One of my goals at Acmebenchmarking is make sure I'm running on
hardware that is representative of real-world infrastructure,
while at the same time doing it as inexpensively as
possible.
To date I've been running on two custom built "desktops" (for
lack of a better term). Both have an Intel Core i7 4790K
processor (quad core plus hyperthreading, 4Ghz), 32GB RAM (dual
channel), and a quality SSD. They are named acmebench01 and
acmebench02.
Alas, it is time to expand.
MUST...PURCHASE...MORE...HARDWARE!
In order to maintain the inexpensive theme I tend to buy used
hardware, my goal on this purchase was to achieve many more cores
and greater memory bandwidth than my existing machines can
provide. Keep in mind that used hardware is great for
benchmarking (and likely development and QA environments) but you
might want to avoid it for production. For years now I've been
purchasing used hardware …
Showing entries 1 to 2
Apr
13
2015
Mar
02
2015
Technical conferences are flooded with visual
[mis]representations of a particular product's performance,
compression, cost effectiveness, micro-transactions per
flux-capacitor, or whatever two-axis comparison someone dreams
up. Lets be honest, benchmarketers like to believe we all suffer
from innumeracy.
The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines innumeracy as
follows:
innumeracy (noun): marked by an ignorance of mathematics and
the scientific approach Mark
Callaghan has been a long time advocate of explaining benchmark results, but that's not the
point of the bar chart. Oh no, the bar chart only exists to catch
your eye and …
Showing entries 1 to 2