On Mon, 18 May 1998, Steve Curry wrote:

> I may be spitting into the wind here but I think this explanation is wrong.
> I belive that Extreme Linux would best be described with a model of two
> pentium computers setting together acting as one CPU, Hard drive, memory.
> So say if you had two Pentium II 400's with 1 Gig of ram (my Linux dream
> machine), if you were running Extreme Linux the machine would act as a
> Pentium II 800 MHz with 2 Gigs of memory. <---- That is *EXTREME*!!!! 
> 
> Now if one of these machines broke down I think "in theory" it should still
> stay up and running acting as just the one pentium II 400 with 1 gig of
> ram. So in a sense there is some redundancy but, I know that both machines
> (or however many you have) would all pull their share of the load, all of
> the time. There is no setting and waiting with Extreme Linux.
Sorry you are wrong. Try doing some reading about it before you criticize
other people's explanations.



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