Don't bank on it though. The two 555s I've installed have not unlocked any additional cores but I did end up with a screaming dual core that you can O/C the piss out of.
That's alot of coin to drop in hopes that it will work. IMHO you'd be better off buying the cheapest board that you can for now and then picking up a decent mid level board when the 900 series are released. But that is just my opinion.
I thought I was the only one that didn't want plexi-windows, neon, glow in the dark whiz bang cases. I am an adult that wants a sleek sexy, silent PC. My son... well he can keep his blue LED fans :)
Help me surprise my wife by having my workbench cleared off by the time she gets home! Prices include shipping. I accept PayPal. Heat is Miker2k (just signed up, FOUR transactions).
AMD Athlon 64 3700+ San Diego 2.2GHz 1MB L2 Cache Socket 939 89W Single-Core Processor 15$...
APC InfraStruxure Central is the software that will bind all of those management cards together. You've already spent the coin to get the UPSs, these costs are the price to manage them. This software will send alerts, tell you when batteries need to be serviced, etc, etc
Again from a Cisco perspective: I would steer you towards a UC520. It can scale up to just over 100 users and is pretty straight forward to manage with the included GUI. If cost is a factor you could forgo some of the IP Handsets and integrate standard analog handsets in 2, 4, or 24 analog port...
Yes, split internal and external DNS either with different internal (I like .local) and external domain names or with totally separate inside/outside dns server(s).
Excellent point, if it were me I would kill the second NIC on the server and use the newly liberated switch port to plug the AP into. I doubt that a home network (even with streaming) would saturate that gig link and even if it did your bottleneck would then be the uplink to the upstairs switch.