View allAll Photos Tagged Server
The Avaya line of servers delivers the full power of our Aura™ software to large and mid-sized businesses. Designed for reliability in the most demanding customer environments, they feature powerful industry-standard processors running the Linux operating system. Their scalable architecture gives businesses flexibility to deliver the communications capabilities they need now—with room to grow in the future.
Visit Avaya.com for more information on Avaya Servers.
How to turn off server signature on Apache web server
If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to xmodulo.com
This is going to be introduced later today by the company I work for. Four dual core AMD Opterons. 128GB RAM. 3 SAS or SATA drives. DVD burner. 1U Chassis. Sick!
(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push();
WhatsApp, the messaging app that you probably heard got bought by Facebook for almost $20 billion, is offline at the moment. So, yeah, it’s not just you. It’s the WhatsApp servers.
WhatsApp was recently pulled from the...
How to set up server monitoring system with Monit
If you would like to use this photo, be sure to place a proper attribution linking to xmodulo.com
Not photoshoped, but gimped ... to conceal the bad quality of my mobile phone cam :)
Last week we rewired our servers, especially whose iLO-ports. (Integrated Lights Out management-port of our HP ProLiant-Servers.) But in the center of this pohoto you can see two IBM xSeries Servers.
This is a mixed wood server with a backboard. The dark color wood is walnut the lighter is natural red oak. The knobs and pulls are natural oak. This shows the three door style available in a variety of sizes. We can also customize the size if needed.
I like the silouette of Kevin on the other side of the rack contemplating the skyline out the window.
In the left photo, 32 CAT-5e telephone cables and 43 CAT-6e computer cables come into the Community Center server room via a 4-inch conduit. Yesterday I went over to comb out all of the phone cable (middle photo) and then dress it over to the side and into the cable guides and punchdown block brackets. (I don't have to deal with the computer cables. We have a contractor for that...)
Soon I get to install the punchdown blocks and connect all of the dots! (Including the single 25-pair cable punchdown to connect this room to the actual digital phone switch, 200 feet away.) Then, when the building rehab is finished, the Recreation staff should be able to unplug their phones from their temporary trailer offices, walk into the newly opened building, and simply plug their phones in at their new desks.
It might even work!