Re: best OS and HW for postgreSQL

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On Sep 25, 2006, at 6:43 AM, Guido Neitzer wrote:

Hi.

On 9/25/06, Jim Nasby <jimn@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

As for hardware, until recently, AMD was the un-disputed king when it
came to running PostgreSQL (and databases in general). But the newer
Intel CPUs seem to have surpassed the Opteron. I believe there's a
tweakers.net article floating around that did some performance
testing with the new CPUs.

http://tweakers.net/reviews/646/13

cug


Jim,

I run the following :

Hardware          : Mix of Macs (G4's & G5's)
OS                : [OSX], & [OSX Server]
Each machine runs : mySQL & pgSQL, Apache, PHP, Perl, OpenSSL, GD, etc... One machine runs : 4D Web Server (4th Dimension - Cross Platform Client Server RDBMS)

If somebody absolutely wants Intel, the new Macs use Intel Processors, and run (OSX BSD Unix) and (Windows XP), the ease of working in the Terminal Shell (tcsh, bash, sh, csh, etc) is awesome. You can drag items from the desktop such as a folder(s), or file(s) and the paths are copied onto the terminal.

You can also do simple things like type [% open /usr/local/src /etc ] <return> and window(s) containing the contents for those dirs will open at the GUI level. I don't know if linux provides such a close interaction between the GUI, and the shell environment. On OSX, I am always working in both environments at the same time.

Also the greatest editor on the planet "BBEdit" runs on OSX, nothing even comes close.

Most applications, including the operating system can be automated using AppleScript. The Mac allows the user/developer to record scripts at the application, or OS level, modify, save and run them easily via AppleScript. You can even call AppleScripts from unix shell scripts, and vice-versa.

The whole OSX environment compares to Linux Variants that I have seen, much the same as an iPod compares to other mp3 players.

For example you can type [% sudo chmod -R theUser:theGroup [drag folder(s), or file(s) from the desktop onto the terminal]<return> instead of typing the paths, and that's it...

About a year ago I joined a Linux user's group and got to see demos on different variants. Nothing even came close to the integration provided by Apple's OSX. After attending the Linux user group for several months I realized how fortunate I was. In my opinion the complete integration provided by OSX was light years ahead of anything else I ever saw at the meetings. The guys that ran the group worked full time with Linux Systems, so they were well experienced.

I remember one evening at the user group they screwed around for the whole meeting trying to get some images from one of the user's digital camera, finally I asked them if I could see the camera and within a couple of minutes I and was doing a slide show with the images. I thought once again, how incredibly lucky I was to be running OSX...

I've been programming the Mac, pretty much full time, since 1987. I do cross platform testing, and I am always so happy when I get back to the Mac...

Best Regards,

Bill Hernandez
Plano, Texas


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