Software and hardware annotations 2008 November
This document contains only my personal opinions and calls of
judgement, and where any comment is made as to the quality of
anybody's work, the comment is an opinion, in my judgement.
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- 081127 Thu
New line of 10Gb/s PCIe cards with SFP+
- I have been setting up a fairly significant network
infrastructure with 10Gb/s fibre links between routers,
and also at long last some storage servers with
10Gb/s cards,
and soon workstations with the same. This has been driven both
by requirements for data read or write higher than 100MB/s, and
their feasibility thanks largely to
PCIe
with its transfer rates much higher than the 133MiB/s of basic
PCI (and the higher transfer rates of SATA and of course of
disks themselves). Slots with 4 or 8 PCIe lanes are available on
many motherboards, even consumer level ones thanks to the use of
PCIe by graphics cards. All this makes possible to create
storage systems capable of delivering at a cost affordable even
to individuals storage with transfer rates in the several
hundred MiB/s range. But not over the network, as the cost of
10Gb/s cards has been too high.
Myricom
have been selling cluster oriented components for quite a while,
and like the SAN
people they have converged on Ethernet based links, and after
selling for while some of the nicer 10Gb/s cards with
XFP
transceiver sockets, they are now moving massively to the new
SFP+
socket with some
quite interesting new cards and transceivers.
The card design is clearly derived from that for
FCoE
SAN cards, with dual sockets (paths to a SAN array are typically
redundant) for $700, and 850nm transceivers for $300 and 1510nm
ones for $600, and drawing 6-10W fully loaded. At these prices
it is much easier to justify 10Gb/s for servers, and even for
data analysis workstations.
- 081124 Mon Quick
loss of battery capacity
- I have been quite
happy with the
Toshiba (manufactured by Compal)
Satellite U300
laptop, but I have recently noticed that the life of the battery
(model
ST-PA3594U-1BRS
) has gone down tremendouly:
when new I could
get around 3.5 hours
of use out of it, currently only about 2 hours:
PowerTOP version 1.9 (C) 2007 Intel Corporation
Cn Avg residency P-states (frequencies)
C0 (cpu running) ( 1.4%) 1500 Mhz 0.0%
C1 0.0ms ( 0.0%) 1000 Mhz 100.0%
C2 0.0ms ( 0.0%)
C3 13.7ms (98.6%)
Wakeups-from-idle per second : 72.0 interval: 5.0s
Power usage (ACPI estimate): 13.0W (02:06 remaining)
Top causes for wakeups:
36.8% ( 26.4) kicker : __mod_timer (process_timeout)
24.5% ( 17.6) X : __mod_timer (process_timeout)
10.9% ( 7.8) xemacs : __mod_timer (process_timeout)
7.0% ( 5.0) <kernel module> : queue_delayed_work (delayed_work_timer_fn)
That's impressively quick decay, considering that I bought it 9
months ago, and it was pretty good until at least July. Perhaps
the colder weather reduces its capacity, but the lower useful
capacity is the same after I have kept the laptop indoors.
Curiously the battery in my Nokia
has also become much shorter recently. I think that there are
very few commodities
and the fairly rapid deterioration of the capacity of batteries
is yet another differentiator that is important but not that
obvious.
As to practical consequences, I bought the 6 cell battery
because its 3h30m useful charge was rather more useful to me
than the 2 hours charge of the 4 cell battery bundled with the
laptop, as I often do travel between 1 and 2 hours, and 2 hours
of battery capacity is a bit too short to give a margin of
safety. It looks like that the useful life of the battery is
going to be a bit short of 1 year, and that to me means it must
be considered as a consumable, a bit like the toner or the
OPC drum of
laser printers. Costing around £100 with taxes, the
battery ends up costing £8-10 per month, which is about
the same as my phone bill.