SGI's New Linux Boxes 99
An anonymous reader noted that SGI has announced their latest Linux Workstation. It ships with the new VPro graphics board... you can also look at some specific configurations for the boxes. As always, it's SGI so it's priced in the stratosphere, but at least it's purple and oh-so-lustworthy.
Re:This isn't over priced. (Score:1)
Re:Does it use the SGI FirmWare (Score:1)
I have a better offer. (Score:1)
Could someone explain this to me? (Score:1)
Quake-station? (Score:2)
(could... not... resist... posting...)
Maybe overpriced. (Score:3)
Are you a Linux open source hacker, programming for fun and no profit? Do you stay two generations behind in CPUs to max your price/performance ratio? Have you NEVER bought a complete system? Then they are overpriced.
Are you in the IT department of some Fortune 1000 company, or perhaps a developer of a graphically intensive application and are toying with the idea of a Linux port? Do most of your systems cost more than $3000 anyway, and do you buy many every year? Not overpriced.
They're not for me, as my franken-athlon is performing quite nicely. And a PC Power and Cooling case is good enough. And there are sexier cases out there if I cared enough.
Re:Quake-station? (Score:1)
Re:They're nVidia graphics cards. (Score:1)
No it's not, in fact, there are a great many "special tweaks" both in the hardware itself, and in the OpenGL software driver. For example the Linux OpenGL driver uses a (much) faster GL dispatch technique is used than available elsewhere, and many other improvements.
The hardware is enhanced as well.
It doesn't compare (Score:2)
pushing pixels !=professional graphics (Score:1)
Re:Why there's no article about /. getting DoS'ed (Score:3)
Chris DiBona VA Linux Systems
--
Grant Chair, Linux Int.
Pres, SVLUG
Re:They're nVidia graphics cards. (Score:1)
It helps when I read the whole thing.
Re:Quake-station? (Score:1)
Re:Not so high-priced, actually (Score:2)
Re:Could someone explain this to me? (Score:1)
Re:Does it use the SGI FirmWare (Score:1)
Interesting, probably will help profits and keep SGI focused on the graphics. I do hope they bring back the goodies of the 320 for future systems, very impressive systems.
Re:Quake-station? (Score:1)
At least not now or anytime soon.
The 230 has a tweaked geforce.
The geforce2 isn't a whole lot faster than a geforceDDR.
The higher end models use a tweaked geforce2.
Games do not measure 3d capability. They measure the ability to push lit, shaded relatively simple polygons with small textures. Compare this to what A pro card can do and you'd crap yourself. Why do you think that framerate is everything?
If you want a linux game machine, go get a PC and put in a voodoo3 and install xfree 4. If you want incredibly fast and flawless OpenGL, want an incredibly reliable and stable workstation, and want to play the occasional quake3 (at very high framerates), then this is what you want.
Re:First hardwrae accelerated graphics? (Score:2)
Yes.
You are missing a bit.
You are correct that there is 3d acceleration in linux. Matrox G200/400. Voodoo3 and to a lesser degree, nvidia. There is one pro card out there from Evans & Sutherland, but it is $500. The Matrox drivers are somewhat fast, but not mature at all. The V3 drivers were, until now, the most mature, and work flawlessly with Xfree4 DRI. They do not do 32bit rendering.
The 230 has flawless and very fast 3d acceleration.
The 230 is a supported platform.
Did I mention how fast the 3d is?
You must realize that you cannot expect to pay for only the hardware on this system. It has been optimized and has incredible software to go with it. I, personally, have waited patiently for this day, and am now saving up to buy one of these.
Re:sgi dead, pc kills mips for 3d work (Score:1)
Note also that I make a distinction between Compaq and DEC, which is perhaps unrealistic nowadays.
Let's say that you've got the latest and greatest from Intel, Nvidia (or maybe 3DFX), Adaptec, and Seagate. We're talking about a $3000 system here, assuming, of course, that you want a dual processor Coppermine or Xeon, Ultra160 SCSI, and high-end video.
The big problem is that the i840 chipset doesn't scale well, despite Intel's claims. It only supports dual processing (like the BX and i820 chipsets), suffers from a MTH (memory translator hub) or insanely over-hyped and expensive memory (RDRAM, which has hardly any benefit over PC133), and can only address several gigabytes of RAM. You do (finally) get a 66 MHz, 64 bit PCI slot or two, which is nice. However, I'd like to see more of them.
Let's look at the processor now. The processor cores, a Coppermine or Cascades (that's what the new Xeons are called, right? I forget and I'm too lazy to look it up), are exactly the same. Why would Intel put a Coppermine in Slot 2 format and call it a Xeon? I dunno. According to Intel's rumored roadmaps, there will be large cache versions of the Cascades available eventually. Until then, use of Cascades is rather... stupid? It's just an overpriced Coppermine, which is still saddled with the 32 bit Pentium Pro core.
Even if you go back to the older Pentium II or Pentium III Xeons on an NX chipset, you're limited to a maximum of eight-way SMP. That's impressive-sounding to an x86 fan, but it's not enough to even make a RISC-based server fan give you the time of day. High end SPARC servers use monstrous amounts of CPUs -- 16, 32, 64, even 128 and beyond. The NX chipset is limited in other ways, because it uses older technology, before the advent of Coppermine and Cascades. x86 technology typically does not scale well beyond two processors, though sometimes you can get some decent performance out of a quad processor setup. In case you were unaware, the eight-way SMP standard for x86 systems came from Compaq, not Intel. This sort of scares me. Compaq has a history of doing this in a highly proprietary manner. I wouldn't be too surprised to see eight-way Xeon systems from nobody but Compaq.
Try using Ultra160 SCSI, gigabit ethernet, and a speedy AGP video card on your 32 bit, 33 MHz PCI bus. I guarantee you that you won't like the results. Wintel systems are not scalable. Intel's i840 is a giant step forward, but it really can't compete with the high-end workstations and mid-range servers made by SGI, Sun, DEC, IBM, etc. x86 is awesome at the low-end, but you'd have to be a little bit silly to use it beyond that.
I love the price/performance ratio of x86 boxes, and the fact that they use industry standard, off-the-shelf parts, but you can't compare them against anything but entry-level RISC-based workstations and servers.
For my money, I'll go for a DEC Alpha or a cheap, dual processor x86 system. One maxes out at $3000, the other starts at $10,000. But there are places are both of them.
The BMW of computers ... (Score:1)
I suspect the real competition is with Sony's Cr eativeStation [eetimes.com] which appears (according to the limited information released so far .. any updates?) to be both MIPS based (a variant of their Sony PlayStation) as well as Linux development. If someone ever tweaks key libraries to use the vector-based co-processors, things will really rip.
Sigh, why don't they sell the chassis, then let us buy the CPU's separately so we can upgrade at our leisure.
LL
Re:i would like to see... (Score:1)
Slightly-modified KDE or GNOME won't impress me.
I was told by an sgi rep that there are no plans to port the Indigo Magic Desktop to Linux. Part of the problem is the custom motif-based widgets (hooray for the drop-pocket!!!) that make up the apps are tied up in closed source licensing.
I have scoured search engines for a couple years now looking for someone porting at least the look and feel of those thoughtful, if oversized, widgets to an OSS toolkit. No luck so far.
Re:They're nVidia graphics cards. (Score:2)
Whoa look at those prices! (Score:1)
First hardwrae accelerated graphics? (Score:1)
Re:Not so high-priced, actually (Score:1)
--
Though I use a Macintosh, I am not a mac-bigot. I just hate Windoze.
Finally a credible CAD platform for free OS'es? (Score:1)
I sincerely hope that some of the larger MCAD vendors take note. Otherwise these boxes will end up being just expensive games machines. We've been using SGI IRIX boxes for our Pro/E work for years but it becomes increasingly more difficult to justify the (hardware) costs to the suits.
Most engineers like the flexibility and stability of the un*x platform, so please PTC,SDRC, Dassault and the likes, wake up!!
Re:Not so high-priced, actually (Score:1)
Re:Hrmm (Score:1)
Re:Not so high-priced, actually (Score:1)
Re:I'll tell you all how it goes. (Score:1)
I'd be very interested in your experiences with them.
A decently-priced, high-performance hardware accelerated OpenGL on Linux is what I have waited years for.
It would have been nice if the high quality high performance SGI workmanship could have been encapsulated in video card with an open source driver, patch to DRI+XFree86 4.x that worked in more user-customized situations too.
For example, say I'm inclined to wait for a 1 GHz Thunderbird with DDR SDRAM. I'm guessing the chipset and motherboard are part of a tuned package that is not easily swapped in and out at will.
Still, it is a tempting machine, especially for a user
Re:Why there's no article about /. getting DoS'ed (Score:2)
Hey zico, you know that the VA/Andover merger isn't final until the SEC approves it right? After that you are free to spin conspiracies
Awww c'mon, Chris, you know I'm gonna hafta call you on that one. Since when did actual lack of company ownership ever keep a loyal Slashdotter from spinning conspiracy theories between Microsoft and just about any other company out there? You gotta gimme something better to work with to quell this particular conspiracy yarn. ;-)
Cheers,
ZicoKnows@hotmail.com
Simpson's fans? (Score:1)
To the tune of "The Garbage Man Can" from episode 5F09 (diehard fans will know where to find the real lyrics):
Who can make posts all day
That get modded up +2?
Post stuff that's offtopic
And piss off even you?
The Karma Whore!
Yes the Karma Whore can!
The Karma Whore can
And he does it with a smile
And never metamods you.
Who can take this mod point?
I don't mind at all!
Who can mod him up before he even posts at all?
The Karma Whore!
Yes the Karma Whore can.
The moderation folks
They are gullible blokes.
Courteous and easy-going
He'll make sure that his karma's over flowin'!
"Hey! Karma Whoring's not like blowing!"
Who can?
Who can?
Who can?
Who can?
The Karma Whore can!
Coz he's Signal 11 man!
He steals mod points....for....you!
Copyright (C) 2000 by me.
thank you.
Re:They're nVidia graphics cards. (Score:1)
--
For the same price, I'd rather have (Score:1)
Grey beats purple in a decision.
timothy
Re:Not so high-priced, actually (Score:2)
You are mistaken. A kernel built with VisWS support will not run on normal systems, and vice versa. Yes, the patches were integrated, but using them is a compile-time decision.
nice (Score:2)
Re:Not so high-priced, actually (Score:1)
just thought I'd correct you a little bit. I really hate it when SGIs are considered too expensive--because they're not. Not if you consider you get IRIX(which in my opinion is way better than linux on the desktop), plus a 20 inch monitor, plus a really well made, cool looking machine.
mike
Re:They're nVidia graphics cards. (Score:1)
Re:I wonder (Score:1)
Re:They're nVidia graphics cards. (Score:1)
Re:What about Inventor? (Score:1)
Re:Now we just need some software to run in Linux. (Score:1)
Re:Whoa look at those prices! (Score:1)
I wonder (Score:2)
This isn't over priced. (Score:2)
It's a high end PC with fast PIII 128 MB RAM and GeForce graphics with AGP 4X + very high quality drivers and support. You can't get a better Linux system for significantly less.
It looks blue & gray to me, not purple, (just incase you buy one for the color and are disappointed.
Hrmm (Score:1)
They're nVidia graphics cards. (Score:5)
They also said that some special tweaks would be put on their boards so that they would run faster than generic cards with identical drivers. Other than a mild overclocking (to get the higher fill rate listed), I don't see any way they could do this than to minorly cripple the drivers for boards that don't have official SGI roms.
That said, it's nice to see SGI making progress towards high quality 3D on Linux - I just wish they weren't following the propreitary lead of nvidia.
Re:They're nVidia graphics cards. (Score:1)
The driver that they released has some extra code to drive the custom chips that they have put on the board. -- At least this is what they said at the Linux University that I went to.
Jamie
Ah ha! (Score:3)
The workstation family will be priced from $2,725 (U.S. List). The Silicon Graphics 230 is shipping now, the Silicon Graphics 330 and the Silicon Graphics 550 are expected to ship later this quarter. For additional information on specific configurations, please go to http://www.sgi.com/workstations/index.html"
They're using the Steve Jobs model of Supply and demand.
tcd004
Here's my Microsoft parody, [lostbrain.com], where's yours?
Makes mice happy... (Score:1)
SGI Rox. (Score:2)
When Unix started to fall they saw it as a Windows NT world in the making and began to turn that way. However 1/2 way through the transition they realized NT had already peaked and was on it's way down. So they are taking up Linux.
If BEOS shows some signs of being "the next big thing" they will adopt that too.
Some people see this as being indecisive. I see it as flowing the money and the customer who spends it. Only companies that do that have long term viability. Just ask IBM how they made it through the last 100+ years to the point where I haven't seen a new IBM typewriter in years. ( Once opon a time that was *the* IBM business )
Sun on the other hand shows no singes of being able to outlive Solaris and no OS is forever. Sure unix has been with us for 30 years but who uses AT&T Unix still ?
Ohh.. BTW. The boixes listed on the "Configurations link" above are kinda sweat but not the real kickass workstations yet. ( SMP ? Where are you ? )
Re:sgi dead, pc kills mips for 3d work (Score:2)
That doesn't mean the technology is better, just that it's more marketable. An Onyx2 with eight CPUs and an infinite reality engine is more powerful, by any standard, than anything that has ever existed containing an x86 CPU. And that's a low-end SGI. Nothing that runs Red Hat, except possibly a Sun Enterprise 10000, can even come close to an Origin 2000.
The peecee sucks. It may be easy to market, but it still sucks.
Re:I wonder (Score:1)
Now we just need some software to run in Linux.... (Score:1)
running on linux instead of all that boring server software I really
hope we will get:
A|W Maya
SoftImage XSI
Lightwave
Hopefully something will be announced at Siggraph 2K in New Orleans,
but Im not holding my breath!
"One World, One Web, One Program" - Microsoft Promotional Ad
Re:You got your karma back!!! (Score:1)
Follow the link in my
Re:Not so high-priced, actually (Score:2)
The first-generation systems failed precisely because they had those characteristics. SGI was trying to sell a designed peecee. You can't do it. The whole point of the peecee is that it's just like everyone else's. Either you sell a peecee or you sell a workstation. SGI's come to their senses and decided to sell peecees. Sure, the first-generation systems were better; they were also a failure. Those systems were different. These are just blue peecees.
Re:that was the stupidest post ever (Score:1)
Actually, as long as you don't brand him a troll, you are probably ok.
Re:sgi dead, pc kills mips for 3d work (Score:3)
SGI is at least making a contribution to Linux Open Source, not just riding the wave. SGI's commitment to Linux is not new, this is just the first graphics machine and SGI has been doing a lot of work getting it right, not just slapping a few boards together and using whatever software they can download from the OS community.
Knowing a fair old bit about graphics I can tell you that your PC won't smoke an Onyx2, and certainly not by 50X. Maybe some day, but not yet, you can't get near the pixel fill rate with the antialiasing you need to beat an Onyx2.
An Origin2000 has no graphics and the point of that system is it scales well and has memory bandwidth up the wazoo, again you can't get close with a PC.
Re:Quake-station? (Score:1)
*legal disclaimer*
I work for SGI, and I haven't played with the system yet, and it was about a month ago.
Re:They're nVidia graphics cards. (Score:1)
--
Re:sgi dead, pc kills mips for 3d work (Score:2)
And a lot (if not most) of that is the video silicon, not the CPUs.. We've got an orphan Onyx with a 4-board RealityEngine2 in the office and it runs 2 MIPS 4400/166MHz CPUs.. IIRC those are the same as the ones in the Cobalt boxes (Qube, RaQ) or at least the same generation..
But the video is obscenely cool.. (when will Mesa get the aquarium screensaver?
Your Working Boy,
onyx and other comments (Score:1)
On a side note, is it just me or are their Intel-based systems shipping in rather ugly cases? I've always loved the Indigo, Indigo2, Indy, O2, Octane, and Onyx2/Origin2000 cases... but these new Visual Workstations don't look like anything special. I also like the old "granite" monitors and accessories, never cared much for these new black ones. Ni Modo.
Re:Now we just need some software to run in Linux. (Score:1)
Re:Quake-station? (Score:1)
The driver we're shipping with is significantly better and faster than what we had with Beta.
Anyway...
*legal disclaimer*
I work for SGI, and worked on the drivers for a period of about four months before returning to the Performer group to continue work on mongoose (Performer on Linux).
Re:They're nVidia graphics cards. (Score:1)
i would like to see... (Score:2)
Does SGI have any plans to have a uniform set of desktop and media tools (4dwm, Indigo Magic, toolchest, fm, media convert, etc) between their linux and IRIX distributions in the future? What sorts of cross-platform tools and documentation have they been hinting about? I've been spoiled with IRIX 6.5.X and its well made documenation and simple, yet professional appearance. I hope Insight and other IRIX apps make their way to SGI linux, perhaps to be supported and extended on both ends. Slightly-modified KDE or GNOME won't impress me.
Welcome to a brave new world, SGI. Make us proud.
canderso@ttacs.ttu.edu
What chipset they use? (Score:1)
As you know, i820 screwed, so the market is very good for alternative systems. SGI _may_ have a very bright future.
Re:Why there's no article about /. getting DoS'ed (Score:1)
Which reminds me, did Slashdot ever run a story about when they got hacked?
Yes, they did. [slashdot.org]
Re:They're nVidia graphics cards. (Score:1)
Re:Does it use the SGI FirmWare (Score:1)
you may get maya... (Score:1)
for some reason a/w announced a mac port (to os x i believe) - oh wait!, os X got delayed. i would not be surprised if apple payed them for it. (some rumor about a trade for quicktime 4 or something) as vocal as the mac market is, most of the desktop 3d market (in studios) is still irix and NT with alot of people still wanting to use linux, especially with the recent ports and announcements of new ports. until then its the renderfarm / server (small server) OS. big servers being solaris, irix, etc.
even then the linux port would be more for studios and the like. they are the ones clamoring for that and actually have clout.
Apple should just let OS X run ppc linux binaries so people writing linux apps can just compile those. theyll need something like an X server but for apple it shouldnt be that big a deal.
Not so high-priced, actually (Score:3)
This is part of the new direction SGI has been moving in . . . not only to an open software architecture (Linux) but also to a new level of price-consciousness. Expensive, powerful workstations just don't sell anymore; Nvidia's hardware can make a lowly Dell PC push more pixels than an Octane. So SGI's rolling with that, and is moving toward making the best damn non-outrageously-priced graphics workstations on the market.
Not to mention the coolest-looking };-)
Seem to be cool boxen... (Score:1)
Although, maybe I'm a bit jaded over everybody oohing and awing over the color; hey, I'm colorblind, all that color nonsense is highly overrated.
What about Inventor? (Score:1)
--weenie NT4 user: bite me!
Re:Why there's no article about /. getting DoS'ed (Score:1)
Re:that was the stupidest post ever (Score:1)
Re:This isn't over priced. (Score:1)
Re:This isn't over priced. (Score:1)
Re:I wonder (Score:1)
but is it enough? (Score:2)
I'll tell you all how it goes. (Score:2)
---- Ryan
Does it use the SGI FirmWare (Score:2)
If so, then I'd say it's worth the price. Their firmware was nice and had a real understanding of SCSI, could boot off of any drive, and had no stupid 1024 cylinder limit like BIOS systems - like a Sun or Mac.
Re:This isn't over priced. (Score:1)
Re:Whoa look at those prices! (Score:1)
Well, finally... (Score:1)
Proprietary RAM, a slow graphics subsytem that was non-upgradeable and you couldn't run standard NT on it.
These things are just standard x86 clones in a pretty case. Thats not necessarily a bad thing.
As evidenced by the success of the iMac, a pretty case more than offsets major bad points like a technically inferior OS. (this does not apply to IRIX)
The only thing that differentiates this box from a Dell machine or similar is that it has OpenGL drivers for it's video card.
From what i read, it looks like they implement their OpenGL functionality in hardware on a custom chip which is a very good thing. I just hope NVidia or SGI can sell these into the consumer space, since i am very disappointed with the OpenGL performance of my TNT2.
I do wonder why SGI are going with Intel CPUs and a crap 32bit PCI bus though. I guess this is sort of necessary to run NT on... surely an EV-6 bus with Athlon or Alpha CPUs would be more in line with the architectural choices made for their MIPS IRIX machines?
Re:nice (Score:1)
The price vs. time for frame ratio was pretty sweet. Single proc Intel can hold its own against a single proc Octane.
And in a world where memory is everything, the Linux boxes destroy the Octanes.
Going with SGI's for proc rendering is not a good way to go. Well... unless you had several procs working on one frame. But if you really need a frame done that fast...
not that hot (Score:1)
It's a darn shame they've gotten rid of the "cube" logo on those systems and have replaced it with "silicon graphics octane" spelled out in an ugly font.
Compare the prices, and at least they're shipping (Score:1)
Better question about these new workstations is the leadtime to delivery. It's not uncommon for an "available now" system to take two weeks to get from SGI's warehouses to FedEx.
Re:Now we just need some software to run in Linux. (Score:1)
They are still in development (my code, not A|W) and the seem extremely promising.
To all those who think it is too pricey (Score:1)
To some of you, that sounds fine, but to the people who need these in a high availabiltiy environment (such as... hmm... a CG Studio) this is an extremely important difference. I have been disapointed with prices that I have seen from SGI before for the current Linux offerings and for the cost of current MIPS boxen. This is the nature of the buisness though... they are going to be expensive.
What blows my mind is that a company that develops for buisnesses and was (and might still be considered) the leader in high end 3d is creating a product that is priced for the above average home user... and is good enough to use in the studio, where do we have the right to complain?
The company backing makes up for the price difference. SGI is still a good company with support and R&D. This is the extra that you pay for.
Not every solution is going to be cheap or free (or even open) but those that have bits and pieces that follow those goals should be applauded.
Re:sgi dead, pc kills mips for 3d work (Score:1)
Re:Not so high-priced, actually (Score:1)
Some thoughts on these new systems (Score:1)
As a user of SGI's traditional MIPS processor- and IRIX OS [sgi.com]-based Unix workstations, this latest crop of Visual Workstations has me thinking, "hmmmm". As far as pure specs, even the low end model blows my MIPS R10000-based SGI Indigo2 Maximum Impact right out of the water.It's the software, however, that has me a bit concerned. IRIX may look a bit old fashioned and might not have a list of specs as long as that of a typical modern linux distribution, but it is very well designed, supports its hardware quite nicely, and does the job. I have been spoiled with the Insight online manual viewer, swmgr and inst package managers, and other IRIX tools. I work well and am quite efficient with my SGI. The MIPSPro compilers, ProDev Workshop, Inventor, and Performer weren't cheap but they work well and are very well supported [sgi.com] with patches and IRIX 6.5.X overlay updates. I have heard the occasional horror story, but problems are rare. SGI is going to have to do a lot of work bringing their linux distribution on par with their current version of IRIX. APIs such as Performer and Inventor will have to be synced up with their IRIX counterparts if they hope to make cross platform development a reality.
I'm happy to see SGI embrace linux, open source, and lower cost hardware, however I hope the transition is smooth and the high-end market still kept on the radar. There are dozens of low-cost 3D packages for PCs and Macs. No longer does one need an SGI to even consider 3D. It's the sheer scalability of their systems that gives SGI their edge. An application can be developed and tested on a (relatively) low-end O2 [sgi.com] or the mid-range Octane [sgi.com] before being deployed and presented on the high end Onyx2 [sgi.com]. All without recompiling. The shared architecture and OS makes SGI's lineup like no other. Currently, it appears SGI's top linux system [sgi.com] can only be expanded to 2 processors, 2 GB of RAM, and perhaps a future graphics card. Whereas the current Onyx2 supports up to 128 processors, 256 GB RAM, 16 graphics pipes with 4 GB texture RAM total (with InfiniteReality 3 graphics). Not to mention the sheer memory and inter-processor bandwidth as well as the strong, proven hardware support in the OS. All running on the same version of IRIX as that little O2.
There will always be a low end and a high end. There will always be new and old systems about. I'm happy to see SGI moving ahead with new models, faster processors, and updated graphics for their existing machines. From what I understand, the Octane is due for an update soon and the Onyx2 yet again early next year. SGI's future looks bright, I just hope they make the right marketing and public relations decisions. Going after educational and other growing, expanding markets would be a good move, especially if software discounts are offered in certain situations. I welcome SGI to the world of linux, but caution that they have a lot of work to do on both their software and hardware if they are to provide a full solution or even one that will nicely coexist.
C'mon SGI, you can do it. (And please dump that silly new logo on your high-end machines).
canderso@ttacs.ttu.edu
Re: nice (Score:1)
Show me a $5000 SGI MIPS machine that outperforms a $2500 generic x86 box for rendering and i'll eat this post.
Using a cluster of those cheap boxes, you'll be able to render a hell of a lot more frames for a lot less $$$ in the same amount of time than anything SGI can provide.
MIPS based SGIs are nice for interactive work, but their CPUs just don't have the price/performance to be a viable option down on the render-farm.
Re:Not so high-priced, actually (Score:2)
Re:Hrmm (Score:1)
Re:metallica vs napster...offtopic (Score:1)
Metalica are currently recording their answers
The /. Response album will be in record stores soon at $20 US
Re:What's the point? (Score:1)
Why there's no article about /. getting DoS'ed (Score:4)
Could be any number of reasons, such as:
Oh well, those are the reasons that come to mind at first blush. There might be others, but either way, don't count on it ever being reported here, despite the fact that it is a big story to readers here. (Anyone want to try to argue that it's not a huge story to the people who actually visit this site? I'd love to hear it.) Of course, Slashdot will probably say that they're in the business of reporting news, not reporting about Slashdot itself -- shortly before they publish their 8th story about Microsoft lawyers sending letters to Slashdot.
Cheers,
ZicoKnows@hotmail.com