Originally posted by allquixotic
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Calxeda Shows Off 192-Core ARM Ubuntu Server
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Originally posted by curaga View PostYou absolutely can, see the TrimSlice for example.
Or you use some preinstalled system...
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Originally posted by oliver View Postno pics, no proof.
here, let me do that for you;
http://armservers.com/ (scroll down the page, for articles + pictures)
and verification via a picture that indeed, it does exist;
Still think there is no proof?? ....and by the way, i can't see gravity and yet gravity still exists.
i love your flawed logic, though. lol.
cheerz
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Originally posted by locovaca View PostJust a point of correction, a 2U server chassis is pretty small, only 3.5 inches high. A normal full atx desktop case is the equivalent of a 4U rackmount as I recall.
The good news is, if you can believe this ~ i've dropped my Rack/PC down a flight of stairs - with ZERO damage awesomeness...lol
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Originally posted by ninez View PostThat would be correct. I wanted to buy a 2U rack, but unfortunately a 2U rack can't fit standard sized PCI cards. 3U is the lowest profile that you can go, if you still want to be able to fit PCI cards without using an adapter (to allow to put your pci-card to sit horizontally, but then of course, you probably won't be able to use more than 1 pci slot). Knowing this stuff, i ended up buying a 3U rack to save myself hassles, and i am using most of my PCI slots ~ GFX card, Soundcard, USB 2.0 + firewire card...
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Originally posted by Svartalf View PostActually, this is quite incorrect. You can get things down to a 1U rack with standard sized PCI/PCI-E cards. There's this nifty little passive part called a "riser" that is used in 2U and 1U configurations ALL THE TIME. :-D
3U racks are the lowest profile you can go without using an 'adapter' (aka riser), which puts your pci cards horizontally, which AFAIK is exactly what i wrote. plus, my GFX card didn't fit in it nicely with other cards too (and other concerns).
I have one sitting on my shelf (right beside me), i said 'adapter' only because i had forgotten what it was called. Using a 2U rack with it, wasn't the best option for me - i had some space (dead space) and concerns over the potential for overheating.
anyways, that for pointing out what i already wrote - but using the correct term (riser).
cheerzLast edited by ninez; 08 May 2012, 03:39 PM.
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