If we do it (Alan S. seems to think I'm nutts for suggesting it, so let's work that out, as I want to hear his further thoughts). No hard drive will be necessary for this, although a few floppies might. If we need to, we can setup a large RAMdisk which loads off of floppy initially, then, if more is needed, it can obtain it via FTP or SMB, from one of the other machines. However that shouldn't be necessary, as the utilities to make this work, are not vast. On Sun, 2 Nov 2003, Rejean Proulx wrote: > Thanks, I've got garbage lying around that I can probably get 128M for. It > might be overkill, but here it is. One of the boxes is a 333MHZ so it > should be plenty. Does it need a hard drive or can I just boot it off a > floppy for this sort of thing. None of my garbage has hard drives anymore, > but I'm sure I could come up with a hard drive. > > Rejean Proulx > Visit my family at http://interfree.ca > MSN is: rejp at rogers.com > Ham License VA3REJ > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Alex Snow" <alex_snow at gmx.net> > To: "Speakup is a screen review system for Linux." <speakup at braille.uwo.ca> > Sent: Sunday, November 02, 2003 10:14 AM > Subject: Re: RFC on solution to Rejean's situation > > > > I'd say the router should probably have at least 32mb possibly 64. > > I've seen a pentium 133 act as a router for about 25 or so computers > > all making heavy use of the internet and connecting to each other > > using smb shares. > > On Sat, Nov 01, 2003 at 05:59:57PM -0600, Luke Davis > > wrote: > > > Hello, folks > > > > > > After talking to Rejean about solutions to his situation, we came up > with > > > the following. I would like comments from the users experienced with > this > > > sort of thing, about whether our solution will work as I believe... > > > > > > Now, the groundwork, and useful information summary: > > > > > > 1. The network consists of many Windows machines, and a single Linux > > > machine. [rest cut]