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#1
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We have five developers that we need to upgrade to newer faster boxes.
We have chosen Dell because they seem to offer and good price/performance/support equation. I have historically purchased 1 yr old processing power as it is usually good enough. I just had a recent call with a Dell salesperson and he suggested Precision 380 with 2xSATA drives in Raid 0 for performance. This is about $600 more per box as he has it configured with 1gb ram and Dual video card. My question is that is this really that much of a difference from a dimension P4 3.2ghz with a single drive and 1 gb ram. Does the Precision really offer $600/per box of benefit while using VS2005 and SQL2000 on the box? Thanks Ryan |
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#2
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In article <1133220232.791526.47670@g43g2000cwa.googlegroups. com>,
slickrock22@yahoo.com says... > We have five developers that we need to upgrade to newer faster boxes. > We have chosen Dell because they seem to offer and good > price/performance/support equation. I have historically purchased 1 yr > old processing power as it is usually good enough. I just had a recent > call with a Dell salesperson and he suggested Precision 380 with 2xSATA > drives in Raid 0 for performance. This is about $600 more per box as > he has it configured with 1gb ram and Dual video card. > > My question is that is this really that much of a difference from a > dimension P4 3.2ghz with a single drive and 1 gb ram. Does the > Precision really offer $600/per box of benefit while using VS2005 and > SQL2000 on the box? RAID-0 is a bad move for developers and your support people - it means twice the chance for a total data failure. Our development teams use 3.2Ghz P4 systems with 2MB cache, they used motherboards that support onboard RAID-1, use a Dual 250GB Drive setup with a MIRROR, 32GB for C and the rest for D - all apps/projects/data is stored on D. The 1GB RAM is minimum if you are going to run VS2005 and MSDE at the same time and still use MS Office 2003. If you have a few machines that will run SQL and the others won't, then get those users a Dual Xeon workstation, not really that much more in cost. Just avoid RAID-0, you don't need it or its headaches. One other thing - make sure that you GHOST an image of their machines BEFORE you install VS2005 and MSDE on them so that in the event of a failure you can restore the machines to like-new state in 10 minutes. Oh, and Dell is going to cost you a premium for their name. Find a online shop, a no-name place, to setup a Dual Xeon PC-DL Deluxe or a Intel Dual Xeon board and go with that. You can get the SAME parts if you know what to spec and save about 50%, but you don't get the GREAT dell warranty. -- spam999free@rrohio.com remove 999 in order to email me |
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#3
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Thanks for the response. Do you have a suggestions for an online
store? Do you have a hardware combination suggestion? At a 50% cost saving I can buy 2 for each developer (A live and a backup . Icommonly shop at newegg, buy.com and CDW. Thanks Ryan Leythos wrote: > In article <1133220232.791526.47670@g43g2000cwa.googlegroups. com>, > slickrock22@yahoo.com says... > > We have five developers that we need to upgrade to newer faster boxes. > > We have chosen Dell because they seem to offer and good > > price/performance/support equation. I have historically purchased 1 yr > > old processing power as it is usually good enough. I just had a recent > > call with a Dell salesperson and he suggested Precision 380 with 2xSATA > > drives in Raid 0 for performance. This is about $600 more per box as > > he has it configured with 1gb ram and Dual video card. > > > > My question is that is this really that much of a difference from a > > dimension P4 3.2ghz with a single drive and 1 gb ram. Does the > > Precision really offer $600/per box of benefit while using VS2005 and > > SQL2000 on the box? > > RAID-0 is a bad move for developers and your support people - it means > twice the chance for a total data failure. > > Our development teams use 3.2Ghz P4 systems with 2MB cache, they used > motherboards that support onboard RAID-1, use a Dual 250GB Drive setup > with a MIRROR, 32GB for C and the rest for D - all apps/projects/data is > stored on D. The 1GB RAM is minimum if you are going to run VS2005 and > MSDE at the same time and still use MS Office 2003. > > If you have a few machines that will run SQL and the others won't, then > get those users a Dual Xeon workstation, not really that much more in > cost. > > Just avoid RAID-0, you don't need it or its headaches. > > One other thing - make sure that you GHOST an image of their machines > BEFORE you install VS2005 and MSDE on them so that in the event of a > failure you can restore the machines to like-new state in 10 minutes. > > Oh, and Dell is going to cost you a premium for their name. Find a > online shop, a no-name place, to setup a Dual Xeon PC-DL Deluxe or a > Intel Dual Xeon board and go with that. You can get the SAME parts if > you know what to spec and save about 50%, but you don't get the GREAT > dell warranty. > > > -- > > spam999free@rrohio.com > remove 999 in order to email me |
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#4
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In article <1133224925.566363.326770@g43g2000cwa.googlegroups .com>,
slickrock22@yahoo.com says... > Thanks for the response. Do you have a suggestions for an online > store? Do you have a hardware combination suggestion? At a 50% cost > saving I can buy 2 for each developer (A live and a backup . I> commonly shop at newegg, buy.com and CDW. I've been buying from www.5oclock.com in Ohio, but that's because they are within driving distance for me - so if I have an issue I can take it to them and deal directly with them. In all, I've bought more than 40 Dual Xeon workstations and servers from them over the last 2 years, not a single one has gone bad. I also know hardware, use to design low-level circuits in the old days, so I spec each part to my needs and then order it from them. A server I spec'd from Dell, a 6600 series, 10 drives and 2GB of RAM was just about $24,000, I paid less than 30% of that for a machine equipped close to the Dell (still had 10 drives and 2GB RAM). We bought 4 of those and they are now more than a year old and running strong as online backup storage arrays. If you tell them that you need a couple very high end Developer Workstations with Dual CPU's and 2GB RAM, with XP Prof + SP2, and a RAID-1 Mirror with 200GB drives, and a nice easy to use case with a 550W PSU and an extra case fan, you'll get a nice system for a very reasonable cost. Since you're developing, you could use your MSDN or Action Pack licenses to save a little money and not get the OS. -- spam999free@rrohio.com remove 999 in order to email me |
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#5
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slickrock22@yahoo.com wrote:
> We have five developers that we need to upgrade to newer faster boxes. > We have chosen Dell because they seem to offer and good > price/performance/support equation. I have historically purchased 1 > yr old processing power as it is usually good enough. I just had a > recent call with a Dell salesperson and he suggested Precision 380 > with 2xSATA drives in Raid 0 for performance. This is about $600 > more per box as he has it configured with 1gb ram and Dual video card. > > My question is that is this really that much of a difference from a > dimension P4 3.2ghz with a single drive and 1 gb ram. Does the > Precision really offer $600/per box of benefit while using VS2005 and > SQL2000 on the box? > > Thanks > > Ryan Dell's standard business practice seems to be to advertise a low price then sell overpriced upgrades. Kerry |
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#6
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1) RAID 0 is just fine, don't be scared off by it. But I doubt it'll make
that big a diff for your application anyway - you ARE setting up a SourceSafe Server on a seperate box, w/ a RAID 1 setup, right? If not then LOOK INTO IT. You don't want your source repositiory to ever be unavailable. You still do need to do nightly backups, don't just rely on the RAID 1. Store backups off site, or better yet, backup across the net to an offsite server. {Fires do happen, and hurricans, tornados,...}. 2) Dual Video - as in SLI? Don't need that, that's for sure. Dual Monitors tho, that's almost a must, w/ your app on one screen and the debugger on the other. Dual 17" LCDs are very handy, and reasonably priced these days. So, you need a dual-head video card, w/ DX-9 support (for the future). These run $75 typically. If you're doing game development then you don't need my advice on video, you're an expert already, and that's a whole different ballpark. 3) A 3.0 GHz Intel or 3000+ AMD Athlon 64 should do ok; an AMD X2 would be better, and should give a good 2-3 years of life. An Intel D820 is about $95 less, but that will get used up in motherboard+memory+video extra cost, I'd stick w/ an X2 +3800 system for about the same cost (w/ DDR+AGP vs. DDR2+PCIx16). Go for a full 1GB of cl2.5 memory. [You can save a few dollars w/ a socket 754 AMD setup, but go Athlon not Sempron, and that dollar savings is dissappering fast as socket 939 prices continue to fall]. Newegg and it's like are good sources for parts if you want to build your own. Dell's reputation has taken a hit lately, and their systems are basically "comodity" products, neither bad nor very good [For all intents, Dell is basically just Intel's retail arm, all their systems are Intel boards w/ intel chips]. The biggest benifit of getting a Dell is the software bundle, which would cost you $150 at least - Dell gets it for about $10. But if you own XP licenses already why repay, just transfer them (if they're not OEM). If you're an MSDN subscriber then you've already paid for all that stuff, it's on those disks somewhere!. Have you looked at ABS Computers? They are a pretty good outfit IF you're a computer person and not a novice. Their tech support is good, again if you're a reasonablly knowledgable person - a novice would probably find them to be impatient and rude, which is what you'll get from Dell tech support no matter what. |
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#7
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slickrock22@yahoo.com wrote:
> My question is that is this really that much of a difference from a > dimension P4 3.2ghz with a single drive and 1 gb ram. Does the > Precision really offer $600/per box of benefit while using VS2005 and > SQL2000 on the box? following up, the "Precision" line is Dell's "workstation" line, which is why they're more bucks. I'm not surprised the salesman reccomended it, they like to recommend their Precision line to their engineering customers. Would a Dimension works just as well? Yup. By The Way, if you're shopping Dell, try BOTH the "Dell Home" and the "Dell Small Business" sites. They are seperate marketing arms of Dell, and offer different deals at different times. Check both before deciding which has the best offer for you (this week). |
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#8
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Thanks!!! That is some great advice. I will look into specing a few
units. Ryan |
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#9
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This isn't an ad or anything...but I work for Insight (Insight.com) and
we are an international permier IT solutions provider. We have extensive resources available to answer/validate your questions. The poster above did a great job. Where we can add additional value is providing our lab integration services (if you like) and to work with the OEM to get special pricing for your deployment. As you know, never pay list price. I am available at dbrooks at insight.com or brooksdavid at gmail.com. I have server specialists who can assist with any further questions. Thanks Dave |
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