Chris Mauritz wrote:
Ugo Bellavance wrote:
Mark Weaver wrote:
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On Tue, 1 Jan 2008 08:57:22 -0500
Robert Moskowitz <rgm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Have you ever thought about how rare floppy drives are now? At best
you go with a bootable usb, if your notebook supports bootable USB.
My Libretto does have a bootable floppy, but that is something extra
to carry. It will not boot from anything else (besides its HD). My
nc4010 (this notebook) will boot from usb. My corp notebook (nc2400)
is locked down; and I don't see any value at getting corp IT bent out
of shape.
why would you even think about using a Notebook computer as a firewall?
I was assuming you were going to delegate this task to an older machine
with sufficient resources to handle the task and not give the task to a
notebook computer.
I guess he wants it to be portable.
He seems to be knowing his requirements a lot better than we do. It
looks like he wants an easy firewall that would boot for HD only,
cost nothing, and runs with usb ethernet devices.
I really think he should carry an embedded firewall (like a soekris
or a wrap) with pfsense on it.
Old laptops make pretty good firewalls, I think. They take little
space, have a built-in battery backup and built-in keyboard/monitor to
use when you are visiting the datacenter. I have repurposed a couple
of older laptops for these reasons since the machine doesn't need to
be very fast to accomplish the mission. A lot of 3-4 year old laptops
cave in under the weight of Windows, but are really overkill for a
simple unix firewall. Better than sending them to the dustbin.
I have a Dell notebook that functions as my backup Win2000 family
finance system.
Next project is to see if I can reuse that old Toshiba 4000cdt box ;)
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