System of the Year, Linux Style
Bob the Blob writes "LinuxHardware has put together a wonderful article that gathers up all of the top hardware into the ultimate Linux system from 2001. In the article, there is a review of the hardware from 2001 that discusses what we've seen and why the parts were chosen. To make you drool, think Athlon XP with GeForce 3 Ti500 with the stability of Linux." Worth noting that this
machine is of course now at least 10 days obsolete ;)
Slashdot posts advertisements as news.
Still pretty impressed with what it does on my 70MHz SparcIPX (it's got a sped up processor ;)
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
Now i can take this baddass linux box and reboot to windows to play games even faster!
It seems like a 'Linux System of the Year' ought to fully embody the Linux spirit, which nvidia does not. I'd much rather see a Radeon in there.
nvidia cards are severely limited if you're not willing to run the closed-source drivers. nvidia still won't share all of the information about their cards needed for activating DVI-D and other parts of the display output hardware, as well as pieces of the rendering hardware.
Admittedly, nvidia has done a decent job of keeping the closed-source drivers up to date for 98% of the users out there, but simple things like using an nvidia card as your secondary/tertiary display can still lock your system up, and there's not much you can realistically do to fix that without the source.
Hey,
To make you drool, think Athlon XP with GeForce 3 Ti500 with the stability of Linux.
That will be useful! The $300 graphics card will be ideal for all the 3D-intensive games that are only availiable for Windows!
Michael
"Goodness me, how unlike the FBI to abuse the trust of the American public." -- The Onion
--tif
Clearly this system is in no way "ultimate" in terms of price/performance, reliability, or open-ness of software and hardware.
It would be educational to see what system LinuxHardware could come up with with a $1000 spending cap, and a requirement that it reach a 60-day uptime under constant use.
I use free-as-in-speech software because I have been burnt too many times by closed source software which changes in ways I don't want, or doesn't change in ways I do want, or goes out of business, or changes its licensing model, or doesn't keep up with the times and won't work with newer software. Etc etc etc.
I WILL NOT be burned by proprietary software again if I can help it!
As a semi-aside, my original disgust for Microsoft was the patronizing "we know what you want" attitude of their software. Then of course there was the bugginess of it. I also grew to loathe their business non-ethics. A few years ago, a wonderful job went away when some vulture capitalists would not fund a friend's startup "because M$ would dup the effort and we wouldn't get our money back". And since then M$ has compounded all reasons for disgust. However, all this disgust for M$ is not why I use free source software; it's because I don't want to ever again be trapped in proprietary software over which I have no control.
Infuriate left and right
They do not provide the full source. They provide what amounts to a bunch of stub functions which link to closed-source binaries.
This is akin to saying that Microsoft gives full source because you have header files for using their libraries.
The article seems Slashdotted, but from the summation I can only assume that this is another desktop x86 setup.
I'd rather like to nominate the iBook as the portable Linux dream system of the year. The TiBook is a little too flimsy for a clumsy oaf like myself, but the iBook is an indestructible, lightweight, brilliantly engineered machine. There's an Apple on the outside, but even if you eschew OS X for Linux, it's still the best bang for your buck in laptops from 2001.
--saint
Maybe they should get themselves a server that doesn't get slashdotted.
I'm sure the GeForce really helped there.
Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon