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heh, that's the point my friendsovs said:yea still a lot of space in that rack
Icidic said:I hope not, that'd be awefully slow and painful with 15 Virtual PCs - when they're all using the network...
Nah, still there until im finished with the IE.cleric_retribution said:ps, what happened to all the cisco stuff? sold?
I have run GSX on top of Windows 2003 server with 2-3 VM's running at the same time (2 of which would be other Windows 2003 servers), with only 2GB of RAM. The windows VM's were a bit slow, since I statically allocated them 512MB of RAM.
I would imagine that ESX would be better since it runs as the OS (instead of on top of another OS), and should be able to handle memory better.
Gotta Love CCNP....
I take my 821 in a few weeks. I'm pretty sure I'm ready for 801, but I'll take baby steps.
The way I have my lab setup in the basement, I don't know why I didn't ever think of putting a white board in my basement. I have and use one at work.....geeezzz...
What's your take on the IS-IS protocol? Is it really used in the real world?
You taking the 640-801(CCNA) or did you mean the 642-901(BSCI)?
My take on the IS-IS protocol is this, its kind of a grandfather routing protocol so im going to respect it(hell it was developed before IP was large!). I think that its very scalable and much faster than any other routing protocols(yes, even OSPF), so its got my best convergence vote. The simplicity of the protocol is the most appealing, though CLNS can be a bit confusing if you're only used to IP(which I was) but once you get it down its like subnetting... second nature.
Is it used in the real word? hmmmm....I never worked for an ISP and I would assume that this would be a prime place where you would find it deployed or perhaps some large network in the commercial market..Im still wondering one thing though, whenever I used to call up an ISP and report a down T1/T3 line they would refer to the line as a circuit(hence the circuit ID) and IS-IS is the only routing protocol I know of that calls interfaces circuits. This makes me wonder, maybe some of the ISPs I have worked with are deploying IS-IS on the edge, if not its OSPF.
PS. Guys, the white board was like 30 bucks at staples.... get one... hahaha
You taking the 640-801(CCNA) or did you mean the 642-901(BSCI)?
My take on the IS-IS protocol is this, its kind of a grandfather routing protocol so im going to respect it(hell it was developed before IP was large!). I think that its very scalable and much faster than any other routing protocols(yes, even OSPF), so its got my best convergence vote. The simplicity of the protocol is the most appealing, though CLNS can be a bit confusing if you're only used to IP(which I was) but once you get it down its like subnetting... second nature.
Is it used in the real word? hmmmm....I never worked for an ISP and I would assume that this would be a prime place where you would find it deployed or perhaps some large network in the commercial market..Im still wondering one thing though, whenever I used to call up an ISP and report a down T1/T3 line they would refer to the line as a circuit(hence the circuit ID) and IS-IS is the only routing protocol I know of that calls interfaces circuits. This makes me wonder, maybe some of the ISPs I have worked with are deploying IS-IS on the edge, if not its OSPF.
PS. Guys, the white board was like 30 bucks at staples.... get one... hahaha
There are different types of "circuits" depending on what you are using it for. In a phone network they call things circuits because your copper/fiber traffic goes between 2 points. A switched circuit is a POTS line or ISDN, something that goes through a phone switch. Dedicated Circuits, private lines or leased lines are dedicated point to point connections. Circuit ID's give all sorts of information, varies by company but usually it tells you the ratecenter, cable pair, bundle, cable type and all sorts of other information.
I acquired my license for testing purposes through a licensed reseller( i can pretty much do what I like with it). If you want a linux box with virtualization you should check into Xen which I think is hardware hypervisor based virtualization vs. paravirtualization. If you want to stick with para-based you can always use Virtual Box, I know quite a bit of people that like it. If you are set on running ESX, call them up... tell them that you work for a large company that is looking into providing virtualization solutions for your customers and that you need a full license to try out their software(this actually goes for every company that requires licensing). I cant even beging to tell you how many companies will GIVE away their software when you give that exact line and im not talking eval stuff(microsoft, adobe, etc, etc). Thanks for the complimentOk, I finally have to ask, how'd you get ESX? Did you have to pay for it? I need to be able to build a virtual linux machine with networking support (test webserver), and Virtual Server won't play nice with linux.
Oh, and that's a nice setup man!
Thanks. I consider where Im from the be Central Jersey, though some say that doesn't existSparkyy said:Hey xphil3, nice setup and smart idea on going virtualization to keep the power bill low, but my question is are you up in Northern Jersey or Southern Jersey?
Thanks. I consider where Im from the be Central Jersey, though some say that doesn't existNear exit 81
Ha ha, exit 81 of the parkway? Wow to me that is Southern JerseySince you're pretty much past all the shores.
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I liked in Warwick. Went to school at NEIT.
Why is it so hard to understand why my parents are letting me do this, computers don't suck up that much electricity. My friend and I tested 12 computers and all my networking geat running for a solid month in RI and the electric bill went up 120 bucks(and this was in the summer with the AC). Ill let everyone know how much electric is up here when I do see the first electric bill. But anyway, my parents know I use it for education and probably expect me to buy them a lexus or something down the road sometime
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btw ubergeek: I see that you work in best buy. Is this the one in west warwick? If so do you remember the 5 or so kids that came in with flyers for free RAM around a year or so ago and your *bitch* manager tryed to kick them out and they still got the RAM by calling corporate.... lol.... good times, good times.![]()
yay for off topic but i went to NEIT! too.... when i lived in RI
i miss RI... i live in crappy florida now
Funny that you posted, I just bought another 4gigs of ram 2 days agohave you added something new to your lab ???
Funny that you posted, I just bought another 4gigs of ram 2 days ago. Thats good for another 6-8 VMs
Yep, fully buffered ECC @ 677Mhznice
so now how much do you have?
8gb
...nice
are they fbdimm??
Yep, fully buffered ECC @ 677Mhz
i mean expensive is fbdimm
well. like I said they are fully buffered and they *were* expensive a year ago. a 2GB module is only 75 bucks nowi mean expensive is fbdimm
just that