panic mode
- Joined Oct 10, 2011
- 4,985
and how do you get around reverse DNS for your email server?
Reverse DNS is always done at the Name Registrar, not at the ISP. And rDNS service comes included with the domain names, which, of course, I also pay for (about $30 per year per name, IIRC). For this price, I can run as many mail boxes or web services as I want.and how do you get around reverse DNS for your email server?
AutoCAD 13 ? ... ha! ... I've been using it since version 10! ... and I'm quite good at it. In fact, I'm a programmer and developer.My "server stack" at home. It includes a router, local file server, VPN with my office, my "offsite" backup for my business systems, an ERP business system, and other various services.
This is real world stuff with great value and zero cost.
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Yes, in fact.AutoCAD 13 ? ... ha! ... I've been using since version 10! ... and I'm quite good at it. In fact, I'm a programmer and developer.
Does it run well on Linux?
I pay my ISP for data. Nothing else.
Go back and read the very first post in this thread.
Edit: and when I say "My [whatever] is Linux", I actually mean there is physical hardware, controlled, maintained, and managed by me (and no one else) that does those things.
I don't purchase services.
That makes sense... Although it did involve stretching the truth a bit.My mail servers (of which I run a few) are hosted on leased VPSs at about $12 per month.
Yeah, now I remember ... you have rather eclectic tastes, my friend.Yes, in fact.
But that is an old bookshelf. It's contents have not been updated in at least 20 years. Somewhere around here I've posted a photo.
yes, windows isn't free, there's the explanation right there.If Windows were so geat with its intended design and simplicity we wouldn't have other options like Linux, BSD, and the like to begin with.
"I don't purchase services" was intended to mean things email, SAS, web hosting, etc, not hardware installations. I'm sorry for the confusion.That makes sense... Although it did involve stretching the truth a bit.
So the hardware was free? can I get some?I pay my ISP for data. Nothing else.
Yes. No.So the hardware was free? can I get some?

So, aside from reporting back to Redmond, what does that box do for $2K?Windows Pro retails at 200 bucks. A couple years ago I built a new box, below is the capital cost, lets call it 1800 bucks. If I added Windows pro to that it would have come to a round 2,000 bucks, so that means the OS is just 10% of the cost, frankly silly, not a big deal.
More than 2K in reality, the wide monitor set me back a few bucks too, so the % cost of Windows (if I had to buy it was more like 15% of the total).So, aside from reporting back to Redmond, what does that box do for $2K?
If a windows app runs under Wine, it runs at native speed.Linux is great choice when deploying own device, a single product with specific function that can be replaced by a drop in substitute. that is where line is drawn...
personally i wouldbe only happyLOVE to do a complete transition to Linux (as in Linux desktop). the only real issue is that none of the needed apps would run on it. one could have to run them in VMs, or Wine, but then... performance drops massively. and it sure FEELS like working on TRS-80.
i do not feel like waiting or running bunch of VMs in parallel. while at home or office i could make some of the VMs run on another hardware, but this is just not portable. thing that works without need for bandaids is running everything natively. so $200 is a peanuts compared to my time spent on just making it work. not to mention much bigger cost of lost productivity.
reality is - it took decades for Linux just to get usable Office suite, and it will take much longer to catch up on other fronts. and THIS is the real reason why adoption is limited to single purpose devices (modens, storage, media players, business computing farms...). it is more likely that it will not catch up at all... the hardware may become more powerful so that running bunch of VMs is not much of an issue. then companies that make those software solutions may try to deploy their products as VMs. time will tell...
I should add: I had to ask my VPS provider for special dispensation to open port 80 on my email boxes. Even they have to be careful not to allow SMTP abuse, as it results in their entire public IP subblock being tainted and listed in RBLs.It is (today) impossible to run a mail server from ones home (because of Microsoft!), though I used to before port 80 was such an awful thing to offer to Windows users.