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Date:      Sun, 25 Feb 1996 15:09:18 -0500
From:      Charles Henrich <henrich@crh.cl.msu.edu>
To:        jeff@mercury.jorsm.com, freebsd-isp@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: [Last revision?]: FreeBSD server considerations..
Message-ID:  <199602252009.PAA01519@crh.cl.msu.edu>

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In lists.freebsd.isp you write:

>Get the ASUS, and start with a slower Pentium. The ASUS should support
>upwards of 180MHz so you save your initial investment.
>>
>> Bus: Almost if not everything PCI.

>All but your dirty video for plain text...

>>
>> SCSI Card: Adapetc 2940 PCI, $235.

>Get the Ultra Wide for about $65 more. If your supplier wants much
>more, find a new supplier.

Not a bad idea to look at the BusLogic cards as well, I have had exceptionally
good performance, and reliability with this guys.

>> SCSI Drives: Two Conner or Quantum 1.08GB drives.  The 2GB seemed to be
>> more than twice the price of the 1GB drives.  $245/Each.

>Seagate, Seagate, Seagate... Get Wide it only costs a few dollars more.

Thats religion, I would say connor connor connor, the 4207S specifically.  One
hell of a badass 4.2gb 7200rpm SCSI disk.  I have had many Seagates go dead on
me within two days due to how hot they run.  (These all barracuda's).

>> Memory: 16Meg.  I will upgrade to 32Meg shortly, when needed.  Just about
>> $400.

>> CDROM: Toshiba 4x [SCSI].  $140.  I will be using it for a bit more than
>> just installing the OS and the 4x is about the same price as the 2x.
>>
>> Tape: Conner TAPESTOR 4GB External SCSI.  $440.
>>       4GB Tapes, $70/Each.  3 Tapes (daily/weekly/every third week backups)

>Spend more for a 8mm or DAT and save in the long run on media. Really.

For the CDROM I would recommend a Plextor.  I think it was this weeks/month's
Media Source that had a review of 4x-8x CD's and they recommended Plextor's.
(Not to say the Toshiba is a bad drive, I believe they rated it second).

For the tape you should really spend the extra money and get a DAT drive.  For
that I would recommend the Sony SDT-5000 compressing DAT.  Has a 1mb on-board
buffer, and sustains nearly 900K/sec during a standard unix dump.  Slows down
somewhat on already compressed data and such.  With a typical compression you
get about ~8GB on a $15 120meter tape, or ~$4GB on a 90 meter tape ($7).

-Crh
-- 

    Charles Henrich     Michigan State University     henrich@crh.cl.msu.edu

                     http://rs560.msu.edu/~henrich/



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