On Saturday, 19 August 2017 03:13:05 BST Stroller wrote:
> > On 18 Aug 2017, at 13:28, Todd Goodman wrote:
> > You'll need to look into the free tier to be sure. You can always set
> > alerts to email you if you're getting close to getting charged.
> Thanks for your help.
>
> On 18 Aug 2017, at 13:28, Todd Goodman wrote:
>
>> Many thanks, that's very helpful.
>>
>> So AWS instances work like any other VM? I can ssh into them, install
>> packages on them and so on?
>> …
>
> Yes, you can ssh in to them as usual (assuming you have allowed it
On 8/17/2017 6:05 PM, Stroller wrote:
On 17 Aug 2017, at 12:40, Todd Goodman wrote:
I use AWS instances extensively at work and they have been incredibly reliable
and after initially learning the tools they're very convenient to manage (IMNHO
of course.)
I've used the
> On 17 Aug 2017, at 12:40, Todd Goodman wrote:
>
> I use AWS instances extensively at work and they have been incredibly
> reliable and after initially learning the tools they're very convenient to
> manage (IMNHO of course.)
>
> I've used the AWS free tier EC2 to set up
On 8/16/2017 6:00 PM, Stroller wrote:
On 26 Mar 2017, at 03:57, Stroller wrote:
In the next few weeks I need to move my email server (a very old Gentoo
installation) from the closet in my home, into the cloud so that I can go
travelling and access my mail
> On 26 Mar 2017, at 03:57, Stroller wrote:
>
> In the next few weeks I need to move my email server (a very old Gentoo
> installation) from the closet in my home, into the cloud so that I can go
> travelling and access my mail from anywhere.
A few months ago
> On 29 Mar 2017, at 06:43, Arthur Țițeică wrote:
>>
>> €5 a month seems an ideal price, but I can probably afford a little
>> more.
>
> Dedibox/Online has real hardware (dedicated servers) for 15 or 30€ on the
> personal range. The more expensive one has 2 SSDs for
În 29 martie 2017 07:33:54 EEST, Stroller a
scris:
>
>> On 28 Mar 2017, at 13:41, Alarig Le Lay wrote:
>>
>> 2. What is cheap for you? I’m part of a non for profit association
>that
>> rent VMs at 5 € per month for 32G of hard drive, one
> On 28 Mar 2017, at 13:41, Alarig Le Lay wrote:
>
> 2. What is cheap for you? I’m part of a non for profit association that
> rent VMs at 5 € per month for 32G of hard drive, one vCPU and 512M of
> RAM. https://grifon.fr/services.html
Many thanks for all the replies to
On dim. 26 mars 03:57:00 2017, Stroller wrote:
> Hello,
>
> In the next few weeks I need to move my email server (a very old
> Gentoo installation) from the closet in my home, into the cloud so
> that I can go travelling and access my mail from anywhere.
>
> I've never used VM's before, but my
On March 26, 2017 4:57:00 AM GMT+02:00, Stroller
wrote:
>Hello,
>
>In the next few weeks I need to move my email server (a very old Gentoo
>installation) from the closet in my home, into the cloud so that I can
>go travelling and access my mail from anywhere.
>
On March 26, 2017 4:57:00 AM GMT+02:00, Stroller
wrote:
>Hello,
>
>In the next few weeks I need to move my email server (a very old Gentoo
>installation) from the closet in my home, into the cloud so that I can
>go travelling and access my mail from anywhere.
>
You could also check out Scaleway, who offer a dedicated ARM server for 3
EUR/month. And DigitalOcean which offers simply priced VMs (starting at
$5/month) targeted at individuals/developers rather than big organisations
(in contrast to AWS). Haven't used Linode so not sure how these compare on
* Stroller [170325 22:57]:
> Hello,
>
> In the next few weeks I need to move my email server (a very old Gentoo
> installation) from the closet in my home, into the cloud so that I can go
> travelling and access my mail from anywhere.
>
> I've never used VM's
Linode just updated their gentoo image, it works out of the box (I failed to
get the previous version to work, but if I had been willing to put a week into
getting it working, as with most things Gentoo, probably no problem). Their
1024 (I think) VM should be able to do way more than your in
Hello,
In the next few weeks I need to move my email server (a very old Gentoo
installation) from the closet in my home, into the cloud so that I can go
travelling and access my mail from anywhere.
I've never used VM's before, but my understanding is that they look just like a
normal machine
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