You know when grown-ups tell you everything's going to be fine, and you think they're probably lying to make you feel better?
Yes.
Everything's going to be fine.
Yes.
Everything's going to be fine.
Wednesday, November 05
Yeah, Uh, Well, I Guess That Will Do
Signed up for a $5/month virtual server to test a new provider.
Signed up for a $5/month virtual server to test a new provider.
Ran a disk speed test.
[root@chiriri install]# hdparm -t /dev/vda11.6GB per second on a budget virtual server. Yes, I think I can find a use for this.
/dev/vda1:
Timing buffered disk reads: 4994 MB in 3.00 seconds = 1664.55 MB/sec
Update: Caching disk controller. Tried it again, and I got ~200MB/s on the first run, but it ramped up quickly to nearly 1.8GB/s on subsequent runs.
CPU performance seems good too; a little slower than my VPS at Vultr, but about in line with our physical servers (which are slightly older, E3 Xeon V1/V2 chips). RAM is a very healthy 4GB.
The reason it's so cheap is that there's no SLA or redundancy; it's a virtual server on a single physical server, and if it goes down, it goes down. Also, it "only" comes with 1TB of bandwidth. An equivalent VM on their redundant hardware is $18/month, but that comes with 5TB of bandwidth - and they charge $10/TB, so if you need the bandwidth, it's still a bargain.
Same provider does Amazon S3-compatible file storage at 2.1¢ per GB per month for storage plus 1¢ per GB for bandwidth. That's 30% cheaper than Amazon on the storage side, and 90% cheaper on bandwidth.
They also offer a 176-core IBM Power 8 server, but that's a little on the expensive side. I did run up a 6-core Intel-based VM with 24GB RAM and 240GB SSD for half an hour of testing, and that worked just fine.
So far my testing has cost me 7¢. Except that they gave me a $5 credit for signing up, so it hasn't cost me anything at all.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
09:37 AM
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Tuesday, November 04
The Dam Breaks
Computer monitors have been stuck at around 100 dpi for the past twenty years. There have been a few exceptions like IBM's legendary T220, but that cost $10,000, so not something likely to show up on the average desktop.
Computer monitors have been stuck at around 100 dpi for the past twenty years. There have been a few exceptions like IBM's legendary T220, but that cost $10,000, so not something likely to show up on the average desktop.
The new wave of ultra-high-definition (3840x2160) monitors started showing up last year, beginning with Sharp's $3500 32" model, and Asus and Dell's versions, then followed by a range of cheap 28" TN panels and the occasional 24" IPS model. LG showed up with an ultrawide format 3440x1440 34" screen.
And then, just in the past few weeks:
- Dell teased a 27" 5K monitor for around $2500.
- Apple shipped a 27" 5K iMac for around $2500.
- Dell leaked new 24" and 27" 4K IPS monitors, and a 25" 2560x1440 monitor.
- Acer also have a 27" 4K monitor and a 25" 2560x1440 monitor.
- LG, Dell, and Samsung all announced curved 34" 3440x1440 displays. If you remember CRTs, these are curved the other way.
- LG have a 31" 4096x2160 (Digital Cinema 4K) IPS monitor going for about half the price of the various 31" 3840x2160 monitors based on Sharp's IGZO panel.
- And Philips called all the others a bunch of pikers and announced a 40" 4K monitor for under $1000. (With DisplayPort, 60Hz refresh, and a good quality VA panel with 176° viewing angles, so a big step up from the Seiki 4K TVs that have been popular in this size.)
I was saving for something new, and the Retina iMac looked perfect for my needs.* But I could get three of those Philips 40" 4K monitors for that price, and plug them straight into my existing PC. Or I could get the 5K iMac and a Dell 4K 27" monitor; with Apple's auto-scaling on high-definition displays, there would be little apparent difference between the two screens. Or the iMac and the 27" Dell and a 40" Philips, and watch my credit card curl up in a little crispy ball of pain...
* Programming, web design, documentation, and the occasional bit of gaming.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
07:47 PM
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