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According to this[0] which is a neat read anyway, it "has 256 MiB DRAM, 256 MiB NAND, and a single Cortex-A7 CPU clocked up to 1.3GHz." You can run DNS, a VPN, or a small web server even on a VPS with 32MB of RAM so those are pretty cool specs. [0] https://xnux.eu/devices/feature/modem-pp.html |
It also was our main e-mail server and web server, hosting both our own website and several customer websites. We had a second one of the same specs for a few other things and backups, but that was our main workhorse.
[EDIT: They were running Linux 1.0 and 1.2, first with NCSA httpd, then Apache; when we first got them they ran Slackware, installed from floppies; I think we ended up installing Redhat at some point before we retired them; the modems were hanging off Cyclades serial cards; and they were literally hanging - for our first 16 lines we had US Robotics Sportster modems hanging on the wall. (I'm writing this in the hope someone will tell me to get off their lawn and tell me how they did more with less, btw.) ]