Why not go for a journaling solution that a) innovates in filesystem design, with large increases in speed already and advanced database-like features in the pipeline and b) has been in the kernel for months.
Ext3 is just a patch to Ext2 - it's not the future.
That article was cleary written for morons, who overplan everything. IT IS A PARTY, not a damn business conference. Checking in indeed. Just get together, bring as much kit as you can get hold of and have fun setting it up half the night.
The article's completely right about wireless exceeding their advertised range, i've just got home from the LBW where we had a single flat panel antenna connected to a regular base station transmitting over about 1 1/2 miles up to the campsite, to another relatively small antenna connected to a wavelan card in a laptop. Sure the link went down at the slightest hint of bad weather, and we got about 30% packet loss, but we were still getting about 500mbits.:)
Why not go for a journaling solution that a) innovates in filesystem design, with large increases in speed already and advanced database-like features in the pipeline and b) has been in the kernel for months.
Ext3 is just a patch to Ext2 - it's not the future.
And of course you will be caching everything and using traffic shaping, right?
That article was cleary written for morons, who overplan everything. IT IS A PARTY, not a damn business conference. Checking in indeed. Just get together, bring as much kit as you can get hold of and have fun setting it up half the night.
erk, 500kbits, obviously.
The article's completely right about wireless exceeding their advertised range, i've just got home from the LBW where we had a single flat panel antenna connected to a regular base station transmitting over about 1 1/2 miles up to the campsite, to another relatively small antenna connected to a wavelan card in a laptop. Sure the link went down at the slightest hint of bad weather, and we got about 30% packet loss, but we were still getting about 500mbits. :)