Archive for May, 2010
Current Status: Melting, but wishing I was playing EVE Online
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So im sat here in the office melting away thanks to the one nice bit of weather we’re likely to get all summer trying not to sneeze thanks to my hayfever and the gardener outside cutting the grass and all I can think about (apart from whether anyone would notice if I moved my desk into the server room next to the air con units), is how long it will be before I can get home and get back to playing EVE Online.
Yes, im one of those masochistic wierdos who actually enjoys the game and loves its sandbox nature, the ability to do pretty much anything you like, even if all that entails is sitting around in space and shooting rocks (which is what I spend quite a bit of time doing).
Purpose of this post? None, but when space looks this nice how could you not want to play?
My New Best Friend – Introducing Spiceworks
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So for the last few months I’ve been looking for ways to improve our ability to monitor our network (both the Servers and Desktops), we already have external monitors for the really important, business critical things like our website and email but for the day to day tracking of our desktops and less important servers we dont really have anything apart from me sticking my head in the server room every morning to check for flashing red lights! I’ve also been motivated to find a solution for tracking our desktop PC’s too after seeing one of my colleagues spend (literally), a whole week building a giant Excel spreadsheet to track both hardware and software on all our Desktop PC’s. While I am quite happy with Cacti and its ability to graph pretty much anything, it isn’t really designed for much more than this and so isn’t much use for tracking all the things I want to.
This is where Spiceworks comes in, it is a free (but ad supported), program that is designed for SMB’s to monitor and track their desktop and server infrastructure. Unlike almost every other program I have tried so far it is actually designed to be simple to use, no messing around trying to decipher config files or setup SNMP polling or anything like that, simply download the one .exe and install it on a spare Windows server (or desktop), the installer will install a copy of Apache and Ruby on Rails and make all the needed config changes, all you need to do is make sure that nothing else is running on the port you choose (such as another webserver like IIS or Apache).
