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I am curious though, how many man hours does it take to maintain the
equivalent horizontal scale with Windows? And then with Linux. My
guess would be that the man hours would be much more, and that is
where the $1.43 million becomes more justified. You could easily
require two $50k/yr admins to work on 100 Windows servers to keep them
all jiving. Note my numbers are all in theory, I don't know what the
going rate is for a good admin, nor do I know how many servers it
would take to equal the IBM i config mentioned.

Aaron Bartell
http://mowyourlawn.com
http://mowyourlawn.com/blog/



On Mon, Oct 11, 2010 at 1:31 PM, Thorbjoern Ravn Andersen
<ravn@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
 Den 11/10/10 19.37, Charles Wilt skrev:

And according to this, 64 is the most you can get:
http://www.itjungle.com/tfh/tfh082310-story03.html
a special PRPQ will only let it span 64 cores and 256 threads.
"So a full 64-core system using the slow processors would cost you $1.43
million just for the base hardware chassis and the processors."

You can get a lot of commodity hardware for that amount of money for
horizontal scaling....

--
  Thorbjørn Ravn Andersen  "...plus... Tubular Bells!"

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