Hesperos
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hesperos | |
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Hesperos G6 | |
Hardware | |
CPU: | Various@Various |
Software | |
OS: | Various |
Collection Data | |
Acquired: | 2000 |
Catalog Data | |
Location: | Various |
Usage Info | |
Role: | Various |
Summary
Hesperos has been a steady staple in my computing lexicon since the G1 machine was built up in 2000. Having served multiple roles, from Oracle database server to Windows NT 4 domain controller to multitrack recording workstation to work machine, I have a deep fondness and sentimentality for the Hesperos name, much as Joel Martinez has a fondness for athena.
The article is divided into generations representing each substantial change to or replacement of the machine.
DFI 486 (G0)
Summary
This machine was purchased from University Presbyterian Church, where it had been used by Shelia Hornsby as a bookkeeping machine. I had payments for it deducted from my paycheck when I was working there as an administrative assistant.
Naming
I have a theory that this generation was originally named davinci, but I'm not anywhere near sure about that. When I moved into the Martinez household, it definitely had an artist name (just as Poseidon (Original) was originally named picasso). At the time, I also had a machine named mozart, so consistency in naming was nowhere near in place when I bought this machine.
Hesperos (G1)
Summary
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.
Unique to this machine was a QIC-80 tape drive that was intended to connect to the floppy drive controller. As I had both 3.5" and 5.25" floppy drives in the machine, I never actually connected the tape drive, which ended up being there more for appearances than anything else.
The G1 machine was a short-lived part of the Hesperos story, and gave way to Hesperos (G2) as soon as funding was available for procuring upgraded components.
Hesperos (G2)
Summary
In this incarnation, the machine was vested with an ATi Rage IIc video card, an 8GB HDD, and 32MB of RAM, and shortly upgraded from Solaris 7 to Solaris 8. I was never able to get the network card to work, as Solaris 8 wanted nothing to do with ISA NICs. This gave way to Hesperos G3.
Hesperos (G3)
This incarnation of the machine ran Windows NT Server 4 (from BackOffice 4.5), as Joel Martinez acquired the installation media (along with copies of Microsoft Macro Assembler 6.11 and FrontPage Server Extensions) from the IT manager at Sendero Capital Management, his then-current workplace.
At the end of the G2 era, I moved out of the Martinez household. This machine went back to my mother's home and was wiped/reinstalled, giving away to Hesperos (G4).
Hesperos (G4)
Summary
This generation of the machine was used to develop the C18POLL MODBUS polling app under Caldera OpenLinux 2.3, for Elephant Butte Irrigation District on a contract with Megahertz Computer Consulting. The roots of my "programming" playlist (including Joe Satriani, Steve Vai, the OST of Ah! My Goddess, and many others) were formed under XMMS on this machine.
Once that contract was over, OpenLinux was disposed of. Joel Martinez, Jonathon Moon and I were also gearing up to begin our adventures in digital multitrack audio recording. This, in turn, gave birth to Hesperos (G5).
Hesperos (G5)
Summary
In this generation, Windows 98 RTM was installed on the machine, along with Cakewalk Pro Audio 9 (eventually upgraded to Sonar). We recorded such classics as Repent, Goddess Amongst Us, The Screamer, and Psychedelic Chocolate Beauty Sculpture on here.
It is somewhat related to Dimetrius (Original), in that that laptop was the first machine on which we tried multitrack recording (with n-Track Studio). That machine proved unable to produce synchronized multitrack audio, which inspired the build-up of Hesperos in its new role.
The Creative Labs Sound Blaster 16 ISA sound board was incapable of functioning in full-duplex at its full quality, so the sound quality of headphone monitoring was terrible while simultaneously recording audio. It was also prone to 60-cycle hum and other EMI/RFI noise, which would harm the quality of its recordings. This prompted us to install a Yamaha XG sound card that Joel procured, which was able to handle full-duplex 16-bit/44kHz operation.
When we moved the studio out of my mother's house, this machine ended up being gutted for parts and its hulking, empty case left in her garage until it was run over. It was thus disposed of. The sad tale of its last days (written during the trailer era) follows in the section below.
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
Hiatus
At this point, a hiatus in the Hesperos naming tradition began. The multitrack recording setup during the rest of the trailer era, and indeed, all the way into the early days of the Alamo St. era, was a horrific machine called music. That machine caused nothing but the worst problems until being retired around 2008 in favor of a Power Macintosh G5 2.0DP.
Hesperos (G6)
Summary
Hesperos G6 is my current work desktop, and the most powerful computer that I own. It is indeed a worthy heir to the Hesperos legacy.
Specifications
- Dual Intel Xeon E5645 CPUs at 2.4GHz (6 core, 12 thread)
- 24GB ECC RAM
- NVidia GTX1080 Founders Edition GPU
- Corsair AX1200i Power Supply (1200W)
- 2x 120GB SSD in RAID0
- 4x 1TB 10KRPM HDD
- EVGA Classified SR-2 motherboard
- Dual-booting Debian 8 and Windows 7
- Four monitors
- Pages using duplicate arguments in template calls
- Stubs
- 2000 Acquisitions
- Computers with Various CPUs
- Computers running Various
- Various
- Computers in role Various
- Computers
- Vendor DFI
- 1998 Acquisitions
- Acquired from University Presbyterian Church
- Computers with AMD 486DX4 CPUs
- 2000 Relinquishments
- Relinquished
- Relinquished to Hesperos G1
- Computers running Windows 95/Solaris
- Durango Ct/Martinez Household
- Computers in role Alternative Personal Workstation
- Acquired from JDR Microdevices
- Relinquished to Hesperos G2
- Computers running Solaris
- Martinez Household
- Computers in role Oracle 7 Database Server
- Vendor JDR Microdevices
- Computers with Pentium MMX CPUs
- Relinquished to Hesperos G3
- 2001 Relinquishments
- Relinquished to Hesperos G4
- Computers running Windows NT Server
- Computers in role Windows PDC/SQL Server
- 2001 Acquisitions
- Computers running Caldera OpenLinux
- Durango Ct
- Computers in role Linux Development
- 2003 Relinquishments
- Relinquished to Landfill
- Computers running Windows 98
- Computers in role Digital Multitrack Recording
- Vendor Various
- 2013 Acquisitions
- Acquired from Various
- Computers with Xeon E5645 CPUs
- Computers running Debian Linux
- Office
- Computers in role Business Workstation