On Wed, Apr 12, 2017 at 08:31:29PM +0200, Nicolas Kovacs wrote: > Le 12/04/2017 à 19:41, Andrew Holway a écrit : > > Between the early 1990's and early 2000's the price of a GB of memory went > > from ~$100,000 to ~$1000*. I guess a lot of the design decisions made for > > things like init were focussed on this. In 1995 is was common for server > > platforms to have 32Mb ram whereas the kernel alone in my PC here at home > > is consuming just over 500MB. It seems reasonable that software components > > built in 1997 will not be fit for purpose in 2017. > > Back in 2013 I did some Linux training for a company in Montpellier. The > first week the server racks hadn't been delivered yet, so we were stuck. > In a cupboard, I found an antique Dell Poweredge 1300 server that was > out of service, made around 1997 or so. I dusted it off, found a power > cable, a monitor, a network cable and a keyboard and connected the > thing. It had a P-III 500 MHz processor, 3 x 9 GB SCSI disks and a > whooping 128 MB of RAM, and not a single USB port (only parallel). > Similar, much earlier tale of my own. Doing Intro Unix training at a client site. The classroom had PCs with Hummingbird's XDMCP software to remotely connect to a monster HP unix system. On Monday arrival I learned their HP license expired over the weekend and remote access was not possible. I had my laptop, either a Pentium or P II, running Solaris x86. I put it on the network and had the students point their XDMCP to it. Ran the first two days of class with 12 students plux the console all running X graphical logins. On Wednesday they had us switch to the HP. Some students asked if they could switch back because the laptop seemed more responsive. Jon -- Jon H. LaBadie jon@xxxxxxxxxx 11226 South Shore Rd. (703) 787-0688 (H) Reston, VA 20190 (703) 935-6720 (C) _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos