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PC in a plug

Started by neXus, June 20, 2007, 09:28:40 AM

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neXus

First you had the usb LCD now you have a pc in a plug
http://www.jadeintegration.com/jackpc.php

Grey M@a

Weve had these demod in the uni for a few months now. They are a no frill thin client. They do their job for the public clusters but tbh I aint impressed with the things. For what they are, they are a tad bit over priced but they are good with the right application :)

If you want, I will see if I can dig out the video this place took when they were testing these things.
Steam: Grey_Mata

Jaitsu

aye, will take a while until they up the specs enough to run any sort of game

at the moment the x86 chip speed is clocked at 1.2ghz

:/

Grey M@a

They are basically machines that would suite the likes of an internet cafe that doesnt require anything that has high spec graphics/interfaces and audio.

As said maybe these things will be upped in the spec in order to fulfil greater needs in future.
Steam: Grey_Mata

Rivkid

these would be perfect for our sales and project managers but whats the point - I can buy them a dekstop or laptop for that price nearly!!
Career, Wife, Mortgage... my sig was better when it listed guitars and PC's and stuff!

neXus

Indeed, these along with the usb monitors are more for the office type environment and would save an amazing amount of space and cost

Eggtastico

Seen these a while ago while looking for small media players for streaming music/films around the house.

Not much good for anything TBH. Even thin client/Citrix theyre going to be a dog to work with.

Cypher

They seem pointless to me.

Beaker

Perfect in a centralised environment.  As it says, it runs a Citrix client, and it isnt intended ot do anything but that really.  Might be a nice replacement for a Wyse terminal if you want somethign neater, and less likely get nicked.  

neXus

3rd world uses as well

funkychicken9000


neXus

Quote from: funkychicken9000At that price?!

Not now of course but can see the practicality of it
Back in the day there were no power sockets and devices were plugged into the light sockets

This going backwards going forwards does have uses although this is pants for price at the moment.
The routers in the socket that are starting to ship are cool, networks using them, as well as other devices.

Pete

thin clients work really well in some environments, but these are too expensive - I dont think many companies would go with them over say the hp ones.

I know sh*ts bad right now with all that starving bullsh*t and the dust storms and we are running out of french fries and burrito coverings.

Eggtastico

Quote from: sdpthin clients work really well in some environments, but these are too expensive - I dont think many companies would go with them over say the hp ones.


The only places I have seen thin client work well is for a dedicated task like stock control, etc. - try & run a whole load of different apps & it grinds to halt.

Mark

Badly set up & run then - one of the sites I look after has a 60 server farm, with 1025 users spread across several different contracts, each with a number of apps. They all work off old PCs that have been recycled and flashed with thinstation - the only linux distro Id have about the place. I know of another site with 24 citrix servers and 600 users (Not concurrent, although they do have that many licenses) with no problems.

The problem with most sites is that they allow too many users on each server in the farm (Citrix recommend 30 on very modern hardware, Id say 20-22 is better on the likes of mid range DL380 G5 equiv), AND they are lazily managed - for example - if something is up with one of the boxes rather than tackle the issue they will take it out of the farm for that published application. Net result - one less server, more load.

Number of issues since I moved them to citrix? very few, and mostly tsprofile problems. Issues beforehand - daily. The tech team there has been able to scale down from 15 to 5.

Thinclients are the way to go for large scale rollouts - so much more managable. The comment about third world cost is valid - the cost of a citrix license and a CAL comes to around about the price of a bog standard desktop PC, so you have that to add on top of the hardware cost. It is really only a suitable solution for a large organisation. the access gateway product however is another story - its amazingly cheap when compared to the likes of the AEP Netilla.

Im currently looking into the open source alternative to citrix - its a lot cheaper, but the reliability has been questionable. that can wait until I have the current project finished off at the royal hospital.