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Aurornis ◴[] No.45302320[source]
I thought the conclusion should have been obvious: A cluster of Raspberry Pi units is an expensive nerd indulgence for fun, not an actual pathway to high performance compute. I don’t know if anyone building a Pi cluster actually goes into it thinking it’s going to be a cost effective endeavor, do they? Maybe this is just YouTube-style headline writing spilling over to the blog for the clicks.

If your goal is to play with or learn on a cluster of Linux machines, the cost effective way to do it is to buy a desktop consumer CPU, install a hypervisor, and create a lot of VMs. It’s not as satisfying as plugging cables into different Raspberry Pi units and connecting them all together if that’s your thing, but once you’re in the terminal the desktop CPU, RAM, and flexibility of the system will be appreciated.

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bunderbunder ◴[] No.45302356[source]
The cost effective way to do it is in the cloud. Because there's a very good chance you'll learn everything you intended to learn and then get bored with it long before your cloud compute bill reaches the price of a desktop with even fairly modest specs for this purpose.
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newsclues ◴[] No.45302824[source]
Text and reference books are free at the library.

You don’t need hardware to learn. Sure it helps but you can learn from a book and pen and paper exercises.

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trenchpilgrim ◴[] No.45302877[source]
I disagree. Most of what I've learned about systems comes from debugging the weird issues that only happen on real systems, especially real hardware. The book knowledge is like, 20-30% of it.
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1. titanomachy ◴[] No.45302940[source]
Agreed, I don't think I'd hire a datacenter engineer whose experience consisted of reading books and doing "pen and paper exercises".