You can lease dedicated server E3's for ~<$50 from idiots and kids or idiot kids.I'd love to find an E3 for the price of a pair of socks.
You can lease dedicated server E3's for ~<$50 from idiots and kids or idiot kids.I'd love to find an E3 for the price of a pair of socks.
Not to mention that they may be involved in the largest bust and confiscation of hardware for child porn in history, and how it effects them is still unknown.Or one big hoster in Canada... But it's different with them bringing the EU model to North America...
Thats a lot more than my $7 VPS.You can lease dedicated server E3's for ~<$50 from idiots and kids or idiot kids.
I'm certain they could double or even triple their prices and there would still be no shortage of us willing to payI'd love to find an E3 for the price of a pair of socks.
Yeah, I'd love a dedicated server but for now my VPS works. Need monies first.I'm certain they could double or even triple their prices and there would still be no shortage of us willing to pay
That is pretty neat. Using or listing it as a C220 class PCH is fantastic for support reasons. Should just work out of the box vs having to wait for special drivers.
Yep, DDR4 hasn't been out for that long...ie the "premium" price.I just did a very quick check on newegg and found that 16GB DDR4 RDIMM memory (as Patrick used in his XeonD test rig) looks like it's quite a bit more expensive than 16GB DDR3 ECC memory. Does that sound right? I'm not confident I'm comparing apples-to-apples, but if true it might tilt the balance when doing full comparisons.
Isn't it also more power efficient?To be fair, the DDR4 memory is faster, and that's why I shrink from claiming it's an apples-to-apples comparison. i.e. you're getting some extra value for the extra money. Is it a linear relationship? I don't know, but I doubt it. It would be an interesting exercise if someone (@Patrick?) wanted to do the math to see where the sweet spot is.
Good point. It is lower voltage: 1.2v.Isn't it also more power efficient?