I have a single disc model running hosting my VMWare datacenter at home
John W. Cook
Systems Administrator
Partnership for Strong Families

________________________________
From: Andrew S. Baker <asbz...@gmail.com>
To: NT System Admin Issues <ntsysadmin@lyris.sunbelt-software.com>
Sent: Tue Oct 12 18:07:38 2010
Subject: Re: Home server system

Hey!!  I'm looking at that and the TS-419 right now. :)

So far, the reviews look very favorable, as does the price.

-ASB

On Tue, Oct 12, 2010 at 5:36 PM, Eldridge, Dave 
<d...@parkviewmc.com<mailto:d...@parkviewmc.com>> wrote:
++

Slight diversion. Anyone used any NAS boxes from QNAP? In particular I am 
looking at the TS-459 pro for home use.

From: Andrew S. Baker [mailto:asbz...@gmail.com<mailto:asbz...@gmail.com>]
Sent: Tuesday, October 12, 2010 3:19 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Home server system

Yeah, it's funny how quickly people at home start demanding SLAs and become 
intolerant of any downtime.  :)

-ASB
On Tue, Oct 12, 2010 at 5:00 PM, Steven Peck 
<sep...@gmail.com<mailto:sep...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Mines been solid all this year.  I found that for each system I have a user 
account created for it and that solved the password issue (since each system is 
mostly for one person it works out fine).  I also use it as the print server 
for everyone so that is nice as well.

While there are times when I like to play IT at home, in general I don't want 
to finagle and experiment with stuff that is protecting my families 
data/services or my customer (wife) gets irate.  At work we have a separate 
lab, so at home I have a separate lab. :)

On Tue, Oct 12, 2010 at 1:19 PM, Lee Douglas 
<lee.doug...@gmail.com<mailto:lee.doug...@gmail.com>> wrote:
I ran Home Server for ~ 2 years on an HP Media Center PC. I understand it's 
based on Server 2003, dumbed down a bit. It mostly worked OK, but had some 
strange quirks - for instance, it would complain if the password on a PC was 
not the same as the user account on the server. It would still work, it just 
seemed to want to complain from time to time. It seemed to do a decent job of 
balancing its load over the various discs and was generally unobtrusive. 
There's a free utility available - Google for it - that would let you launch 
other programs from  within the Server UI, so you could use the box for other 
things if you wished. The connector software between the individual PCs and the 
server was a bit flaky and I finally got tired of the nuisance.

If all you want is backup, there are lots of free programs that will do that 
for you. Set up the server to share it's big drives and let each PC backup to 
it on a set schedule.

YMMV



On Tue, Oct 12, 2010 at 4:10 PM, James Rankin 
<kz2...@googlemail.com<mailto:kz2...@googlemail.com>> wrote:
My direct needs are for storage only, but I was wondering whether it would be a 
good idea to try and get some of the extra bells and whistles that Home Server 
or the like provides. As my kids get a bit older, obviously some of the backup 
and multimedia functionality that users can utilize would be nice...although 
there are always ways I could configure things like that myself, should I want 
to.

I'm a bit undecided, but I've got plenty food for thought here....cheers...
On 12 October 2010 15:50, Andrew S. Baker 
<asbz...@gmail.com<mailto:asbz...@gmail.com>> wrote:
What do you intend to do with this server besides provide storage?   Your topic 
says server, but your comments imply NAS.

Home Server seems okay, but I would think you could do just as well with a more 
direct configuration.

I built a nice virtual host server for my home network for under $1500, and 
that was in 2008.  Would be even less expensive to do today.

-ASB
On Tue, Oct 12, 2010 at 8:57 AM, James Rankin 
<kz2...@googlemail.com<mailto:kz2...@googlemail.com>> wrote:
Any recommendations for a reliable and hopefully fairly cheap server system for 
the home? One of my colleagues recommended the HP MediaSmart ex475 coupled with 
Windows Home Server, are there anything else people can recommend? Also, does 
Windows Home Server offer any particular software or benefits or is it just 
aimed at being simple for the non-technical user? I can see it has backup and 
remote access capabilities - I'm not really that bothered about the remote 
access features for sharing across the internet, but anything else is probably 
a plus. How much extra does the Home Server stuff give you when compared to 
some sort of baby NAS device like a TeraStation?

I was hoping to be able to get something decent for under £1000, at the least. 
Storage, availability and backup are probably the primary concerns I'm 
addressing, but I'm open to all sorts of other features as well. I don't have 
masses of data at the moment, but I might start storing VM files on there for 
some testing purposes, so I'll probably need a wedge of capacity.

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