Originally posted by: goossedump
Windows 95 will do the job
Actually, when you consider the amount of work left up to the OS it matters a lot.Originally posted by: Spyro
I don't think that the OS matters much at all.
Originally posted by: chsh1ca
Actually, when you consider the amount of work left up to the OS it matters a lot.Originally posted by: Spyro
I don't think that the OS matters much at all.
My vote goes to Linux.
Originally posted by: chsh1ca
Actually, when you consider the amount of work left up to the OS it matters a lot.Originally posted by: Spyro
I don't think that the OS matters much at all.
My vote goes to Linux.
Originally posted by: Spyro
Originally posted by: chsh1ca
Actually, when you consider the amount of work left up to the OS it matters a lot.Originally posted by: Spyro
I don't think that the OS matters much at all.
My vote goes to Linux.
Since Khyron320 will not be running Linux, this is a moot point, but what makes you say that? This is only going to be used as a gaming server, right? I have a hard time seeing that a server for a game could have noticable performance changes based on its OS when running on modern ( > 500mhz ) hardware.
Originally posted by: xSauronx
since when was 500 and below the limit on modern?
i feel like the stuff is almost ancient on my moms 1.3ghz tbird system.
Originally posted by: SpeedFreak03
Is it worth the extra $$$ for a server OS? I doubt it.
Since Khyron320 will not be running Linux, this is a moot point, but what makes you say that? This is only going to be used as a gaming server, right? I have a hard time seeing that a server for a game could have noticable performance changes based on its OS when running on modern ( > 500mhz ) hardware.
Someone else answered this for me. 🙂Originally posted by: Spyro
Since Khyron320 will not be running Linux, this is a moot point
1. 'Modern Hardware' would be > 2GHz at this point (over 2 years old), and we're reaching >2.5GHz being 'modern'.but what makes you say that? This is only going to be used as a gaming server, right? I have a hard time seeing that a server for a game could have noticable performance changes based on its OS when running on modern ( > 500mhz ) hardware.
So.... The server itself (no game running on the same system) actually requires that much processing power? Wow, I fell old. Is the server inefficient or is efficiency now a mott point. *sigh* Moores law....Originally posted by: dnuggettSince Khyron320 will not be running Linux, this is a moot point, but what makes you say that? This is only going to be used as a gaming server, right? I have a hard time seeing that a server for a game could have noticable performance changes based on its OS when running on modern ( > 500mhz ) hardware.
Since were talking BF1942 yours is a moot point as far as starting with 500 mhz. You need to start much higher than that unless you want to stare at the server box instead of playing the game.
Originally posted by: chsh1caSomeone else answered this for me. 🙂Originally posted by: Spyro
Since Khyron320 will not be running Linux, this is a moot point
1. 'Modern Hardware' would be > 2GHz at this point (over 2 years old), and we're reaching >2.5GHz being 'modern'.but what makes you say that? This is only going to be used as a gaming server, right? I have a hard time seeing that a server for a game could have noticable performance changes based on its OS when running on modern ( > 500mhz ) hardware.
2. I say that based on the fact that the OS handles all the memory management, thread management, file i/o, network i/o, and so forth. Linux simply performs better than Windows with servers because it is faster at almost all kinds of I/O, and has a lot better memory management. Do more with less, as it were. I've personally watched Win2K Server boxes running Unreal Tournament's server chug under the load of 20 people (Dual PII/733s), while an equally configured box on linux could do 32 no problem. That may be a fault with UT or something, I'm not 100% sure, but I've just noted that in my experience, it tends to run game servers a LOT better. I'm not going to turn this into a linux vs win2k flamewar, but you did ask for my reasoning. Trolls refer to my sig please.
Dnuggett also points out something very true -- you'll be lucky to be able to do a 1v1 on a 500MHz box for BF1942.
Now now, if I wanted to do that I could point out that I have a Duron/800 here sitting next to me running a Wolfenstein: ET server, and my IRC server. 😛Originally posted by: Spyro
Thanks for an informative reply, and for making me feel downright miserable 🙁 I'm still using a 700mhz duron, I need to upgrade!!! 🙁🙁🙁🙁
*cries profusely*
Originally posted by: chsh1ca
Now now, if I wanted to do that I could point out that I have a Duron/800 here sitting next to me running a Wolfenstein: ET server, and my IRC server. 😛Originally posted by: Spyro
Thanks for an informative reply, and for making me feel downright miserable 🙁 I'm still using a 700mhz duron, I need to upgrade!!! 🙁🙁🙁🙁
*cries profusely*
Originally posted by: magomago
i think you are in the enthusiat POV if you say 2 Ghz is modern - to the masses a 1 Ghz is modern....my dad was amazed when i begged him to toss away his 233Mhz hp and get a 1700+ (which he did when he found it wasn't expensive and i had fun making it 😉 ) just b4 i left to college because to him he considered 700mhz fast ( 7/10ths of a gigahert as he refers to it 😉 )
Not at all, I am looking at what the OEMs are selling, even in their low-end lines. Show me where Dell, IBM, or HP are offering a sub-2GHz desktop machine, and then I'll consider modern to be > 1GHz, but until then, I consider it > 2GHz based on what OEMs are selling. If you can't buy a cheapo dell box from their budget line that's clocked at < 2GHz, I think it's safe to call it and anything faster 'modern'.Originally posted by: magomago
i think you are in the enthusiat POV if you say 2 Ghz is modern - to the masses a 1 Ghz is modern....my dad was amazed when i begged him to toss away his 233Mhz hp and get a 1700+ (which he did when he found it wasn't expensive and i had fun making it 😉 ) just b4 i left to college because to him he considered 700mhz fast ( 7/10ths of a gigahert as he refers to it 😉 )