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25 new of 84 responses total.
remmers
response 52 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 5 17:45 UTC 2007

Oops, typo:  The URL for the Ann Arbor metro on Upcoming is
http://upcoming.org/metro/us/mi/aa/
cross
response 53 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 13:40 UTC 2007

Good stuff, Remmers.  Thanks a lot.
cross
response 54 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 13:41 UTC 2007

PS: Is anyone willing to write a story about grex for slashdot?  That would
certainly give us visibility in the geek world, which could be really
interesting.  Maybe if there were a call for a grex `project' more people
would be interested; for instance, looking for a replacement for picospan
might draw in some folks.
twenex
response 55 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 14:56 UTC 2007

Short answer: yes. Long answer: Some info on the history from a personal
perspective would be appreciated. Reachable via the usual email address. All
comers welcome.
cross
response 56 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 15:51 UTC 2007

A good historical perspective is in Jan's history, on www.unixpapa.com.
marcvh
response 57 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 17:44 UTC 2007

I'm trying to imagine the results of a slashdot grex article:

  Imagine a Beowoulf cluster of script kiddies...

  In Soviet Union, Grex logs in to you!
nharmon
response 58 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 17:55 UTC 2007

Heh, marc. Don't forget "Does it run Linux?"

I think we should hold off on attracting new users until the we get the
system to a better state of stability. The last thing I want is for Grex
to go down for a couple of days during a Slashdot article and lose what
chance it might have had.

Also, with that many eyes on Grex how shallow will its security problems
become? For that matter, could Grex handle a slashdotting?

tod
response 59 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 18:00 UTC 2007

 could Grex handle a slashdotting?

Arbornet did.
maus
response 60 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 18:07 UTC 2007

Are grex and Arbornet comparable? What is our weakest link? What are our
single point failures? For that matter, what do we do better than others
to attract new visitors? 
cross
response 61 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 18:57 UTC 2007

Actually, Arbornet (in terms of hardware resources, at least) is significantly
weaker than grex these days.  It runs on a much older system, running an old
version of FreeBSD (though they're upgrading), with much less RAM and much
less hard disc space.
cyklone
response 62 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 19:24 UTC 2007

Maus should still check out arbornet, even though she'll need a different
username.
maus
response 63 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 19:43 UTC 2007

Arbornet is the org that runs m-net server? 
maus
response 64 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 19:45 UTC 2007

Silly question: what is the ratio of horsepower:active_users ? What is
the ratio of horsepower:services_offered? 
jep
response 65 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 19:58 UTC 2007

Arbornet is the organization which owns and runs M-Net.  You can get to
M-Net by going to:

   http://m-net.arbornet.org
tod
response 66 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 20:44 UTC 2007

re #64
I'd say the different between M-Net and Grex is nominal.  If any comparison
is to be made, Grex is more robust scientifically.
maus
response 67 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 21:29 UTC 2007

I would say that a useful metric would actually be those ratios, 
especially if we break the nebulous horsepower into concrete things 
like measurable processing power, available memory, available network 
throughput, &c. How much processing capability *per user* do we have, 
and what would be an acceptable baseline, below which a user does not 
get a nice experience? Same question for available virtual memory per 
user. 

Do we have resource limits in place to make each user play fair, so 
that there is a base amount of resource per user (e.g. if there are 18 
available concurrent ssh sessions, each user might get 5%, leaving one 
session's worth for root and one for the system or something like 
that). 

By how much do we oversubscribe our resources? 
tod
response 68 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 22:40 UTC 2007

We can't answer that now, Ms.Spock but we know we need to get the Enterprise
into the Slashdot quadrant before the Romulans uncloak.
nharmon
response 69 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 6 23:42 UTC 2007

Sorry, Jim. I'm a systems engineer, not a publicist. You simply can't
change the laws of physics.
denise
response 70 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 7 00:25 UTC 2007

Hmm, would we get much exposure on the AA [or broader] craigslist page 
in one of their sections?  [A month or two ago, I posted info about a 
group I'm in to the 'group' page and had it sent to the AA as well as 
the Detroit area's list. And I did get some response from it.]  Dunno 
if thhis would work for something like Grex, though.
nharmon
response 71 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 7 00:35 UTC 2007

I like that idea Denise! We could do that on a regular basis!
cross
response 72 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 7 03:54 UTC 2007

I'd like to see a broader target audience than just the Ann Arbor area,
though.  That said, posting on criagslist is a great idea.  How about some
posts on the Well also?  I imagine that community might be interested in
another Picospan-ish system.
krokus
response 73 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 7 04:11 UTC 2007

At least that settles something, maus isn't maus I was thinking of.
I was wondering how Amy got so ComputerGeek savy so fast.  :)
tod
response 74 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 7 23:41 UTC 2007

Amy is savy but also wise enough not to spend solar hours on Grex.
maus
response 75 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 8 15:51 UTC 2007

This maus is a different small, cute rodent. This maus also demands
offerings of cheese. 
cross
response 76 of 84: Mark Unseen   Mar 8 16:54 UTC 2007

There are too many mice and now I'm just confused.

Will the real Maus please stand up?
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