Brendan wrote:Don't.
20 to 30 identical servers is a large amount of $$$ for nothing. It'd make more sense to buy an eclectic mixture of 10 very different servers so you can test how well the OS supports different hardware and how well it copes with different conditions. Don't forget that (for testing "many computers") you can always run your OS in virtual machines (e.g. 10 servers running 20 virtual machines each = network of 200 computers running your OS).
Also note that the cash you have now is probably going to have to last for many years, and in about 12 months you're going to have to explain to your investor that there's no hope of them ever getting any return on their investment.
Cheers,
Brendan
Cheers for the feedback Brendan, the cash is for 12 months.
The servers are just to test the OS, it should cost around $ 500 - $750 New Zealand Dollar per server.
The investor really wants to spend the money on hardware, I am a lot more conseravite, I only want to spend x dollars, and leave some for unexpected, and travel costs. It is quite funny, we talk all the time, he wants me to buy, buy, buy, send him the bill. And I am no, no, no, lets just use what we have and a few extra's.
I am used to having just enough money to keep my family feed, with a little left for extra's, and if lucky some computer stuff.
He can see the potential, he has a great point, if it helps get the project finished faster, then get it.
The hardware money is there to be used, it is only there for a year.
I do not need to test the OS on heaps of different hardware, it is for a specific task, it is not for general public use.
Although a general range of servers, like AMD/Intel 64 are supported.
I might start with 10 servers?
Still thinking about it.....
Ali