fenderman
Staff member
- Mar 9, 2014
- 36,892
- 21,408
1)The information about power consumption of those old systems is readily available. They are hogs.Except in reality, I AM saving money, and they aren't "cheap ass old servers that use a ton of power". You clearly have never used one, let alone have ever owned one. But ignorance is bliss.
Again, I'm not the confused one here. System cooling have EVERYTHING to do with heat generated by the system. But since you've never worked on these systems, you don't understand how this all works, especially thermodynamics.
Again, the only sucker is you. I already have a Kil-A-Watt meter, I TOLD you my power draw, it's not my problem you choose not to believe me. And again, one of those dinky SFFs will NOT "run all the VMs I want". With what I am running on one, it'll get choked out in a minute. Those machines simply do not have the core count to do much, let alone the ability to have enough RAM. You clearly don't understand server technology, and that's fine to admit, but I know you won't. Go read up and understand what and how FreeNAS works, what eSXI is and what it takes to stream multiple 4K video streams with Plex. You think I'm dumb, but I'm far from it. I've been doing this way longer than you can imagine.
It's cute that you can't even understand that a quad core i7 that is the max processor in most of those SFFs can't compare to an e5-2650 octa core Xeon or dual 12 core Xeons.
2)Cooling the system doesnt change physics. The amount of heat generated is the same. In fact, its more with cooling because the cooling system generates its own heat.
3) you did NOT tell me your power draw, you told me your idle draw.
4) First your dell 710 does not have an e5-2650, interesting that you mention that processor. Second, an i7-8700 destroys the 2650. Looks like you need to brush up on your processors.
Perhaps you should spend your time reading the blue iris manual. You dont know the basics...sheesh....your entire rant is based on misinformation that there is something new with nvdia and BI. There isnt. Your silly theory has been tried and tested. Use the search box.