Just as a word of Thanks  !
Although we had many of the same intuitive views on the life expectancy of 
servers, but there is little real data on it....
(and in the military environment the amount of dirt, humidity, and temperature 
variation is worse than the average R&D lab...!)
But the discussion is highlighting several excellent issues and views that we 
thought might be discussed.
Greg's model of operating cost per FLOP vs. Capital Acquisition Cost per FLOP 
in particular was helpful - 

When I mentioned licenses, some of our systems are large and complex, with many 
real time modules as well as 
publish/subscribe middleware, Data  Base servers, and Human/Computer Interface 
products.
Normally those products seem to have a 3 year tempo of upgrades, but we run out 
of Server and OS "leniency" after 
6, 7, 8 or 9 years of aging, so we get maybe one major refresh loaded then have 
to go static and forgo the upgrades 
until the next hardware upgrade (which is what we're trying to decide as a 
resultant variable, not make it a given and an input!).

In military or intelligence programs there is not much of an option to 
co-locate!  ;-]
and our personnel are all our own, so admin costs tend to be high.  

W/Regards/
Dave Lechner
MITRE Corp. 








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