It depends. The hotel may be using a Centrex style phone system which would probably effectively block your modem.Naked broad band, which is what I have, requires no active phone line or phone account.
Which is why I think this may work.
It depends. The hotel may be using a Centrex style phone system which would probably effectively block your modem.Naked broad band, which is what I have, requires no active phone line or phone account.
Which is why I think this may work.
I like old tech, if I had the space, a location near a main node of the powergrid and a few million Euro I'd be typing this reply on an IBM System/360 mainframe...![]()
I almost obtained a DEC Alpha machine but by the time I decided to buy it the darn thing was gone already, at one if my jobs they had a whole bunch of VAX's and Sun Sparc client machines, I think most of VAX's ran Unix but I at least one of them did run VMS.
I wonder how large or actually how small they could make a System/360 based machine nowadays with the chip technology instead of the solid state tech back then, I am almost inclined that the actual CPU and some storage could be PC sized or even smaller..
How about a £1million dollar supercomputer?
At the time the video was made it was worth more as scrap than parts (not to mention using £115 (at 2011 prices) of electricity a day!!!!!
And then there's stuff originally worth 10s of $1000s into the millions that winds up in some guy's garage
Thought VMS was the sole OS for Vax systems but no there's the Ultrix aka DEC Unix. When I was at uni in the early 90s they had a number of vax systems including and 8600 series and an 11/780, Just have a squizz a the Wiki entry didn't realise that at the time I using a computer system date back to 1977 for the 11/780. They were all running VMS but can't remember anything about it other than cob/lis which was the command when we were compiling COBOL code.
They also has a Sun Sparc20 server and at one point purchased a new CPU module - the figure of $AU20,000 was mentioned but that was circa 1992.
I remember reading about the Alphas when they first came out and being struck by the huge freaking heat sink
One of the videos I link above was the dismantlnig/scrapping of an mid-2000s IBM mainframe and going by what was shown, the answer to your preponderance is yes. The CPUs sit in modules that IBM for some reason calls "Books" - almost akin to blades but there didn't seem to be any local storage. Come to think of it in the video I don't think any storage was mention - possibly it was a separate rack - or the use NAS or SAN as opposed to DAS.
Their chips can run FOUR threads per core btw while Intel and AMD are up to two per core SMT/Hyperthreading, seriously fast stuff..
How about a £1million dollar supercomputer?
At the time the video was made it was worth more as scrap than parts (not to mention using £115 (at 2011 prices) of electricity a day!!!!!
And then there's stuff originally worth 10s of $1000s into the millions that winds up in some guy's garage
My IBM XT is not beige, its front is black with a white border, the exterior is grey and black, the insides of the machine is black.Blame the clone makers, they invented the "beige box" of course nowadays its black box..
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