2009/5/27 Stuart McGraw <smcg2297@xxxxxxxx>: > g wrote: >> >> Stuart McGraw wrote: >> >>> Does any one have any hardware "recipes" like this (or a pointer to a web >>> site with some?) Thanks. >> >> where else but, http://linuxhardware.org/. >> >> have a look along right hand side of page; >> 'Latest Forum Posts', and 'Topics'. > > My bad. I'd seen that, but thought from the title > it was a processor (only) comparison and hadn't > read it. The article was indeed the kind of thing I am looking for. > However, it is more than two years > (I don't think the HP wx8400 is available any more) > and I would prefer info that is more current. I didn't > see any similar info on the site that was newer (but > I am still looking). HP (and again, I'm not saying they are better than anyone else, just that I have experience of them) XW series Workstations are all certified with RHEL, which means that Fedora will work absolutely fine. I used an xw9300 for many years, but now the dc series desktops have just as good bang-per-buck as anything less than an xw8000 series machine. HP publish a Linux Support Matrix for their Desktop and Workstation machines and if RHEL5 is listed, Fedora will work. If there's no certification, Fedora might still work - but I understand you are looking for guarantees. http://h71028.www7.hp.com/enterprise/cache/321143-0-0-0-121.html http://h71028.www7.hp.com/enterprise/cache/317386-0-0-0-121.html If you are looking for some less vendor specific recommendations, why not have a look at the Red Hat Hardware Certification site (https://hardware.redhat.com/) as pretty much anything that is certified to work with RHEL will work with Fedora versions newer than F8. -- Sam -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines