Not directed at me but I will share my findings since I've been looking recently. Hope it may help.
You can get full dedicated, 100mbps atom boxes for < $10 at kimsufi.
As for vps, I've not found a deal yet that beats wable.com. $8 a month, tons of ip addresses, multiple deployments(ie can split resources into 3 vps instead of 1), and they are having some strange promotion where they give you extra. I have right now, 5 vcores, 6gb ram, and 80gb ssd for $8/mo. It is openvz, though, if that matters to you.
With the recent leak of an SDK for the Allwinner A80 ARM processor, it is now possible to build Linux for the Optimusboard. However, the SDK does not appear to be a final build, and has quite a few bugs that have to be squashed before the build will successfully complete.
Very nice. Some comments/questions, in no particular order -
1 - Price. 9.99 isn't breaking the bank, sure, but kimsufi has a better price for a much better processor and package.
2 - Any plans on 64 bit as it becomes available?
3 - More options for OS/custom OS installation.
4 - Bandwidth charges, port speed, etc not immediately easy to find.
5 - Would love to see these on backed storage.
We definitely plan on moving up to 64-bit once lower cost alternatives are released in to the channel. Right now AMD Opteron A57's run $2,999, so, they are not very cost effective.
OS choices are more limited in the ARM ecosystem, so we went for the two most popular choices (available) first: Ubuntu and Fedora.
And, Bandwidth for now is unmetered, and set to 100mbit port speed. Hope that helps!
Thanks for replying. The Opterons are the dev model, right? I can't see them selling retail for 3k. That said, it could be interesting for those who want to get a head start to use something like a shared A57, for the right price.
Anyhow, what about storage? These things aren't running on cards are they?
Correct, the Opteron's are the Developer kit, and are A57's.
Storage on these nodes is handled via loading the OS on to the onboard flash, and then an add-on SD card for additional data storage if requested. The concept for miniNodes is based on development and testing of software on ARM platforms, so, the storage is minimum, sure, but we don't envision these nodes as data warehouses.
12 comments
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 37.7 ms ] threadYou can get full dedicated, 100mbps atom boxes for < $10 at kimsufi.
As for vps, I've not found a deal yet that beats wable.com. $8 a month, tons of ip addresses, multiple deployments(ie can split resources into 3 vps instead of 1), and they are having some strange promotion where they give you extra. I have right now, 5 vcores, 6gb ram, and 80gb ssd for $8/mo. It is openvz, though, if that matters to you.
With the recent leak of an SDK for the Allwinner A80 ARM processor, it is now possible to build Linux for the Optimusboard. However, the SDK does not appear to be a final build, and has quite a few bugs that have to be squashed before the build will successfully complete.
From: http://www.mininodes.com/how-to-build-linux-for-the-allwinne...
Hosting on Linux using a leaked sdk , not my sort of thing.
We definitely plan on moving up to 64-bit once lower cost alternatives are released in to the channel. Right now AMD Opteron A57's run $2,999, so, they are not very cost effective.
OS choices are more limited in the ARM ecosystem, so we went for the two most popular choices (available) first: Ubuntu and Fedora.
And, Bandwidth for now is unmetered, and set to 100mbit port speed. Hope that helps!
Storage on these nodes is handled via loading the OS on to the onboard flash, and then an add-on SD card for additional data storage if requested. The concept for miniNodes is based on development and testing of software on ARM platforms, so, the storage is minimum, sure, but we don't envision these nodes as data warehouses.