Bell 101 System Status: Systems last polled on Thu Dec 19 07:40:52 2024.
= Available (23) | = In Use (2) |
= Status Unknown (0) | = Down (0) |
Legend |
---|
Balthasar | Balthazar | ||||||
Elbow | Peaseblossom | ||||||
Juno | Iris | ||||||
Dogberry | Polonius | ||||||
Bottom | Pinch | ||||||
Caithness | Caliban | ||||||
Trinculo | Prospero | ||||||
Cornwall | Burgundy | ||||||
Oswald | Miranda | ||||||
Banquo | Horatio | ||||||
Flavius | Cassius | ||||||
Ulysses | Titania | ||||||
Gertrude |
Click here for today's usage graph, here for yesterday's, or here for the last seven days.
The systems in this lab are named after Shakespearean characters; although the layout described below has changed from the original configuration, we are reluctant to change the text because it is so creative.
Starting with the consultants table, we have Rosencrantz, Guildenstern, Oberon, and Titania - a fae king and queen who never really owned anything, and two people who constantly did the king's bidding and ended up getting killed for it. Perfect for consultants.
Up the left side we have first the triumvirate who took over after the assassination of Caesar: Lepidus, Antony, and Octavius. Opposed and across from them, naturally, are three kings: Duncan, Lear, and Agamemnon (all three fated to die as well, I might add).
Behind Lear sit his three daughters: Regan, Cordelia, and Goneril. Cordelia, being the only faithful one, calmly watches over the back of her father. This being a woman's table, we have on the other side three more doomed females: Ophelia, Gertrude, and Desdemona.
Opposite them we have the "Villains Table," a veritable gallery of rogues. Claudius sits behind his queen (Gertrude), flanked by Iago and Shylock. Across from Claudius we have Hecate, goddess of evil, flanked by the warring lords of the houses Montague and Capulet.
Behind them we have our "Warriors Table" - Achilles, Aeneas, and Ajax seated across from Patroculus, Ulysses, and Hector. Patroculus is across from his friend Achilles and across the table from Hector, who is fated to slay him; Achilles and Hector are at diametrically opposed ends of the table.
Behind these two we have Balthazar and Balthasar, two names popular throughout many of the Shakespearean plays. They add a minor - but necessary - amount of confusion to the whole deal.
Moving on to the right side and coming down, we have Moth and Cobweb forgotten against the wall (Cobweb conveniently closest to the corner of the room). In front of them we have the rest of our Unseelie Court: Mustardseed, Peaseblossom, Elbow, and Froth (frothing in the corner, no doubt), across from four spirits/goddesses: Ariel, Iris, Ceres, and Juno.
After this we have a Court of Fools: Puck, Polonius, Dogberry, and Fool opposite Snug, Pinch, Bottom, and Snout.
Following this we have four hotheads - Cressida, Caliban, Caithness, and Mercutio - seated across from four levelheaded figures - Troilus, Trinculo, Prospero, and Volumnius. Troilus sits opposite his lover, Cressida, while the loyal Trinculo sits opposite the treacherous Caliban (both from "The Tempest").
After this, we have Albany, Burgundy, Cornwall, and Quince set against Sebastian, Miranda, Oswald, and Voltimand; and finally we have our second Warrior's Table: four warriors loyal to the king (Fortinbras, Horatio, Banquo, and Kent) seated opposite four noble warriors who opposed Caesar (Brutus, Cassius, Flavius, and Cato).
Description courtesy of Chester H Zeshonski (chz\@buffalo.edu).