I would much rather see that $100 going towards more storage capacity and
> buffering, rather than a CPU running linux. I think a lot of people would
> agree with me on that one.
Yup. 100mhz Pentium and motherboard is literally $50, including case and
NIC and RAM. Shove a $200 disk inside and I effectively get exactly what
Larry's talking about (hot swappable ethernet interfaced disk drive) but
my version is a bit bigger. Space doesn't concern me. Dollars do.
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