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Home > Archive > Web Servers on Unix and Linux > July 2005 > Servers for use
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| Hello...
I currently operate a small (and sinking) web design business. Also, I
own and operate my own datacenter, including HTTP, POP, SMTP, DNS, and
SFTP servers via 6 servers comprised of white box and Dell Power edge
servers.
Here is the deal. The business is struggling and I find it hard to pull
in enough money to pay for business class ISP service and these servers.
I truly enjoy running them, as it is what I was trained to do. And I
get business every so often, and as anybody knows, physically owning
your own servers makes life much easier when it comes to deciding what
YOU want on them.
I desperately need a way to earn enough revenue to keep these things
profitable. I am reaching out to these groups with the hopes that
someone has an idea.
I would be interested in "renting" out space, running sites, providing
DNS, mirrors or whatever the case may be. I could customize based on
the needs of the individual.
Thanks in advance.
Joe
UpFront Technology
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| S.S.I.N. 2005-06-30, 8:49 pm |
|
"Joe"
> Hello...
>
> I currently operate a small (and sinking) web design business. Also, I
> own and operate my own datacenter, including HTTP, POP, SMTP, DNS, and
> SFTP servers via 6 servers comprised of white box and Dell Power edge
> servers.
>
> Here is the deal. The business is struggling and I find it hard to pull
> in enough money to pay for business class ISP service and these servers.
> I truly enjoy running them, as it is what I was trained to do. And I
> get business every so often, and as anybody knows, physically owning
> your own servers makes life much easier when it comes to deciding what
> YOU want on them.
>
> I desperately need a way to earn enough revenue to keep these things
> profitable. I am reaching out to these groups with the hopes that
> someone has an idea.
>
> I would be interested in "renting" out space, running sites, providing
> DNS, mirrors or whatever the case may be. I could customize based on
> the needs of the individual.
>
>
> Thanks in advance.
> Joe
> UpFront Technology
You have better starting resources than I do, so I'll lend you the idea I
wanted to start.
Hook up satellite TV. to the servers.
Set up a website with each different page being a different satellite
channel with full streaming audio and video.
( ya a hell of a lot of bandwidth 500+ channels, solve this in a few
minutes.)
Start with one or 2 channels if necessary.
Then charge a monthly fee for access. People with a TV out on their video
cards can watch what they want over the net to their TV. help put your cable
TV provider out of business. the future is one single fiber optical cable to
each home, carrying all data/phone/internet/TV.....everything.
right now companies (Microsoft) are trying to put the net on your TV when it
should be TV through internet.
To get the bandwidth talk directly to a fiber communications company. they
have billions of dollars in optical cable running at under 5% capacity. they
can transmit the whole us,national library around the world in about one
second.
so figure the bandwidth for 300 channels 24/7 to 50,000 people over year.
Use this figure when you contact them. They will most likely put you right
through to someone.
50,000 people is very small, figure in 7-10 years half of everyone with high
speed cable.People would soon demand faster optical net links, $$$ for
everyone.
think of the impact it will make on the world
ya just gotta start the ball rolling.
( cut me in for a slice of the pie.!)
this is just for starters there's way more.
next we'll put the power companies out of business.
Cory from
www.crazyedmonton.com
(copy with all headers saved)
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|
| In article <%E%we.1842598$6l.1811070@pd7tw2no>, S@ASK.COM says...
>
> "Joe"
>
>
> You have better starting resources than I do, so I'll lend you the idea I
> wanted to start.
>
> Hook up satellite TV. to the servers.
> Set up a website with each different page being a different satellite
> channel with full streaming audio and video.
> ( ya a hell of a lot of bandwidth 500+ channels, solve this in a few
> minutes.)
> Start with one or 2 channels if necessary.
> Then charge a monthly fee for access. People with a TV out on their video
> cards can watch what they want over the net to their TV. help put your cable
> TV provider out of business. the future is one single fiber optical cable to
> each home, carrying all data/phone/internet/TV.....everything.
> right now companies (Microsoft) are trying to put the net on your TV when it
> should be TV through internet.
>
> To get the bandwidth talk directly to a fiber communications company. they
> have billions of dollars in optical cable running at under 5% capacity. they
> can transmit the whole us,national library around the world in about one
> second.
Nice idea.
I like your website...guns, alcohol and girls, real nice lap dance.
| |
| Nomen Nescio 2005-07-01, 2:47 am |
| On Thu, 30 Jun 2005, S.S.I.N. wrote:
>To get the bandwidth talk directly to a fiber communications company. they
>have billions of dollars in optical cable running at under 5% capacity.
>they can transmit the whole us,national library around the world in about
>one second.
>
Just a bit of an exaggeration.
Current Internet2 Land Speed Records
IPv6 Category
Single Stream Class: 72,225 terabit-meters per second by a team consisting
of members from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and CERN,
accomplished by transferring 357 gigabytes of data across 14,134 kilometers
of network in 10 minutes at an average rate of 5.11 gigabits per second.
Multiple Stream Class: 72,225 terabit-meters per second by a team
consisting of members from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech)
and CERN, accomplished by transfering 357 gigabytes of data across 14,134
kilometers of network in 10 minutes at an average rate of 5.11 gigabits per
second.
IPv4 Category
Single Stream Class: 216,300 terabit-meters per second by a team consisting
of members from the university of Tokyo, the WIDE project, and Chelsio
Communication and other organizations by sending 1485 gigabytes of data
across 30,000 kilometers of network over 30 minutes at an average rate of
7.21 gigabits per second.
Multiple Stream Class: 216,300 terabit-meters per second by a team
consisting of members from the university of Tokyo, the WIDE project, and
Chelsio Communication and other organizations by sending 1485 gigabytes of
data across 30,000 kilometers of network over 30 minutes at an average rate
of 7.21 gigabits per second.
| |
| S.S.I.N. 2005-07-01, 7:48 am |
| "Nomen Nescio"
> Just a bit of an exaggeration.
>
> Current Internet2 Land Speed Records
>
> IPv6 Category
>
> Single Stream Class: 72,225 terabit-meters per second by a team consisting
> of members from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and CERN,
> accomplished by transferring 357 gigabytes of data across 14,134
> kilometers
> of network in 10 minutes at an average rate of 5.11 gigabits per second.
>
> Multiple Stream Class: 72,225 terabit-meters per second by a team
> consisting of members from the California Institute of Technology
> (Caltech)
> and CERN, accomplished by transfering 357 gigabytes of data across 14,134
> kilometers of network in 10 minutes at an average rate of 5.11 gigabits
> per
> second.
>
>
> IPv4 Category
>
> Single Stream Class: 216,300 terabit-meters per second by a team
> consisting
> of members from the university of Tokyo, the WIDE project, and Chelsio
> Communication and other organizations by sending 1485 gigabytes of data
> across 30,000 kilometers of network over 30 minutes at an average rate of
> 7.21 gigabits per second.
>
> Multiple Stream Class: 216,300 terabit-meters per second by a team
> consisting of members from the university of Tokyo, the WIDE project, and
> Chelsio Communication and other organizations by sending 1485 gigabytes of
> data across 30,000 kilometers of network over 30 minutes at an average
> rate
> of 7.21 gigabits per second.
>
are you sure about that being up to date?
Discovery channel was showing some university students using many colors at
once across the fiber optic line, and then to boost it even higher the
colors were in a turning spiral pattern giving 3 times the normal capacity
for each color. They said it increased capacity in the order of 10,000
percent but don't quote me on that the show was a few months ago.
I will search the discovery website, maybe I will find a link.
--
www.crazyedmonton.com
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| S.S.I.N. 2005-07-01, 7:48 am |
|
"Joe"
> Nice idea.
>
Thanks, thought you might like it
> I like your website...guns, alcohol and girls, real nice lap dance.
the wife is quite kinky
and that's in public......you should see in private !
--
www.crazyedmonton.com
| |
| Tom Giarmo 2005-07-02, 5:48 pm |
| On Thu, 30 Jun 2005 23:56:43 GMT, S.S.I.N. wrote:
> next we'll put the power companies out of business.
You're a complete fukken moron but you fukken knew that anyway.
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| voipcanada 2005-07-04, 5:53 pm |
| wow sounds good, i am colocated in toronto with 100mb circuit. let me
know how to get this rolling, i always have more than 95mb spare
pipelines
is there some software for this and what hardware do we need for this -
)server etc), can we also do movie rental on line ,,, pls advice and
thanks
voipcanada at gmail dot com
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