How Well Does Windows Cluster?
cascadefx asks: "I work for a mid-sized mid-western university. One of our departments has started up a small Beowulf cluster research project that he hopes to grow over time. At the moment, the thing is incredibly weak... but it is running on old hardware and is basically used for dog and pony shows to get more funding and hopefully donations of higher-end systems. It runs Linux and works, it is just not anything to write home about. Here's the problem: my understanding is that an MS rep asked what it would take to get them to switch to a Microsoft cluster. Is this possible? Are there MS clusters that do what Beowulf clusters are capable of? I thought MS clusters were for load balancing, not computation... which is the hoped-for goal of this project. Can the Slashdot crowd offer some advice? If there are MS clusters, comparisons of the capabilities would be welcome." One has to only go as far as Microsoft's site to see its current attempt at clustering, but what is the real story. Have any of you had a chance to pit a Linux Beowulf cluster against one from Microsoft? How did they compare?
Could you imagine a Beowulf cluster of MS Windows clusters?!
pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
Imagine a Beowulf cluster of these!
Apparently you (and most everyone else) didn't take the time to even look at the link provided. Microsoft DOES have computational clustering, not just "traditional" clustering. Please note that the link provided points to MS Computational Clustering, NOT MCS.
Yeah, right.
How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
How rude.