Just out of idle curiosity, I have a question for you guys that work in the IT field. Lets say there is this company that consists of roughly 20 employees. Each has their own windows XP machine. There are a few network printers, and a linux (FC1, say) server. The server runs samba for file sharing among the XP boxes (just one big mount where everyone shares the data, everybody has read-write access), apache and zope for the website, and mysql as a database. How much would be reasonable cost for such a setup? What about maintenance costs?
11/25/2005 8:04:27 PM
if you don't know you aren't equipped to take this on
11/25/2005 8:19:36 PM
11/25/2005 8:27:19 PM
"Reasonable cost" with respect to time, money, security, etc.? "Maintenance" ... what does that cover? The simple answer is "it depends" ... and the "it depends" list can fill up 5+ pages in a thread.
11/25/2005 9:34:18 PM
there is no such thing as reasonable in ITits either freeware or fucking outrageous
11/25/2005 9:35:55 PM
Give your client(s) to me.ORDont use linux, even for 20 employees, the administrative costs for setting up, and maintaining (and if you dont maintain/recommend maintaining, you suck) will be more than they will want to pay you and it will become a pay in the ass for you.Just give your client(s) to me, thanks.
11/26/2005 12:14:56 AM
$50,000[Edited on November 26, 2005 at 12:59 AM. Reason : sdf]
11/26/2005 12:58:13 AM
if you don't know you aren't equipped to take this onandDont use linux, even for 20 employees, the administrative costs for setting up, and maintaining (and if you dont maintain/recommend maintaining, you suck) will be more than they will want to pay you and it will become a pay in the ass for you.and running a website internally with a 20 user domain is fucking retarded, unless you are planning on running a full t3, don't even THINK about that with ANY commercial broadband option.and a database on top of that, internally? So you want to put ALL their internal data, their website AND a mysql database in a single physical machine? running a base linux install? behind a consumer grade router? (and if you say oh, run the linux box as the router as well, I will fucking shoot you)andyou haven't considered how you are going to manage 20 users without any kind of domain control?Seriously, start WAY WAY smaller, and at least bring someone in to do this WITH you, because it will turn into a clusterfuck quickly.[Edited on November 26, 2005 at 1:43 AM. Reason : .]
11/26/2005 1:39:06 AM
*nominates self*resume available upon request
11/26/2005 1:54:27 AM
11/26/2005 2:46:04 AM
11/26/2005 10:28:26 AM
smooth, does NCSU have a central domain of some sort that these machines could be put on? What about requesting deparmental/personal space? Exchange accounts?channel, if you haven't already, I would contact NCSU and ask what computing resources are available for faculty members. It would make things a lot easier than trying to do everything "in-house". You would also be guaranteed backup services. I would think for a university this large, they *should* have a lot of their computing services/support centralized.[Edited on November 26, 2005 at 2:03 PM. Reason : .]
11/26/2005 1:59:50 PM
ncsu is like a giant raggedy assed quilt. there's no forest on campus per se. there are a good number of domains on campus (most are setup poorly) that you could setup a trust with. if you want something that would be easy to setup and maintain, I would suggest adding a real 2k3 domain controller. then you could push out printers via active directory, easily setup rights and synchronized credentials for accessing the samba server, have roaming profiles, etc. I'm not a big IIS fan so I would just leave webserver with apache and zope up and have it shadow the credentials of the domain controller. Or you could just have a mounted remote directory on the web server with the documents one needs to be able to access available all the time and just let the webserver handle the hosting stuff. there are tons of permutations and variations of how this could be setup, it all depends on the clients' needs and budget constraints and necessity for ease of management. cliffs notes: there are a few ways of setting up what you want, no real "best" way, initial cost could be $0(keeping what you have in place) to ~$6000(buying a capable domain controller and consolidating a lot of stuff). the cheapest management you'll find will be ~$20/hr and you'll probably want to schedule atleast 3 hours a week(end) for someone to maintain and manage things remotely (group policy, garbage collecting, patching, etc)
11/26/2005 4:12:30 PM
The trouble is there is essentially zero institutional support for research computing. NCSU offers nothing, most colleges offer nothing, and even most departments offer nothing. They are pretty much left to their own devices, which is scary.
11/26/2005 9:31:52 PM
you guys are fucking cocksuckers manwhen you know the answer to a question, you berate peoplewhen someone asks something that google cant answer, you ignore itthats why i usually ignore this shitty fucking section
11/26/2005 10:34:00 PM
huh. i just thought it was cause you didn't know shit about computers
11/27/2005 12:08:34 AM
^^its such a broad question with a ton of different variablesi have had to do this the hard way...call local consultants and "pretend" i am looking for their services to get a quote and from this you can kinda get a feel for the rate you should be charging.
11/27/2005 1:02:36 AM
11/27/2005 11:18:02 AM
11/27/2005 1:56:51 PM