I have an LTSP setup running at home. It's pretty cool stuff. At this point, I am running over a 10M hub to a bunch of pentium 100's-133's. I only have two or three clients up at any given time, but my server is only a 750M Duron with 384M of RAM and a 20G IDE drive. LTSP can work on laptops as well, I have tested it and had no problems with a few Pentium laptops connecting to a PII-233 laptop. I am fairly familiar with the process of installing and building out an LTSP network. I am however a little behind on versions. I have not worked much with LTSP 4 (I think that is the latest). As far as network connectivity goes, you could do it wirelessly, but it is probably not the best choice. If I were trying wireless, I would make sure to do so with 802.11 G in as perfect an environment as I could. I would also build out the server with multiple wireless cards and not share bandwidth on just one. This whole setup would likely get a bit tricky, but I'm pretty sure it could be done. LTSP is one of the coolest technologies out there in my opinion. It allows for a very robust environment that is simple to manage. I love being able to just patch and maintain one server and get 3 free workstations to boot. I also love that I can provide word processing, internet browsing, email and instant message along with a few games to my siblings for next to no cost on machines that other people have just given me. If your friend is interested in looking into this further, I would love to help. Please keep us posted on the list as to your progress. Thanks. Rob -----Original Message----- From: Jim Herrmann [mailto:kclug@ItDepends.com] Sent: Saturday, January 24, 2004 11:02 PM To: kclug Subject: LTSP Advice I have a friend who owns a small business. He is remodeling the workspace he and his employees use and he'd like to really modernize in the process. The things he and his employees need are very well covered by linux, and he is seriously considering it. The main application they use runs on a unix server, which they access through a terminal interface. Definitely no problem there. They also need mail, a shared calendar, a spreadsheet, a little bit of publishing, and they use Quicken a little. I can show him Linux equivalents and Cross-Over Office, and let him choose what he thinks will work best for them. Here's the thing that sounded appealing to him, then he took it a little farther. I told him about running everything on a server and just have some simple X terminals on each person's workstation. I'm starting to look at ltsp.org, but thought I would see if any of you guys had any experience you could share. The other thing he thought would be great would be if these terminals could all be wireless, including the printers. Then the only wires that would be required in the office would be power. That would be cool, but I'm not sure if the technology is there yet. Opinions? Thanks, Jim