[K12OSN] VT-310 DP as small workgroup server

Chris Thomas cwt137 at yahoo.com
Wed Apr 26 23:17:50 UTC 2006


The VT-310 DP is real expensive. They retail for $400-500. With its lack luster general cpu perfomance that William mentiions below, it makes it look more expensive. It is cheaper to get a matx mobo and get an AMD64 or P4 cpu to put into a lanparty case. The only reason I think of someone should buy the VT-310 DP is if they need a super quiet solution (for a HTPC?) or if they want to make a VPN server. The VT-310 DP does AES encryption( and maybe SHA1 and other schemes) in hardware. 
 
Chris

----- Original Message ----
From: William Fragakis <william at fragakis.com>
To: k12osn at redhat.com
Sent: Monday, April 24, 2006 5:38:36 AM
Subject: [K12OSN] VT-310 DP as small workgroup server


the C3s aren't known to be robust processors. iirc, they benchmarked
equivalent to about the same as about 50% slower PIIIs.

You may wish to look also at LAN-party style cases (e.g. Shuttle).
Small, good air circulation and you can stick in a dual core P4 or AMD
chip. Also, most mini-itx cases don't have great air flow - stick two
processors and a drive in there and either you have heat problems or you
need more air movement/fans which ups the noise level.

For modest use, I'm sure the mini-itxs would be nice but I would be
reluctant to put a few users browsing Flash web sites.

The LAN party cases often are of aluminum and have handles, we built one
as a test and it's serving about 12 desktops without issue - It has an
AMD 3500 and a 10K SATA drive - Kids love its looks.

Regards,
William



On Sun, 2006-04-23 at 12:00 -0400, k12osn-request at redhat.com wrote:
> Message: 3
> Date: Sat, 22 Apr 2006 13:47:19 -0500
> From: Daniel Loomis <drloomis at cox-internet.com>
> Subject: [K12OSN] VT-310 DP as small workgroup server
> To: k12osn at redhat.com
> Message-ID: <444A7A37.9050106 at cox-internet.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
> 
> Has anyone tried setting up one of the new Via VT-310DP dual cpu 
> mini-itx motherboards as a small, low-power, quiet server for a
> portable 
> workgroup?  While its dual 1000mHz C3 processors could not compete
> with 
> a dual Xeon or Opteron server, it could be installed in a small case
> and 
> used to support basic office functions for a group of four or five. 
> With addition of a four-port pci NIC, it would not even need a 
> switch--just bridge the four ethernet ports into one br0, add clients 
> and you are good to go.
> 
> It would make a dandy demo system to take on the road, all in a
> package 
> the size of a thin client.
> 
> Dan

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