- Nov 26, 2001
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For work, I've been looking at Wyse thin client terminals and they're pretty cool. With Windows Server 2003 you can have 5 terminal connections.
So I was thinking this would be excellent for home. Put in one server (and the expensive OS license is covered by my MSDN subscription) and then have the wife's PC, kid's PC, kitchen PC, etc. be these thin terminals. These things have no fans and produce almost no heat. They're quite small and completely silent.
The problem is the Wyse are about $329 w/o a monitor. For that, you can get a "real" PC, albeit underpowered, from Dell (and also hotter and noisier).
I cracked open a Wyse and it is very simple. Something has a heat sink on it (I'm guessing the graphics chip) but other than that it's a small "motherboard" with USB, keyboard, mouse, VGA and ethernet connectors. I guess the Citrix and RDC capabilities are in firmware somewhere. But all in all it looks like maybe $40 worth of parts. I've built plenty of PCs, so I'm now wondering if this sort of gear can be bought in parts and assembled.
Anyone ever done that?
So I was thinking this would be excellent for home. Put in one server (and the expensive OS license is covered by my MSDN subscription) and then have the wife's PC, kid's PC, kitchen PC, etc. be these thin terminals. These things have no fans and produce almost no heat. They're quite small and completely silent.
The problem is the Wyse are about $329 w/o a monitor. For that, you can get a "real" PC, albeit underpowered, from Dell (and also hotter and noisier).
I cracked open a Wyse and it is very simple. Something has a heat sink on it (I'm guessing the graphics chip) but other than that it's a small "motherboard" with USB, keyboard, mouse, VGA and ethernet connectors. I guess the Citrix and RDC capabilities are in firmware somewhere. But all in all it looks like maybe $40 worth of parts. I've built plenty of PCs, so I'm now wondering if this sort of gear can be bought in parts and assembled.
Anyone ever done that?
