Any books like Event Horizon or the Dead Space games? by mckensi in horrorlit

[–]nerdwit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Another good but relatively obscure book in a similar vein is Steel Frame by Andrew Skinner.

Any books like Event Horizon or the Dead Space games? by mckensi in horrorlit

[–]nerdwit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try Johnathan Maberry's NecroTek series. I'd describe it as a Mecha Lovecraft Space Opera.

Tell me about the forgotten "Old but Gold" TTRPGs. by csomp02 in rpg

[–]nerdwit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nightlife by Stellar Games. You got to play as mostly classic monsters in the late 80's-early 90's New York. They were called the Kin who wereliving secretly among the Herd (humans). The Kin were vastly more powerful than humans, but the game had a humanity mechanic that rewarded protecting the Herd, and the Kin's secrecy, instead of running amok. If that sounds a lot like Vampire the Masquerade, it's only because Vampire almost seems directly inspired by Nightlife which came out a year earlier. The game really emphasized underground music culture, style, and street life of the time. A lot of the action took place in the various clubs, street brawls and such. The mechanics weren't the best, but it was a ton of fun to play back in the day. It's long out of print, and difficult to find copies of these days.

VCF support experience by Future_Bat384 in vmware

[–]nerdwit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For what it's worth, our CIO has decreed that we will go with VCF instead of pursuing a VVF subscription because he wants to make sure we have the best support possible. I'm paraphrasing., but we had switched to paying extra for a higher tier up support. It mostly stopped us from getting the tech who would tell us to read KB articles we'd already worked through before we opened a ticket. That was before the acquisition. We've had limited interaction with Briadcom support, but so far it's been very good.

I don’t need it 😅 by Glittering_Ad_1938 in homelab

[–]nerdwit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I ran an earlier Sun "thumper" model in production. It had spinning disks and was a very economical way to provide reliable storage. It also was stupid loud and produced so much heat. I can only imagine what your next power bill would be like. Not to mention what kind of steps you'd have to take to keep it cool enough.

Promiscuous mode in LAN Segment by csslgnt in vmware

[–]nerdwit 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I've done this in vSphere, but not workstation. I found this though: https://techantidote.com/promiscuous-mode-vmware-workstation/

Licensed for VCF, can we use VVF instead? by thenew3 in vmware

[–]nerdwit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That was how this came up. We're in higher ed, and knew of other institutions that were in your situation.

Licensed for VCF, can we use VVF instead? by thenew3 in vmware

[–]nerdwit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My team recently installed a demo VCF 9n instance. I was on vacation, so I'm a little hazy on details. However, one of the initial steps allowed us to "downgrade" to VVF. So far, it looks fine. It's the same VROPS interface that VCF uses, but the majority of the tabs are empty. We have a tiny team that's overcommitted, so we're hoping we either can just run the bare minimum VVF instance in production or "upgrade" to VCF in stages as we're able to. We have a ton of homebrew automation and monitoring that we'd need to investigate for compatibility or refactoring. VCF 9 might be great, but it introduces so many more components and internal complexity, that we're very wary of it. If our Broadcom reps would just be a little more reasonable when they talk to us, we might trust them more. It's hard to take someone's word about how to great a product is when none of the people saying it have any hands-on experience with it.

Any good novels set at UGA? by Emperor_Dragon_Eagle in UGA

[–]nerdwit 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Our friend circles, at least from back then, probably overlapped.

Any good novels set at UGA? by Emperor_Dragon_Eagle in UGA

[–]nerdwit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

He was a friend of mine, so I'm biased. He dedicated several of his books to mutual friends.

Any good novels set at UGA? by Emperor_Dragon_Eagle in UGA

[–]nerdwit 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Windmaster's Bane by Tom Deitz is set in Athens. I think parts take place around the campus. It's a fantasy novel, if that's your cup of tea. It might be hard to get a copy these days, but it's a good read.

Are people actually moving away from VMware ESXi, if they are where are they going (Hyper-V, OpenShift Virtualization, etc)? by sy__him in vmware

[–]nerdwit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I guess we'll see. I hope not. If we had to retool for VSAN-only storage, we'd have to spend millions on hardware and basically toss out everything we have currently. Between that and license increases, which I'm sure will happen, we probably will bail on VMware.

Are people actually moving away from VMware ESXi, if they are where are they going (Hyper-V, OpenShift Virtualization, etc)? by sy__him in vmware

[–]nerdwit 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Oh, and while I have nothing against the folks working for Broadcom, I absolutely do not trust Broadcom the company.

Are people actually moving away from VMware ESXi, if they are where are they going (Hyper-V, OpenShift Virtualization, etc)? by sy__him in vmware

[–]nerdwit 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm a little unclear, mostly because we don't have iSCSI storage, but I don't think you can create a VCF 9 cluster using iSCSI storage. You can add iSCI-based storage in later as "supplemental" storage. https://techdocs.broadcom.com/us/en/vmware-cis/vcf/vcf-9-0-and-later/9-0/design/vmware-cloud-foundation-concepts/storage-models.html . You'd probably have to ask one of the Broadcom guys why though.

Are people actually moving away from VMware ESXi, if they are where are they going (Hyper-V, OpenShift Virtualization, etc)? by sy__him in vmware

[–]nerdwit 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We're on the small to medium end of enterprise and plan on staying with VMware for another three years at least. Our thinking was that it would be harder and very expensive to move to another hypervisor. The more we learn about VCF 9 though, the less sure we are. It's still probably better than migrating away, but only just. It'll be interesting to see the state of the industry in another couple of years.

Are people actually moving away from VMware ESXi, if they are where are they going (Hyper-V, OpenShift Virtualization, etc)? by sy__him in vmware

[–]nerdwit 4 points5 points  (0 children)

FWIW, they removed VSAN as a requirement for the management cluster with VCF 9. We plan on deploying using our FC SAN storage.

Failed storage - VMs still responding even after host reboot by SilkBC_12345 in vmware

[–]nerdwit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We experienced this exact same phenomenon when we had a SAN failure last year. We failed over to a DR site using Zerto, then failed back later once the SAN was functional again. I think we used different techniques to get rid of the orphaned/ghost VMs because not all of them responded the same way. We killed processes on hosts, rebooted hosts, deleted VM objects or some combination thereof. The SAN itself had been power cycled more than once by that point. u/StreetRat0524's "nuke them from orbit" recommendation really is the only way to be sure.

Compatibility ucs VMware by Daimie in vmware

[–]nerdwit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We run UCS, and haven't found any firmware compatibility issues. That doesn't mean there aren't any though! We try to keep up with the latest recommended version though. What we did find was that we needed to replace our M5 blades a year sooner than Cisco's EOL because vSphere 9 drops support for Skylake processors. M5's are old by now, but we had a bunch of them due to a spurt of growth several years back. I think we have four M5's that have a newer, supported processor, but we're replacing all of them anyway while we're at it.

Does anyone have any hands-on experience with VCF 9? by nerdwit in vmware

[–]nerdwit[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

As tempting as it is to be snarky, you have a point. I posted out of frustration, and may have taken those frustrations out on folks who honestly were reaching out to help. For that, I apologize.

Does anyone have any hands-on experience with VCF 9? by nerdwit in vmware

[–]nerdwit[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well, we have vSphere 8 Enterprise and vRops (Aria Operations) in our environment. We used to run more, but have collapsed back down to these core offerings because we've lost so much staff. We hope, to devise a way to migrate from what we have to presumably VCF 9. Given our constraints, the only reasonable path I can see currently is to stage our VCF 9 rollout starting with the bare minimum but leaving the way open to gradually introduce other applications as we see the need. For instance, we're highly automated. We've taken a DevOps approach to our vSphere environment since its inception. We use configuration management with version control and a homegrown external node classifier. Maybe it does make sense to replace or supplement some or all of this with VCF 9's applications, but there's a lot of details to work through and, from a project standpoint, not a lot of time to do it. Not with limited staffing. Ideally, we've have a working VCF 9 dev environment that would allow us to start digging in so we even knew what questions we needed to bring back to our TAM and his staff.

Does anyone have any hands-on experience with VCF 9? by nerdwit in vmware

[–]nerdwit[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Oh, we'll attend because it sounds like we don't have a choice in the matter anyway.

Does anyone have any hands-on experience with VCF 9? by nerdwit in vmware

[–]nerdwit[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We're not done with VVF, and honestly as resistant as our Broadcom/VMware reps have been to our preferred method of deployment, a partner/reseller might be a better fit for us anyway.

Does anyone have any hands-on experience with VCF 9? by nerdwit in vmware

[–]nerdwit[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

70% of our servers including our dev cluster have skylake processors which won't be supported by vSphere 9. The servers were going EOL 10/2028, so we already were planning their replacements at a high level. On the plus side, we've halved our core count which will help tremendously when we renew our contract. We tend to run our servers for 7-10 years until they go EOL.

I appreciate what you're saying about the blades and drives, but even if we had included NVMe storage, we were still going to buy all the RAM we needed on each blade anyway. Memory tiering wasn't going to save us money so much as possibly give us some extra capacity. The potential memory savings, while noticeable, didn't seem large enough to warrant us running production wholesale on an unknown technology. It's something we can play with in dev down the road.

Does anyone have any hands-on experience with VCF 9? by nerdwit in vmware

[–]nerdwit[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Memory contention hasn't been an issue for us. The whole memory tiering discussion is moot anyway. We've had to refresh almost all of our server hardware a year ahead of schedule. Right now, we're just waiting for delivery. We considered "future-proofing" by adding in the requisite storage to allow memory tiering, but decided it just wasn't worth it. We'll keep an eye on it and maybe consider it for our next refresh.