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Dan Hounshell

October 2008 - Posts

  • Can I get a Mulligan on the case order?

    This is part 4 in a series about building an Eco-Friendly Economical Windows Home Server.
    Part 1: In search of an Eco-Friendly Economical Home Server
    Part 2: In search of an Eco-Friendly Economical Home Server 2, Electric Boogaloo
    Part 3: A Cheap and Green Windows Home Server
    Part 4: Ordered parts for Eco-friendly Economical Windows Home Server

    After some post-mortem review of my order I’m feeling some buyer’s remorse. The case that I ordered for my eco-friendly economical Windows Home Server box wasn’t as small as I remembered to be. At 15.4” x 7.1” x 14.8” (HxWxD) it is a little smaller than the case of my Dell Dimension 5150 but it is nowhere near the size of the HP MediaSmart servers at 9.8” x 9.2” x 5.5”. But it was still cheap at $39.99 and free shipping!

    If I were looking for something a little more compact and a little more stylish while still fitting into my budget theme (and if I had a Mulligan) I would probably opt for something more like one of these Athenatech cases:

     athenatech_a100sc200Athenatech A100SC.200 Black/ Silver Steel MicroATX Desktop Computer Case 230W SFX Power Supply – Retail 
    13.5” x 5.8” x 14.5" (HxWxD)

    $42.99
    Shipping: $11.99

    athenatech_A100bb270Athenatech Black Steel A100BB.270 Micro ATX Media Center / HTPC Case – Retail
    13.5” x 5.8” x 14.5" (HxWxD) $49.99
    Shipping: $11.99athenatech_A106SB

    Athenatech Silver/ Black Steel A106SB.200 Micro ATX Media Center / HTPC Case – Retail
    14.5” x 5.8” x 15" (HxWxD)

    $62.99
    Shipping: $15.99 


    The A100SC and the A100BB are both 2 inches shorter, more than 1 inch narrower, and about the same depth as the CompuCase 6K28BS and I think they look a little sleeker, too. Swapping for either of these would increase the build price by $15-$20. The A106SB is not quite as diminutive as the other two but it still comes in 1” shorter and 1” narrower than the CompuCase 6K28BS, but looks a lot nicer for a $35 price increase. Any of these three cases would look just as good set horizontally or vertically. I like the looks and reviews of these cases, I may keep them in mind for a future budget Media Center/HTPC build. Or I might just go ahead and order one of these now for my WHS box and store the previously ordered case for a future project.

  • Ordered parts for Eco-friendly Economical Windows Home Server

    This is part 4 in a series about building an Eco-Friendly Economical Windows Home Server.
    Part 1: In search of an Eco-Friendly Economical Home Server
    Part 2: In search of an Eco-Friendly Economical Home Server 2, Electric Boogaloo
    Part 3: A Cheap and Green Windows Home Server

    What a difference six months makes in the price of run-of-the-mill computer desktop hardware. In my last article the cheapest I could get a decently powerful Home Server setup was for about $470 including shipping. By the time I added the $149 cost for Windows Home Server I was in the same ballpark as the HP MediaSmart Home Server setups, though it was a little greener and a little more powerful. Still, it didn’t make a lot of sense to go ahead and do the build.

    Fast forward 8 months and with a little tweaking of chosen parts I was able to order a kit with better specs than the $650 version of the HP Home server for just over $300. That price does not include the cost of WHS itself ($149), but I’ll be enjoying a 120-day eval for a couple of months so I can defer that cost. Even if I included it, though, I’d still be at only $450, which is about $200 less than the similarly spec’d (yet still not as much RAM or CPU and not as green as my setup) HP MediaSmart EX 475 at around $650. At $200 less and better specs the timing is right for me to pull the trigger and do it. 

    Here are the parts I ordered a few nights ago from NewEgg. I should receive everything this week so I plan on putting it together next weekend and then basking in the wonderfulness that is promised with WHS.

     hec6k28bsHEC 6K28BS Black / Silver 0.8mm SECC Steel MicroATX Mini Tower Computer Case - Retail

    $39.99
    Free Shipping

     antec_earthwatts_380Antec earthwatts EA380 380W ATX12V v2.0 80 PLUS Certified Active PFC Power Supply - Retail $29.99  WDGP500GB

    Western Digital Caviar GP WD5000AACS 500GB 5400 to 7200 RPM 16MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb/s Hard Drive – OEM x 2

    $64.99 x 2
    Free Shipping
    Kingston1GBDDR2800Kingston 1GB 240-Pin DDR2 SDRAM DDR2 800 (PC2 6400) Desktop Memory - Retail $15.49  AMDAthlonX2BE2400AMD Athlon X2 BE-2400 Brisbane 2.3GHz 2 x 512KB L2 Cache Socket AM2 Dual-Core Processor - OEM $39.99
    Free Shipping  MSIK9A2GM-FMSI K9A2GM-F V3 AM2 AMD 740G Micro ATX AMD Motherboard - Retail $52.99
    Open Box:
    $36.76  MASSCOOL5f9001b1h3MASSCOOL 5F9001B1H3 80mm Ball CPU Cooler - Retail $9.99

     

    • CASE: I wanted a case that was small(ish), looked pretty good, fairly quiet, and could hold 4 internal hard drives. The case I chose has a nice clean look, got good reviews on NewEgg, and it is fairly small: about the same size as the HP MediaSmart boxes. Over the next week I will re-review blog posts and articles I’ve read in the past about building a quiet PC.
    • POWER SUPPLY: I wanted an 80+ certified power supply in about the 300W range. I had been looking at the 300W Seasonic at about $40. But then I saw the Antec Earthwatts on sale for $30 and I couldn’t pass up the $10 in savings. Plus I’ve read in a couple of places that Seasonic makes those power supplies for Antec. That may or may not be true, but even if it isn’t true the two must be very close in quality for the comparison.
    • HARD DRIVES: I’m sold on the Western Digital Green Power drives for this application. I got two 500GB drives at $65 each. These things were over a hundred dollars each 8 months ago. With the price of the 1TB versions at just $129 I came very close to going with two of those instead. Personally I would have done that, but the WAF (Wife Acceptance Factor) played a big part in that specific decision.
    • RAM: The HP WHS boxes come with just 512MB of RAM, even the higher end box with 1TB of drives, so I figured that is a good place to start with my setup. I could have gone with 2GB of RAM here for $30, but I figure that 1GB is good enough for now and if the box needs more I can easily and cheaply add another 1GB stick later.
    • CPU: I think that the AMD Athlon X2 BE-2400 may be the perfect CPU for this setup. It is 2.3 GHz, dual core, 512KB L2 Cache AND it’s rated at 45W – the same as the AMD single core processers. Plus it was only $40! So basically for the same price and footprint as a single core 1.8 GHz Sempron (like what is in the HP boxes) I was able to go with faster dual cores and more L2 cache. That is a no-brainer!
    • MOTHERBOARD: The minimum specs that I wanted for a board were MicroATX, AM2 processor, 4 SATAII connectors, support for at least 4GB of RAM, onboard Gigabit Ethernet, and lots of USB connectors. I chose the cheapest name-brand board that met those requirements and had good reviews. I was also lucky(?) enough to find an open-box version for $15 less. The jury is still out on whether the open box version was a good choice – I’ll let you know the answer to that after I assemble and make sure it isn’t DOA.
    • CPU COOLER: Since I ordered an OEM CPU it doesn’t come with a cooler. I chose one similar to the OEM style that was cheap and got good reviews. It should meet my needs fine.
    • OTHER: The reviews I read about the HEC/Compucase case that I selected said that the rear case fan was sufficient and rather quiet (surprising for one that’s included in a case) so I’ll delay purchasing any additional or replacement case fans for now.  

     

    The total price for everything that I ordered was right about $310 (I added 2 SATA cables that I may or may not need) and was about $330 after shipping. Had I not added the SATA cables and gone with an AMD single-core Sempron (saving $10) the total price including shipping would have been right around $300.

    I’m very pleased with the parts and the value. Hopefully I’ll be just as pleased with the end result. I plan a follow up with notes on the build after next weekend.

    I’m excited. I cannot wait for the BBT (Big Brown Truck) to show up at the door with my box(es) of parts.

  • Sample OpenID ASP.NET Web Site

    A couple of months ago I posted how to add OpenID to your existing web site in conjunction with ASP.NET Membership. In the comments a few times I was asked to post the code to the OpenID login user control or to create a sample project to share. Even though there really isn't a lot to the code other than what I shared in that article I said that I would post the sample code. After ScottGu linked to my original post last week I felt compelled to step up the pace of doing so.

    Below is a link to the sample solution/project/web application. There is really nothing to the web site itself, just a static home page, a "join" page and a "login" page that use traditional membership controls and the OpenID login user control. Go ahead and check out the code and feel free to use that control and the accompanying utility code in your own projects. Please read the Readme.txt file included in the zip for setup instructions.

    Sample OpenID Web Site

     

  • Save your Kudos for your Annual Review

    Over the last several years I’ve gotten into the habit of saving any “kudos” emails that get sent to me into a folder with the creative name of “Kudos”. I don’t know where I picked up this habit, but from time to time I’ve shared this tip with others. After letting Jose in on my little secret earlier today he suggested that I blog about it and share it with everyone. Good idea, Jose. Hopefully this doesn’t kill my competitive advantage :), but here goes…

    When the occasional email comes in that says “Hey Dan, good work staying up late and making sure that foo got fixed. You really went above and beyond this time. You rock!”, I stash it away into my Kudos folder for safe keeping.

    No, I don’t keep the “atta boy” emails in one place for an easy pick-me-up when I’m feeling like a dummy – though they do help – that and a beer or two or three. I have a more pragmatic reason for keeping them – for easy access come annual review and/or self-evaluation time. Prior to a review I will thumb through them looking for some good examples and evidence that I am indeed a useful employee.

    Because of this evidence rather than just telling my reviewer “I’m a hard worker; I go the extra mile.” and hope he or she takes my word for it, I have proof to back up my claim in the form of a quote or two from those emails. I can then follow up my claim with “… and Willy, your boss, thinks so too – here’s an email I got from him in February where he said so.” Instead of just stopping at saying “I communicate well with others, both co-workers and clients” I can pull a couple of quotes from my stashed emails from a co-worker and a client to support it.

    Saving, organizing, and using “kudos” emails has proven to be a good tool for me come review time. Even if you’re not a traditional employee this can still be useful. As an independent contractor having a repository where you can pull “quotes from satisfied clients” might be valuable. Or as a micro ISV it will give you fodder for that “what people are saying about Product X” spot on your web site.

    Bonus Tip #1: A lot of written conversation these days take place in mediums other than email. Twitter, instant message clients, and LinkedIn are good examples of this. If you get an IM or other message that contains a special “way to go” message, copy and paste it into an email to yourself (along with who it was from, a date/time, and a note about the circumstances) and move it to your Kudos folder so it will be stored along with everything else.

    Bonus Tip #2: The Kudos folder is a good place to store other things besides emails and “atta boy” messages. If I get a good evaluation for a presentation I did at a .NET user group I’ll store the results there. If I write a blog post that shows up on the front page of DotNetKicks I’ll take a screenshot, make a note, and store that in Kudos. If I implement a widget for Client XYZ and they see an immediate 20% increase in traffic I’ll make a note and save that, too. I may not use each and every thing that I put in there for reviews, but if I think it might be useful at some time in the future for some shameful self-promotion I’ll save it. It’s reassuring to know that if I ever feel the need to find some long forgotten piece of information like that I can easily find it in that one folder.

    Good luck. Great Job. Kudos!

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