IKEA - LACKRack (DATA RACK)
Thursday, January 21, 2010 at 5:11PM
George

 

 

Interesting product by IKEA. I like it ... If your a geek like me and need to make a fashion statement or maybe you are looking for an inexpensive rack solution here it is -- LACKRack. Ill be checking out my local IKEA next week to see what the LACKRack has in store for me...

Looking to build a home data center? Look no further than you local IKEA store. Computer hobbyists are adapting the Swedish furniture chain’s LACK side table to house servers and switches, creating a LACKRack. It turns out that the space between the table’s legs is 19 inches, the same width as a

 standard slot in a data center server rack.

The LACKRack was first displayed at the eth0 Winter 2010 computer conference last weekend in Wieringerwerf, the Netherlands. The eth0 team has posted a guide to building your own unit by using wood screws to affix server rack mounts to the legs of the table. The tables are stackable and modular, so can be assembled in a variety of configurations. 
There’s also the LACKRack “Enterprise Edition,” which uses a longer LACK coffee table – and as  with any enterprise product, has a premium price as a result. The eth0 site suggests that Google engineers may have been the first to affix gear to LACK tables. 

Looking to build a home data center?

Look no further than you local IKEA store. Computer hobbyists are adapting the Swedish furniture chain’s LACK side table to house servers and switches, creating a LACKRack. It turns out that the space between the table’s legs is 19 inches, the same width as a standard slot in a data center server rack.

The LACKRack was first displayed at the eth0 Winter 2010 computer conference last weekend in Wieringerwerf, the Netherlands. The eth0 team has posted a guide to building your own unit by using wood screws to affix server rack mounts to the legs of the table. The tables are stackable and modular, so can be assembled in a variety of configurations.


There’s also the LACKRack “Enterprise Edition,” which uses a longer LACK coffee table – and as  with any enterprise product, has a premium price as a result. The eth0 site suggests that Google engineers may have been the first to affix gear to LACK tables.

Leeched from DataCenter

 

 

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