From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Date: Tue, 2 Nov 1993 04:14:18 -0500 From: Bob Kummerfeld bob@cs.su.oz.au Subject: standalone plan9 Topicbox-Message-UUID: fe03f9ac-eac7-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 Message-ID: <19931102091418.cIAyeaLZhMmTyYFuAZQG1nb9Ozt8anvh5AePgIWFP1I@z> From: quanstro@epsilon.eecs.nwu.edu (Erik Quanstrom) Date: Mon, 1 Nov 1993 23:26:08 -0500 To: <9fans@cse.psu.edu> Subject: standalone plan9 i know that rob et. al. were spotted at a recent usenix conference sporting [34]86 laptops (or so i've heard). so i'd like to know o is this included on the cd? yes o is anybody using this yes o this implies that the laptop is running the fileserver, cpuserver and terminal software. is this possible to pull off on a sun or sgi? yes The cpu & terminal server versions of Plan9 are essentially the same. You can have a local disk on your terminal and run kfs to get local files. We have done this with a Sun 3/50 with 70meg disk. I have a Compaq LTE/25E laptop. This is has a full 486 (low power version), 12meg memory, 209meg disk, ethernet, serial, parallel and PS/2 mouse port. It also has an active matrix mono screen that is excellent - it added $AUS2k to the price :-( I chose the machine after a long evaluation of the contenders and the choice was based mainly on the screen quality. I have a small DOS partition on the hard disk and the rest is for plan 9 using kfs for the files. It was learning experience to configure the system that I recommend - not difficult but lots of "ah ha!". I now understand the system much better. I carry the machine in to work, plug into the ethernet and then can mount our main file server and cpu to our main cpu server. I attended INET93 and Interop in San Francisco a month or so ago and was able to plug into the ethernet in the terminal room and use it *exactly* as if I was in my office at home in Australia: mounting the file server, running cpu etc! Bob