Orphan HP Alphaservers looking for a new home
Andrew Luke Nesbit
ullbeking at andrewnesbit.org
Fri Jan 25 19:41:06 CST 2019
Dear Jim,
Please see my response inline...
On 25/01/2019 23:04, Jim Manley wrote:
> Hi Andrew,
Hi Jim,
> If it’s any consolation
I needed no consolation because I already knew that these machines are
going to a good home. But your message is great to read. This sounds
like an amazing project.
> the users of these components will be high
> school students in an extremely rural area at the lowest level of
> poverty in the U.S. The students are eager to learn computing and
> networking principles, and these will provide opportunities for that in
> spades.
I think that learning foundational principles on real AlphaServers, with
a good teacher, /actually sets up students in greater stead compared to
computers based in the x86_84 universe, for example/. I mean this on
many levels and across varying dimensions.
Kind of like how I learned computer architecture from Hennessey &
Patterson using MIPS and a RISC ISA. The concepts translated easily and
well. All you need is genuine interest.
I don't know much about the socioeconomic profile of Montana. I spent
much of my in many parts of the US, mostly for personal reasons, and I
loved the country in general. Unfortunately I never had a chance to go
to Montana.
> The performance level of these, compared with current technology, is
> unimportant, as getting the right answers is more significant than how
> fast they were computed.
Are you referring writing networked computer programs to solve problems?
I was discussing with my partner earlier this week that knowing about
computing skills, like how networking _really_ works, is critical future
knowledge for people who want to stay street smart in the universe of
electrons whizzing by. It's going to be seriously important.
> These components were used for data services,
> so that fulfills the trifecta of computing, data structures, and
> networking (and at fiber channel speeds, AIUI).
This trifecta of "computing, data structures, and networking" intrgues
me. Is it part of some curriculum? Or is it a grouping of computing
concepts that you have identified as being meaningful? In the second
sense I think I get it if I think hard enough.
> We’ll make some videos eventually as they puzzle their way through
> getting software licenses acquired and installed, things are configured
> to work together, and we get proof-of-life command line prompts.
I have a huge and active interest in education. I would be very
interested to hear about how you get on with this.
> I hope you are able to acquire your own Alphaservers and whatever other
> techno-toys you covet in the near future.
I don't like phrases like "techno-toys", regardless of how they are
intended to come across. Similarly, words like "gizmos" and "gadgets".
They rub me the wrong way but it is not a conversation I want to have
right now.
I'm not looking for AlphaServers to fulfil some sort of fetish. Rather,
I have a specific project use case for them, and I would like to include
them in this project I'm working on.
I wish you all the very best in this work, Jim, and I believe that
motivated students will appreciate the value of something clearly
amazing like an AlphaServer. As I mentioned above, I've got a genuine
interest in education and would love to hear how it goes. Do you mind
if I ping you again in 6-12 months?
Kind regards,
Andrew
> On Fri, Jan 25, 2019 at 2:58 PM Andrew Luke Nesbit
> <ullbeking at andrewnesbit.org <mailto:ullbeking at andrewnesbit.org>> wrote:
>
> Dear Richard,
>
> Thank you for replying in such a considered way. Please see below for
> comments.
>
> On 25/01/2019 00:07, Richard Loken via cctalk wrote:
>
> > All of you have at one time expressed interest in all or part of
> this
> > rack full of Alphaservers and one of you even talked about
> driving a truck
> > up from Montana and taking it all home.
>
> All I can think of at this moment is how beautiful it must be to
> go on a
> road trip in Montana.
>
> > Are any of you still interested?
>
> I remain tremendously interested in learning about AlphaServers and
> acuiring another one or two.
>
> But I live in London, UK. I was considering paying for the cheapest
> slow seamail. Other people have less crazy ideas. I doubt that
> my idea
> is appealing to Richard either.
>
> > First priority goes to anybody willing to come up here and pick
> up all
> > or part of the collection. I will consider shipping if that is
> what it
> > comes down to but the packing and transprotation will be
> expensive for
> > the DS15 and extremely expensive for the other units.
>
> From reading the rest of this thread, it looks as though you've
> already
> found your collector/s and arranged a date.
>
> I'm very happy that these are going to a good home. It's fabulous
> that
> the flame is carrying on.
>
> For future reference, if anybody sees AlphaServers or similarly
> interesting hardware closer to home (UK or EU), then please do let me
> know! Thank you!!
>
> Kind regards,
>
> Andrew
>
>
>
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