On Sat, 08 Oct 2005, Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote: > all UPS's are Debian compatible as long they have an rs232 interface. > Which statement I don't understand. Why is USB bad? What do I do with M$ > code that is shipped with most?
USB is not bad (but good luck trying to find USB power surge isulators, which are quite easy to find for RS232), but its support in Linux is not anywhere close to the RS232 support (smart protocols). And not all dumb RS232 UPSes have Debian support out-of-the-box. You may be unlucky enough to have to either open the UPS or do some experiences to find out the RS232 pinout. I know of some Brazilian UPSes with dumb contacts that certainly do not follow the usual pinouts for these things. > Alvin's claim that they don't last long might be true, but here again, a > good db for Linux is lacking. How long is a UPS supposed to last? A good UPS unit (prosumer grade) is supposed to last more than five years, at least seven. Batteries are expected to last two years or a bit more. I am not very sure if there are good consumer grade units anymore. I have had two at home, both had control circuitry AND battery problems. I ditched them to the recyclabe trash, and got a prosumer ("small server") APC instead. So far, I am happy with it. > Then there are the prices. I would get an APC BP500UC, that's $110. But > Henrique reports on an APC Smartups, that's double the price, where I > look. So what is the price performance curve? NOW that is the golden question. There are a lot of bad talk about cheap APC units (including Alvin's), and it makes sense that you would get trash if you go for the "average joe" model of UPS. I would go with prosumer models, you pay more, but what you are trying to protect costs at least 10 times the UPS, doesn't it? > Now I am afraid to leave the system on when I am not personally present > to turn the switch. Yeah, I know that fear. Here where I live (Campinas/SP/Brazil) we get really, really annoying electrical storms (I live near what is considered the 5th worst area of the world for electrical storms :( ). Fast power cycles (~ 2s) when the power transmission lines get temporarily shorted out by lightining are way too common. Also, fast ~5s power cycles while the automated power routing systems compensate for falling trees and branches downing street powerlines and utility poles during storms are also common enough to worry about. And power quality ain't that good to begin with :) It took a lot of faith on the UPS and building surge protection system to leave anything plugged in when I go out... I am lucky to be in a building complex with its own power transformer (and a reasonably beefy one, since the complex is composed of six buildings), so we get high-voltage mains from the utility company, which is much better behaving most of the time than the low voltage mains houses get. And the high voltage mains have lighting protection fuses just before the power transformer, which the low voltage mains don't. -- "One disk to rule them all, One disk to find them. One disk to bring them all and in the darkness grind them. In the Land of Redmond where the shadows lie." -- The Silicon Valley Tarot Henrique Holschuh -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]