Originally posted by: Gurck
Originally posted by: Trygve
Here's my
work area
Here's the
computer I'm typing this on
and here's the
computer next to it that I use for video.
I'm in the midst of rearranging some of the server racks downstairs (swapping out a mailserver today--whee) so I'll probably take some updated pics of those machines later.
Nice looking setup. Out of curiosity, does that room get really hot? Do you have central / room / no a/c?
Don't have A/C, but I have a hard enough time as it is covering the electric bill for the servers in the basement. (One of the reasons I'm trying to reduce the number of machines or at least make them more energy-efficient; for example, I'm thinking about replacing the current DNS servers with laptops. Relatively low power consumption, and a built-in batter backup; just a little worried about the life expectancy of the hard drives versus a decent SCSI drive.)
When it gets warm during the summer, I have a couple of portable swamp coolers under the desk on the other side of the room that I fire up. Cheaper than A/C and Colorado's dry enough that it works pretty well. The new setup makes a huge difference over what I had up until two years ago: then I was running two dual-athlon machines with three big (and darned warm, too) Sun monitors and four Sun 711 12-drive SCSI enclosures. The noise level didn't help with editing, even though I have the computers at a distance and would wear headphones. Noise was a big part of why I figured I'd give water cooling a try. Still could be quieter, though. Maybe I'll get it really quiet with the next version.
Wish I could find more pictures of my setups from way back when, like back when I had a system running off a CDC Hawk drive (two 14" disks, one fixed, one in a removeable cartridge, 5 Megabytes each). That might have been the noisiest, but my desk was at the end of 120 feet of RS-232 cables (the computer itself was in the bedroom clothes closet). Had three dumb terminals on my desk back then; I haven't had to get by with just one display for decades.