Here's some nostalgia
Posted: Mon Jan 05, 2004 4:37 am
Okay, I got really bored last night, so I took a couple of pics from my broadband router.
Behold! Worship the raw computational power of this beast! It's a 486 running a low-profile linux distro with basically only NAT and routing in the kernel. There's no harddrive (well there is, but it's not connected), it just boots from floppy. It used to have 4MB ram but *drumroll* I upgraded it to 8MB!
Ladies and gentlemen, I give you the IBM PS/1!
<img src=http://tricord.cjb.net/router/router01.jpg>
<img src=http://tricord.cjb.net/router/router02.jpg>
<img src=http://tricord.cjb.net/router/router03.jpg>
<img src=http://tricord.cjb.net/router/router04.jpg>
<img src=http://tricord.cjb.net/router/router05.jpg>
It actually performs like a dream. I slapped in an ISA 56k modem, so it's actually a one user RAS for dial-in. There are two huge-arse ISA NICs, you know those with ten thousand jumpers where you have to configure IO and IRQ manually. It acts as DNS server/gateway, DHCP server, router with NAT and portforwarding. When I took this machine from a dusty shelf in the basement of it's previous owners, nobody ever would have thought that this machine would be running 24/7 for over three years serving my home network and handling many gigabytes of transfer. Speeds are great, too! I get about 500k/sec after which my ISA bus is saturated
Behold! Worship the raw computational power of this beast! It's a 486 running a low-profile linux distro with basically only NAT and routing in the kernel. There's no harddrive (well there is, but it's not connected), it just boots from floppy. It used to have 4MB ram but *drumroll* I upgraded it to 8MB!
Ladies and gentlemen, I give you the IBM PS/1!
<img src=http://tricord.cjb.net/router/router01.jpg>
<img src=http://tricord.cjb.net/router/router02.jpg>
<img src=http://tricord.cjb.net/router/router03.jpg>
<img src=http://tricord.cjb.net/router/router04.jpg>
<img src=http://tricord.cjb.net/router/router05.jpg>
It actually performs like a dream. I slapped in an ISA 56k modem, so it's actually a one user RAS for dial-in. There are two huge-arse ISA NICs, you know those with ten thousand jumpers where you have to configure IO and IRQ manually. It acts as DNS server/gateway, DHCP server, router with NAT and portforwarding. When I took this machine from a dusty shelf in the basement of it's previous owners, nobody ever would have thought that this machine would be running 24/7 for over three years serving my home network and handling many gigabytes of transfer. Speeds are great, too! I get about 500k/sec after which my ISA bus is saturated