Difference between revisions of "Hesperos"

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| name = hesperos
| name = hesperos
| image = HesperosArtemisFront.jpg
| image = HesperosArtemisFront.jpg
| caption = Hesperos v2 (Right)
| caption = Hesperos G2 (Right)
| role = Various
| role = Various
| os = Various
| os = Various
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Ah, the storied Hesperos! The hesperos name has spanned every era following its original use on the network. What follows is an accounting thereof.
Ah, the storied Hesperos! The hesperos name has spanned every era following its original use on the network. What follows is an accounting thereof.
= DFI 486 (0th Generation) =
{{Infobox System
| name = Hesperos G0 (DaVinci?)
| image = QuestionMark.jpg
| caption = No Photo Available
| vendor = DFI
| cpu = AMD 486DX4
| freq = 100MHz
| os = Windows 95/Solaris
| osrel = RTM/7 (x86)
| acquired = 1999
| acquired_from = University Presbyterian Church
| relinquished = 2000
| relto = Hesperos G1
| location = Durango Ct/Martinez Household
}}
= Hesperos (1st Generation) =
{{Infobox System
| name = Hesperos G1
| image = HesperosArtemisFront.jpg
| caption = Hesperos G1/G2 (Right)
| vendor = DFI
| cpu = AMD 486DX4
| freq = 100MHz
| ram = 8MB
| location = Martinez Household
| acquired = 2000
| acquired_from = JDR Microdevices
| relinquished = 2000
| relto = Hesperos G2
| os = Solaris
| osrel = 7 x86
| role = Oracle 7 Database Server
}}
The first-gen Hesperos was built from the bones of the [[DFI 486]]. I had recently installed Solaris 7 for x86 on the DFI, and it proved unusably slow. My first step was to order a full-tower AT case from JDR Microdevices, and move the bones of the DFI into it. This provided no performance gains, for obvious reasons.
The G1 machine was a short-lived part of the Hesperos story.


== Historical Summary ==
== Historical Summary ==

Revision as of 14:56, 12 April 2019

This page is a stub. You can help by expanding it.

hesperos
caption
Hesperos G2 (Right)
Hardware
CPU:Various@Various
Software
OS:Various
Collection Data
Acquired:2000
Catalog Data
Location:Various
Usage Info
Role:Various


Summary

Ah, the storied Hesperos! The hesperos name has spanned every era following its original use on the network. What follows is an accounting thereof.

DFI 486 (0th Generation)

Hesperos G0 (DaVinci?)
caption
No Photo Available
Hardware
Vendor:DFI
CPU:AMD 486DX4@100MHz
Software
OS:Windows 95/Solaris
Collection Data
Acquired:1999
From:University Presbyterian Church
Relinquished:2000
Relinquished to:Hesperos G1
Catalog Data
Location:Durango Ct/Martinez Household
Usage Info


Hesperos (1st Generation)

Hesperos G1
caption
Hesperos G1/G2 (Right)
Hardware
Vendor:DFI
CPU:AMD 486DX4@100MHz
RAM:8MB
Software
OS:Solaris
Collection Data
Acquired:2000
From:JDR Microdevices
Relinquished:2000
Relinquished to:Hesperos G2
Catalog Data
Location:Martinez Household
Usage Info
Role:Oracle 7 Database Server


The first-gen Hesperos was built from the bones of the DFI 486. I had recently installed Solaris 7 for x86 on the DFI, and it proved unusably slow. My first step was to order a full-tower AT case from JDR Microdevices, and move the bones of the DFI into it. This provided no performance gains, for obvious reasons.

The G1 machine was a short-lived part of the Hesperos story.

Historical Summary

This section is included from my old home page, The VAX Pirate's Lair, and as such is not to be considered accurate or up-to-date.

This machine is enormous. Not currently functional, as it is missing a hard drive, floppy drive, CD-ROM and memory. This is one of those massive full-tower monstrosities with 6 external 5.25" drive bays that only supports AT/Baby AT motherboards. It originally ran Solaris 7 for Intel. I plan to rebuild it as a Windows domain controller once I get the needed components.

Historical Specifications

  • Intel Pentium 233 MMX
  • 5.25" 1.2MB floppy drive
  • Internal QIC-80 tape backup unit