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  1. #1

    www.maxqe.com - Dual Xeon Woodcrest starting at 275.00

    We have Dual Woodcrest's starting at 275.00 and Single woodcrest's starting at 130.00

    Dual Xeon Woodcrest 5130
    • Dual Xeon Woodcrest 5130
    • 73GB SAS
    • 4GB RAM
    • Redundant PSU
    • Gb NIC
    • Remote Access Available ( Reboot, KVM over IP, Virtual Media )
    • 8 Useable IP Addresses
    • Internap
    Xeon Woodcrest 5130
    • Xeon Woodcrest 5130
    • 160GB SATA II
    • 2GB RAM
    • Gb NIC
    • Remote Access Available ( Reboot, KVM over IP, Virtual Media )
    • 8 Useable IP Addresses
    • Internap
    Larry
    Chief Technology Officer
    Max QE LLC
    Hourly Services, Securing, Management, SSL Certificates, Dedicated Servers, Optimization, Migrations, Restores

  2. #2
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    31
    how much bandwith?

  3. #3
    sorry I forgot to add that

    Default is 2TB quota but we can also do metered 95% if you wanted

    The default port is 10M, we can put it on 100M port for $10/month
    Larry
    Chief Technology Officer
    Max QE LLC
    Hourly Services, Securing, Management, SSL Certificates, Dedicated Servers, Optimization, Migrations, Restores

  4. #4
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    31
    Metered 95%? what is that?

  5. #5
    http://www.sitespecific.com/about/95th_percent.asp has a good explination

    Computing the 95th percentile from the accumulated 5-minute data transfer samples provides an effective means of evaluating the regular, sustained utilization of your connection. The 95th percentile calculation is a widely used mathematical algorithm--most large service providers (UUNet, Sprint, Cable & Wireless, etc.) use this method to calculate bills for larger circuits (e.g. Ethernet, T3).



    To compute the 95th percentile value on a data set, the following algorithm is used: sort the data set by value from higest to lowest, discard the highest 5% of the sorted samples, and the next highest sample becomes the 95th percentile value for the data set. For example, suppose that a month is 1 hour, 40 minutes in length. Over the course of this short month, we gathered the following data sets for the inbound and outbound traffic (all numbers in Mb/s):




    Its basically just billing on what is used 95% of the time. So if you had a commit of 2Mb/s for example and you stayed at a constant 2Mb or below all month you would be fine. Small spikes to even 10M/s wouldnt cause an overage as long as they didnt stay for more than a few hours over the month



    Larry
    Chief Technology Officer
    Max QE LLC
    Hourly Services, Securing, Management, SSL Certificates, Dedicated Servers, Optimization, Migrations, Restores

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