What is it? I don't have twitter anymore.Yup. Check out the CEO/CTO's twitter, you'll see them
What is it? I don't have twitter anymore.Yup. Check out the CEO/CTO's twitter, you'll see them
That was my thought.Given the location of these, I'd wager these were from OVH's BHS facility. Not the first time they had custom as rock rack boards built for them.
Your Ebay link says ASrock. Are they ASrock boards in a SuperMicro Chassis?Hi guys ,
We have another 25 of these up . they came from supermicro server configuration and the reason was the stand off was not right . supposedly they are working .
My thoughts exactly. No doubt they will sell tho.I agree. 50-100 may be okay for the brave, but 400 is way too high...
It's Canada, we're so starved for cool things up here I don't doubt they'll go away.My thoughts exactly. No doubt they will sell tho.
Yeah, lot of folks here would probably give it a try at <$100. Lot of users here seem to fit the Bizarro-R-Us label when it comes to buying hardwareIf I could get one for <$100, I'd give it a poke. It sounds like a fun project and it wouldn't be the first bizarro board I've bought and played with.
It has two mini-PCIe which would be enough for me with those SFP+. I see it has an RJ-45 and I presume that's just for basic GigE away from the SFP+ and not for the BMC. Those USB-B connectors look interesting, but without knowing what they do and without some way to power cycle the system I can't commit to good money on a gamble.I just took a look at the picture and saw a JTAG connector for the FPGA. A good sign that this is super funky stuff.
I also saw the MAC address label that indicates the two MACs as referring to "node 0" and "node 1", and a doulbe reset switch. So i think this is two nodes on a single board.
I would pull the trigger if it where cheaper and if shipping cost weren't too high. If someone from Europe wants to team up to reduce shipping cost end maybe get a discount from the seller I'm open to it.