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Long time no see. Hope all is well.
I have used UPS/APC/Leibert etc in small to large business with success. That is with Windows 2003/2007 servers.
For Mac, you can probably try the APC Tracker 4.4 software. There is also a native OSX energy saver feature that you can experiment. The old software works. Well, there is only one way to figure out if the UPS software really works is to unplug it from the socket. If it shutsdown gracefully (what you want to software to do) then you are golden!
Depending on your APC installation we normally use CAT5e connectivity for servers. Here is the compatibility chart from APC http://www.apcmedia.com/salestools/SJHN-7AYQNP_R6_EN.pdf
I have a Belkin unit that runs my linux server at home. I believe that the software for it includes Windows, Linux and OSX versions.
I know this doesn't help, but I use an APC unit with my iMac...while I don't have the software angle working for me, it does provide over 2 hours of power in the event of a loss, which tends to be more than enough time for things to come back. If I know a huge storm is coming, I'll turn off the computer, or if things are REALLY bad I tend to be home anyway. Its not a perfect solution but its one that has worked well so far.
Mostly out of curiosity, what is the worst thing that could happen if the plug is just pulled on a desktop mac?
It works, but now that my APC's battery is at or beyond it's expected useful life
Quote from: JohnR on 5 Jul 2009, 01:29 pmMostly out of curiosity, what is the worst thing that could happen if the plug is just pulled on a desktop mac?I'm not confident in my take on your question or it's relevance, but if I'm following you correctly, I believe the answer is little to nothing.
Quote from: Double Ugly on 6 Jul 2009, 01:07 pmQuote from: JohnR on 5 Jul 2009, 01:29 pmMostly out of curiosity, what is the worst thing that could happen if the plug is just pulled on a desktop mac?I'm not confident in my take on your question or it's relevance, but if I'm following you correctly, I believe the answer is little to nothing.In that case I'm not really following why the UPS is needed in the first place. Sorry Jim, I'm sure there's some fundamental thing I'm missing here, I'm really not seeing how the UPS helps other than providing power during a blackout, which is not an OS-dependent thing.
Quote from: Double Ugly on 3 Jul 2009, 04:47 pm It works, but now that my APC's battery is at or beyond it's expected useful lifeWhy not keep the old one. It still works You know those APC batteries can be replaced right?!?
Right, but if nothing bad happens if you just pull the plug, what does it matter? I'm really just wondering, honest, not trying to be argumentative
Well, maybe he's extra careful.
hey doubleugly,if you're an os x man then i believe the only manufacturer that still supports the soft power shut down and soft resume on feature is apc. if you're using the mac with windows, well then your options are limitless .