Put plainly, there really isn't one. If you're doing things like video or 3D rendering, and have the right software, that can be run on a cluster. Or, if you like doing chemical or biological simulations, there's software that will run on a cluster to do those things. But will it make your internet browser go faster? No. Will it give you higher FPS in Quake 3 or UT2003? No. Sorry, but I don't have any better answer for you. That's just the way things are. 🙁Originally posted by: NRaygun
I was thinking of putting together a Beowulf cluster for the fun of it.
What are people running on them? Other than S@H and other distrib computing, are there games or simulations that leverage the power of the cluster?
What's the killer app for the average joe?
Just curious, are you talking about the small CF disk in a IDE-to-CF adapter with a minimal Linux / BSD installation, or are you going to go the really hardcore (IMHO) way of burning EEPROMs with the necessary bootcode to place in the network adapter for netbooting? (I was considering the former, since it's cheaper because I don't have an EEPROM burner)Originally posted by: n0cmonkey
Forget beowulfing. The benefits just arent there, unless you were running john the ripper or whatever 😛
Setup some diskless crunchers. Its a fun way to cheaply setup some massive crunchers and learn a Unix-like system at the same time. I have plans for this when the money starts coming in again.
Originally posted by: jliechty
Just curious, are you talking about the small CF disk in a IDE-to-CF adapter with a minimal Linux / BSD installation, or are you going to go the really hardcore (IMHO) way of burning EEPROMs with the necessary bootcode to place in the network adapter for netbooting? (I was considering the former, since it's cheaper because I don't have an EEPROM burner)Originally posted by: n0cmonkey
Forget beowulfing. The benefits just arent there, unless you were running john the ripper or whatever 😛
Setup some diskless crunchers. Its a fun way to cheaply setup some massive crunchers and learn a Unix-like system at the same time. I have plans for this when the money starts coming in again.
Heh, I want to get away from floppy drives all together. My next PC will probably be an as-silent-as-I-can-get-it box, since I can't stand PC noise (my current Coolermaster HSF and cheapo powersupply are making me allergic to it). Speed is nice, but not totally necessary, so I may get one of those Cyrix processors, or a slow-speed Celeron that can run undervolted or something like that. It would all go in a small case (Shuttle-style). A CompactFlash card in a IDE-to-CF adapter would be used; a minimal Linux installation would boot from this, allowing the machine to be used non-networked, but data files and the rest would be stored on a network drive (presumably mounted via NFS). The only thing I can't figure out how to take care of is the power supply. All PSes that I've seen seem to require a fan. 🙁Originally posted by: onebadv6
Linux diskless seti cruncher. This is a close as you can get for linux based diskless seti cruncher. you just need motherboard, ram, cpu, network card and a floppy drive. The floppy drive can be removed after boot if you want. Really cool setup, I have my motherboard hanging from the floor joist in the basement.
Thanks for the links. 🙂Originally posted by: onebadv6
for power supplies check this out from the TiVo forum
power supply thread
company that sells them
PDF with all the models
Now the Tivo is a linux based box that uses 2 HD and a fan to keep the case cool but that is all. It's quiet enough that I can barly hear it running. Now with your CF setup you power requirements should be very little so this supply should do that. Also for CPU you may want to try the embeded VIA Eden chip. Nice and cool and low power as well
Eden info