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Re: [K12OSN] Thin client compatibility



If you want to be sure of having a good, functional thin client box, get your hands on some old Pentiums from some used computer store (in the Washington, DC area, two stores, Computer Renaissance and PC Retro, serve that market). More often than not these have LTSP-friendly NICs in them (3Com 3C905's, Intel EtherExpress Pro's, etc.). We have a ton of Pentium 166's with 32MB DRAM, 3C905 NICs, S3 Trio64 video boards, and SoundBlaster 16's in them. They make very good thin clients, and without any additional expense.

The folks in Largo, FL have bought used thin client boxes for as low as $5 apiece, but they did their homework long and hard before they actually made any such purchases. So, it might not be too good to be true, but buyer beware.

That said, if you want to take this route, what you want to look for is the type of graphics chip, the type of built-in NIC, and the type of sound chip. Also find out how much DRAM is in there (you want a bare minimum of 32MB). They need to support either EtherBoot or PXE, and of course they need to support DHCP (if they say "BOOTP", but not "DHCP", I'd pass). I would recommend against buying anything for which all of this information is not available, as these are the necessary issues to have solved before any LTSP client will actually boot and produce a display for you.

Note that, for LTSP, you do not need RDP, ICA, or any of those other proprietary protocols; if you need RDP-type functionality, K12LTSP already includes rdesktop.

David Beach wrote:

I see lots of cheap used thin client boxes (ranging from $15 WYSE jobs to
$250 Compaq EVO T30s) on eBay. They are nice and small, no fan, etc. I know
virtually nothing about LTSP protocols. These talk about running Windows CE,
compatible with RDP and ICA 3 protocols and 'support SNMP, DHCP', etc.

Will these work with LTSP? Or, can they be made to work with LTSP? What are
the 'key words' for LTSP compatibility? If they can work with LTSP, some of
these appear to represent a real bargain but, as my mother said, if it
sounds too good to be true...

David Beach


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