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StudioF19

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About StudioF19

  • Birthday Jan 21, 1995

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Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    North Conway, NH
  • Occupation
    Customer Service (My Retail Job) and Director of IT (My Non-Profit Job)

System

  • CPU
    AMD FX-6300 6-Core Processor Black Edition
  • Motherboard
    MSI 970A-G43 AM3+ SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 ATX
  • RAM
    G.SKILL Ripjaws X Series 16GB (2 x 8GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM
  • GPU
    AMD Radeon HD 6800 Series
  • Case
    Thermaltake Overseer RX-I (Black)
  • Storage
    1 x SanDisk Z400s 2.5" 256GB SATA III SSD, 1 x Seagate 2TB 3.5" HDD SATA 6Gb/s, 1 x Toshiba 3TB 3.5" HDD SATA 6Gb/s
  • PSU
    EVGA SuperNOVA 750 B2, 80+ BRONZE
  • Display(s)
    HiSense 40" Class 40H3E (Full HD Display), Samsung 22" Class SyncMaster T22B350 (Full HD Display)
  • Cooling
    Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO
  • Keyboard
    Logitech K360 (Unifying)
  • Mouse
    Logitech M325 (Unifying)
  • Sound
    SoundWorks Digital 2.1 Speaker Set
  • Operating System
    Windows 10 Pro for Students

StudioF19's Achievements

  1. I will have to take a look at that - I'm not at my desk, but I'll toss that link in to my notes.
  2. We do have a VMware ESXi Server that can run a small VM to serve a solution to clients, but it does have to be free to impliment
  3. That is correct. Because of the nature of the business, we do need it to be free for commercial use. so open-source is the best, followed by commercial freeware
  4. I honestly don't know. I mean, I might bite the bullet and try and my GLPI work for me, but I honestly don't know. I was wondering what other people might have done for similar situations. ~Nick
  5. GLPI isn't for management of sellable goods. Asset management of computer + network equipment, the license on all the devices, and who has what, when. It's kind of like what linus showed himself doing when hey built the server with the 24 1TB Intel SSDs, scanning the ram sticks. I'm looking for a decent solution that uses a bar code scanner, and can manage the data efficiently. a BONUS to the software would be to be able to track things don't have licenses or even computer components in them, like stage lights and wires. Thank you for your help so far! ~Nick EDIT: I didn't realize the full context of your last post. I have a POS system right now, but that is for our concessions. I don't know of any other POS systems out there that are free(a big + for a SMALL non-profit) and reliable, than Unicenta oPOS
  6. Thank you for that link - I've actually looked at that page before, and none of them are really what I am looking for. I'm kind of looking for something like http://glpi-project.org/?lang=en, but simpler. GLPI has a very clunky interface with many hoops to go thru, hence the desire to find something simpler with barcode support
  7. Hello all! I am looking for suggestions on a fairly cheap, if not free asset management solution, and ways to implement this. I have tried Spiceworks for an automated kind of solution, but it fails to read all the devices on the domain, and so I am looking to go to a traditional scan in/scan out management solution. if you have any ideas or suggestions for a barcode based, (preferable) Windows based solution, that would be awesome! If it had support for fixed assets as well, or could be manipulated to "tag" certain assets that aren't necessarily computers or networking, that would be awesome as well, but not required. ~Nick
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