Server is down due to removal of Xbox......

Soldato
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http://www.windowsitpro.com/Articles/Index.cfm?ArticleID=50428

if you read the story

Public Universities are always running on a limited budget which means they sometimes come up with “innovative” solutions. A couple of years back, an X-Box with some variant of Linux installed had been put in the server room to support a subject designed to teach computer-illiterate Philosophy students how to build their own web pages. This unorthodox platform was chosen because one of the techs was a Linux enthusiast and had convinced “the powers that be” that a cheap web server solution for this subject could be implemented using an X-Box rather than a standard PC or server. Grateful to save money where they could, the project was approved.



Several years later and most of the staff in the department had moved on to bigger and better things. There was a new manager and a brand new set of helpdesk techs. The department’s Unix administrator was one of the few people left who knew what the X-Box was used for. Each year before the second semester class began he powered up the X-Box and updated its software. Few of the other staff ventured into the server room so there was little reason to wonder why an X-Box was sitting on the rack.



Five weeks into the “Web pages for Philosophy students” class the excrement encountered the rotary cooling device. The IT department’s help desk started receiving calls from Philosophy students who were unable to access their web projects.



Flummoxed, the help desk staff escalated the job ticket to the Unix administrator. Unable to remotely access the X-Box, he trotted off to the server room. He was surprised to find that the X-Box was no longer present. He did a quick search of the room but failed to find it. As it did not look as though someone had broken in to the room, there had to be another explanation.



The administrator went down to the new manager’s office to report the missing X-Box. The new manager was quiet for a moment and then sheepishly informed the administrator that it was he who had removed the X-Box. The manager had thought the X-Box was just a games console that the IT departments staff used for recreation when it got quiet. Noticing that the X-Box hadn’t been moved from the server room for some time and that his son was going to be at home on school holidays for the next two weeks, the manager decided to take the X-Box home so that his son would have something to entertain himself with. The manager then drove home and retrieved the X-Box. The administrator got a labeling machine and plastered the words “This is actually a server” all across the console.


Just shows how much machines can be easily modified.....anyone know of any other "modifications" like that at there work
 
knowlesy said:
Just shows how much machines can be easily modified.....anyone know of any other "modifications" like that at there work
The Xbox console was easily modified because it was, in essence, just a run-of-the-mill computer system with a custom front-end. In addition to the fact that it was one of the first (if not the first) games console to include a built-in hard drive, it was only natural that people would start running modified software on it. There is a large community of people running UNIX operating systems on Xbox hardware (Xbox Linux, for example), and even the PS2 had an official linux conversion kit released (although this required additional hardware, whilst the Xbox could have linux installed on it with nothing more than a burnt CD and a freely available tutorial found online).

Such modification is not using the Xbox for its intended purpose, mind, and I have reason to believe this violates the EULA.

Still, it reminds me of a phone prank in which someone rang The Planet asking for a quote to colocate an Xbox console. Can't find it now, but that was great :p
 
Lol, that's a cool little server. I like using stuff in an alternative kind of way. Kind of like when I modified my blender with warp engines. Honest.
 
Energize said:
A pc would actually have been cheaper....
The article states "several years later", so on the basis that the Xbox has been around since November 2001 in the United States, I'd guess he installed it in 2002-2003. How much did an Xbox console cost back then? Probably about £200 here, or $250 in the States. That couldn't have bought a whole lot of computer hardware, new or old.

Plus, it was probably bought as a games console, used for a small amount of time then abandoned; turning it into a UNIX server was just a natural progression and didn't cost a penny in itself :)
 
XBOX's rule. We have one downstairs and one upstairs and we don't even play games on them. I've installed Slayers Evox which looks like Windows XP Media Centre and stream stuff off my main PC's hard drive.
 
Anandtech had an article on running the Xbox as a server, and even clustered something like 8 of them together. The Xbox worked out cheaper than similiar hardware, and when clustered was pretty fast.
 
Energize said:
xbox is p3 700mhz, you could easily have bought one for that much.
Just to correct my previous post, apparently the Xbox cost about $200 in 2001.

You could probably have bought a superior machine second-hand for the same price, but it's a well-known fact that Microsoft make a loss on their hardware (even with their massive purchasing power). Nevertheless, why go to all the trouble of buying a second-hand machine when you've got an unused Xbox console sat in the living room? :)
 
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