Hey Jijo,
You may want to explore hosting a dedicated server in the states. For a little over 100 USD per month, you get free hardware, redundant lines, redundant power supplies, no power surges, decent security, automatic backups and mirroring, no hardware problems, and most important of all, more free time.
Given the increase in Meralco's rates (has anyone noticed), it may actually cost you 100 USD just to run the electricity for your hardware (switch, DSL modem, UPS, server, and an airconditioner). Been hosting our site in the states for the last five years. So far (knock on wood), we've never gone down and we've never lost data.
Rafael 'Dido' Sevilla wrote:
Our mail server just recently kicked the bucket, as did a few other bits of crucial infrastructure vital to our business, because of broken power supplies and video card fans. It's beginning to become frustrating. We haven't got the budget to purchase something like a Proliant with a quarter of a million price tag, but am wondering what other alternatives might be present for off the shelf DIY hardware built to provide reasonably high reliability.
First off, any video card that has to have its own onboard fan is out of the question for such an application. We have already had three such cards destroyed in recent days from excessively high uptime. Apparently nobody sells non-AGP or even fanless video cards anymore (no suggestions about surplus shops here; getting them is hit and miss in such places). Onboard video chipsets may be viable (but some of these have their own fans too!), but they can't do anything for the otherwise viable motherboards we already have. I've already considered running them without video cards on deployment, but if the system crashes for some other reason, I'd like to have an escape valve that allows me to see what might have gone wrong. Are there still commonly available fanless video cards of any kind?
The other thing is power supplies. About half of the long running servers we have had their uptimes cut short because of power supply failure. Any recommendations on where we could buy good, reliable power supplies?
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