G'day Jeremy I too use the IVC-200 4 Port Capture Card using Fedora Core 4 and find it to be very good.
In regards to racked mounted computers, as another idea to consider, we actually built our own shelves for our racks to house standard workstations. See http://hpc.cqu.edu.au/images/ag11.jpg for a photo and http://hpc.cqu.edu.au/menu.html?INDEX=index2.html&MAIN=accessgrid.html for more information in general about portable AG nodes. If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to contact me. Cheers, Jason. -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Christoph Willing Sent: Wednesday, 1 February 2006 8:48 AM To: [email protected] Cc: [email protected] Subject: Re: [AG-TECH] System options On 01/02/2006, at 8:15 AM, Jeremy Mann wrote: > I have been tasked to build a new portable AG node for another > University. > I want to do it right this time and rackmount everthing that I can > in a > 12U rack with wheels. I've done some initial searching for 3U and 4U > machines from Dell and Monarch and they consider 3U or 4U a > "server" and > ramp up the price considerably. Also, the motherboards in these > machines > maybe have 2 PCI slots. For future expansion we need at last 4 capture > cards. Would a 4 port capture card work with Linux? Jeremy, We have mostly Linux AG nodes in Australia and a large number (maybe the majority now) use the IVC200 4x input card: http://www.icp-australia.com.au/DataSheets/IVC200G.html > Are there any other sites with racked AG nodes? From whom did you > buy your > computer from? For the same reasons you mention above, we tend to have ours made to order by local builders. We've had good success with Tyan motherboards - the Tyan S2895 looks like it would be great for an AG node (add 2x dualhead PCI-Extreme graphics cards = accelerated graphics on all 4 outputs). chris Christoph Willing +61 7 3365 8350 QPSF Access Grid Manager University of Queensland

