lxskllr
No Lifer
- Nov 30, 2004
- 59,022
- 9,380
- 126
I'm buying a god damn bedsheet and using that, screw this expensive crap.
I can confirm an umbrella doesn't work. I tried that when I was about 7. Didn't work as I imagined; At all... :^D
I'm buying a god damn bedsheet and using that, screw this expensive crap.
So i'm buying a parachute and I was going to get a real one, with real parachute fabric, with real parachute cord , and reall parachute pull strings, and a real parachute backpack and a real pair of shoulder straps, and then I saw the price and it really brought me down to earth.
I'm buying a god damn bedsheet and using that, screw this expensive crap.
A failed parachute means death.
A failed server that can be repaired with replacement hardware within a half hour often is a very minor expense on a small business.
If the business demanded 24/7 up-time else the company goes out of business, then you'd have a valid comparison
Exactly. And you can fix the potential downtime by having 2 of the custom servers running in some kind of HA or failover mode (depending on what they're for), which will still be cheaper and easier to work on than the enterprise grade one. People seem to have the false sense of security that a "enterprise" server will never go down. It will. After spending a couple hours on the phone trying to explain the problem to some guy in India, you'll finally get a spare part. With a custom built server that uses standard off the shelf components, you could have spares on hand.
The 4 hour response *IS* nice, but imo, it's not really worth the extra cost when you could just use that money to have spare parts or better redundancy instead. Custom built stuff tends to use way less power too, so that's another way to save. Though I think that's changing, lot of the newer enterprise stuff is not as power hungry now days.