It's embarassing admissions time.
I use a four-way KVM switch and run from one to four machines all the time. That sounds downright silly, but there is a minor purpose.
- I periodically have to hit the road for up to a couple of weeks. My email stays on a laptop all the time, so I don't have to backup and cross-load it for a road trip.
- I have some moderately heavy duty design applications that eat up most of the cpu, disk and memory on an entire machine.
- One of the machines is a "data furnace", running backups and acting as a file server for the house data network. This machine, for instance, runs FreeNAS with a couple of other virtual machines running server apps for the house net. The TV, audio playback, and my Dearly Espoused's machines sip from the server applications.
- One machine is a "rented mule", and does tasks that may lead to its being flushed and refilled as needed; it's modestly sacrificial.
There have been a couple of times where simply having another machine that can access the net has saved my bacon. I stumbled into this backwards, having the machines, then finding how great it was when something died.
I may have to go to an 8-way KVM, as I recently found I need a CAD program that was left behind by the move from XP to Win7 in the industry. It's easier and cheaper for me to set up an XP machine as a protected shelter for the application than to buy the new version that runs on 7+.
I use a four-way KVM switch and run from one to four machines all the time. That sounds downright silly, but there is a minor purpose.
- I periodically have to hit the road for up to a couple of weeks. My email stays on a laptop all the time, so I don't have to backup and cross-load it for a road trip.
- I have some moderately heavy duty design applications that eat up most of the cpu, disk and memory on an entire machine.
- One of the machines is a "data furnace", running backups and acting as a file server for the house data network. This machine, for instance, runs FreeNAS with a couple of other virtual machines running server apps for the house net. The TV, audio playback, and my Dearly Espoused's machines sip from the server applications.
- One machine is a "rented mule", and does tasks that may lead to its being flushed and refilled as needed; it's modestly sacrificial.
There have been a couple of times where simply having another machine that can access the net has saved my bacon. I stumbled into this backwards, having the machines, then finding how great it was when something died.
I may have to go to an 8-way KVM, as I recently found I need a CAD program that was left behind by the move from XP to Win7 in the industry. It's easier and cheaper for me to set up an XP machine as a protected shelter for the application than to buy the new version that runs on 7+.
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