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oarsinsync 3 days ago

> The setup was common in universities, back then. That's probably also how they got to use it.

Sun Microsystems were also big in universities. As were IBM. Lots of people believed the "servers have special hardware" voodoo back then, and parroted that it's bad news to run servers on consumer hardware.

Somehow, decades later, the meme refuses to die. Unlike Sun Microsystems. Or IBM's Unix server business.

amelius 3 days ago | parent [-]

Except Apple has tight control. You're basically building your castle in Apple's kingdom.

If Google had used Apple appliances for their servers they would be violating the EULA and have lawyers knocking on their door.

Apple appliances are made for consumers. Apple's lawyers were not paid to cover business usecases, so they basically don't allow it.

rollcat 3 days ago | parent [-]

None of this is the point of this discussion.

The point is: commodity hardware is powerful, and it's interesting to explore its capabilities outside of its original purpose. Apple or not.

amelius 3 days ago | parent [-]

If you ignore legal constraints, maybe.