Windows Home Server Details 234
phorest writes "Perhaps Microsoft read the comments from the Slashdot community on Windows Home Server? In any event Microsoft is opening up WHS for users to construct their own system after all; though I'd like to see the price of this OS release before making the jump. From the review: "At the 2007 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas this week... Microsoft previewed its long-awaited Windows Home Server product, a Windows Server 2003 R2-based server for consumers that dispenses with the complexities of most Windows Server versions and provides the core storage, sharing, and remote access functionality that digital media and home networking enthusiasts require... Microsoft will make WHS available in two ways: Bundled with new WHS hardware and software-only, the latter so that enthusiasts can install the system on the hardware of their choice... If you're building your own home server, Microsoft requires a 1 GHz processor or better, 512 MB of RAM or more, and as many disks as you think you need. The company will support multiple home servers on the same network, but it's still murky how that will work."
Multiple Servers (Score:3, Funny)
Easy... Lots of Money.
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Not that 10 connections in a home could be reached but it's possible.
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1.) Want to be network administrator.
2.) Want to spend money on yet another computer taking up space in their house.
People already have all their data on their main computer. They just want to stream it out to things and back it up now and then. This is a product searching for demand that's not there, to make it seem like Microsoft is "branching out."
Re:Multiple Servers (Score:5, Insightful)
Microsoft thinks people:
1) Are increasingly moving toward a multi-PC household, with a desktop, laptop, and one or more computers for their children.
2) Are willing to spend money on a low-end server to accomodate the growing demand for shared files and applications.
3) Are looking for a way to get the most out of their WMC PC and their new XBOX 360 by streaming video.
Personally, I've been predicting this move since Media Center was announced. It's a logical step toward the "digital home" that we've heard so much about. WHS won't do anything near everything I want it to, but it's a step in the right direction. I'm hoping this will up the ante and get some good, easier-to-use OSS servers designed around home use.
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IdiotProof-Lockup (Score:4, Interesting)
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Now we just need to train the unwashed masses about NOT surfing shady porn sites from the server, but to do it from their workstations...
Basic AIDA, folks. (Score:5, Interesting)
More likely they are currently flooding the market with "educational" pieces designed to increase the public's awareness of a new category of product; its no coincidence that the forthcoming product will match what the public has been trained to expect of it in advance.
(Hint: look up "AIDA" as a marketing term sometime...)
Hmm? (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't see why they would market something based on Windows 2003 right now anyway, with Vista here / around the corner (depending on who you are)
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This is why the XP SP cannot be applied to XP64, but XP64 and 2003 share a service pack.
I think also that Vista is based off of 2003/XP64 not the 32-bit version of XP.
Mote like SBE for Home Media (Score:2)
At least, that's what it sounds like. I think SBE is about $1k at retail, I think, with promo/NFR versions down in the $400-500 range.
I'
Re:Hmm? (Score:4, Informative)
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You're apparently very well informed. That would explain why Microsoft dropped the XP-based Vista code and spend two extra years porting it on top of the 2003 codebase.
Simply put: Windows 2003 is not just XP with "server goodies", it's a major improvement in terms of modularity, security and contains a lots of improvements centered around running in an enterprise environment.
Re:Hmm? (Score:5, Informative)
I'd get one if I didn't already have a server to do this stuff (and more).
Re:Hmm? (Score:5, Funny)
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And of course using the term 'uneducated Slashbots' really isn't going to garner you any favors around here...ahh, but you knew that already didn't you?
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Video Interview from Channel9 (Score:3, Informative)
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He's dumb as a post.
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A post on slashdot?
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New Apple Base station (Score:4, Interesting)
That makes an almost solid state device to:
Provide wireless Access (N) in your home
Act as router (3 ports)
Share USB printers
Share storage
To me, it's a more integrated and "out of the box" solution.
I know, it can't serve webpages...
But still, it seems a little easier for laymen.
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Can it back up the data on the USB drive automatically? Can it share other devices like scanners? What would be a cool application of this is if it could read music off of the USB drive directly and only need a computer (or a wireless remote) for control. Combine AirTunes and a USB drive. Sort of like a Sonos box with the advantage of built-in storage.
-b.
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Re:New Apple Base station (Score:5, Informative)
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-nB
Re:New Apple Base station (Score:5, Interesting)
However, it is a closed system. As long as it does what you need (and you don't want a web server), it should be fine but the Linksys NSLU2 is an open system that can be customized to do whatever you want.
BTW, the Linksys WRT54G WiFi router also is open source and people have added an amazing range of capabilities. there are about five different open source projects customizing it.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WRT54G [wikipedia.org]
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The AirPort Express Firmware Updater addresses reliability and resolves issues with AirTunes, AirPort compatibility, and issues with some third party Routers.
-Resolves issue with Audio dropout when playing to AirPort Express with AirTunes -Resolves issue with Wireless Disabled mode for AirPort Express -Resolves issue with
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You are right in that for just sharing some hard drives the apple solution isn't bad but I can get a WiFi Access point for less than $80.
With the NSLU you have the option to.
Use it as a web server http://www.nslu2-linux.org/wiki/HowTo/SimpleHomeW e bsite [nslu2-linux.org]
Mail server http://www.nslu2-linux.org/wiki/HowTo/SetUpAnEmail Server [nslu2-linux.org]
VPN http://www.nslu2-linux.org/wiki/HowTo/SetUpOpenVPN Server [nslu2-linux.org]
FTP http://www.nslu2-linux.org/wiki/HowTo/SetupFtpd [nslu2-linux.org]
Act as a Bluetooth access point htt [nslu2-linux.org]
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The WHS is an entirely different beast. It's supposed to act as a r
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Maybe with Time Machine, but seeing the product isn't out yet, that is only speculation.
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(Aside: It's still ludicrously expensive for a phone, especially given it's expected limitations. I know, tonnes will buy it anyways...but I'm finding a strange attitude. Apparently the general opinion is that this is a reasonable price for a phone...but a similar price for a 60GB PS3 is insanely high...imho, this makes the PS3 look down right cheap.)
But 10/100 only for
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I'm only digging at the mindset here specifically actually. Sony is evil for selling a high tech gadget for 600. Apple can do no wrong for doing the same. It's just a bizarre viewpoint around here. I'm not intending an actual comparison between the two by any means.
My biggest question is why, when people here on slash are much more informed and have a pretty good idea what things are worth, is this the case? $600 is a bloody expensive phone. (Sure, that's pretty norm in t
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With Sony, even with them selling bleeding edge tech at a LOSS, that's not good enough.
Really, I just don't understand how the average
It's all about reputation.
Apple wants to copulate with you. Sony waits for you to drop the soap.
NAS anyone? (Score:5, Interesting)
The slashdot crowd take old pc`s and turn em into servers.
Surely the way forward for home users is networked storage that probably use less AC than a PC?
Especially as we are now seeing combined adsl-router-NAS with built in raid. Is there then less chance of getting owned than with a MS based system? I know server 2003 that this is based on is more secure than previous MS offerings, but still...
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FWIW I've used the Buffalo and Infrant ReadyNAS units. Both support up to 4 drives. The Infrant units were more expensive but much faster and generally seemed better designed and built. You could also use something like the Linksys NUSL2 which you plug external USB drives into instead of installing them inside a ser
That Ease of Use Thing (Score:3, Insightful)
Cold day in hell (Score:3, Informative)
What does this do (Score:4, Interesting)
I mean, really, does any home user need the kind of performance a networking OS brings? You're gonna have at most 10 computers hooked up to the darn thing. Now, otoh, it might be a cheap way to build a domain
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Yes, but I don't like being master of my domain.
512MB RAM (Score:3, Informative)
-b.
Home servers cost (Score:2, Informative)
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WHS will be priced for OEM sales to HP and Dell.
Same as always. The home buyer is not a system builder and doesn't give a damn about retail list.
I can't see how a home server from MS would be any less complicated than setting up a Redhat Linux server.
Let me suggest one reason why Red Hat abandoned the home market:
When Microsoft sought beta testers for Windows Vista, it wasn't looking for just anybody. T
Xbox 360? (Score:2)
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I'll still use my 360 for games, but won't by bullied into either converting all my video to WMV or purchasing a pre-built (since the OS is only OEM) XP Media Center box.
So instead you'll limit yourself to Apple's proprietry formats and having to purchase stuff from the iTunes Store ?
The mind boggles at how someone could think moving from Microsoft to *Apple*, would reduce "lock-in"...
Real Rocket Science (Score:2, Funny)
1973 called. It wants its system interconnectivity dilemmas back.
Opportunity for Hardware OEMS and Linux! (Score:3, Interesting)
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Honestly, I've been wishing someone would provide appropriate hardware for a home server for a long time. Save the price of any sound hardware, an expensive processors or video cards. Give me a cheap but well-made small system with lots of hard drive space. It doesn't need lots of processor or RAM, and it would be fine. Just 500GB-1TB of storage, ethernet, and otherwise just enough hardware to get Linux installed. All I want is a NAS/Apache/E-mail server that I can ssh into, and maybe a serial port tha
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Those NAS servers from DELL and HP already run Windows Storage Server, so certifying the new MS Home Server is a no-brainer. Certifying LINUX and supporting it is non-trivial, especially if the t
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http://www.winsupersite.com/images/reviews/whs_04
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Microsoft bears the expense of adapting a mature server OS for the home.
A server the user can access remotely without ever thinking about the difference between a static and dynamic IP address. With data protection perhaps more robust and certainly easier to understand
Welcome to the year 2000 microsoft (Score:2)
Why is it that Microsoft is always five years behind the times?
Let's talk security (Score:5, Insightful)
The target audience for those server systems are home users. Who not necessarily have any clue when it comes to security. Actually, it is quite likely that the people buying this kind of system will not have a lot of knowledge in the IT area. And of security.
The systems will also be very similar, if not identical. Unlike Linux boxes, which can almost never be hijacked cookie-cutter style, this would open the venue for boxes which are most likely easier to hack than current implementations of servers.
Not necessarily because MS does a worse job than OSS developers. But it's just like with the other MS systems. The possible gain from a working exploit is incredible, so the effort will match it. And twice so if you can rely on the system running 24/7 and having lots of storage.
I predict a completely new kind of problem for the 'net.
Simpler shorter translation (Score:2)
They sure used a lot of words to say:
"stripped everything except DRM services"
-
I've already got a "home server" (Score:3, Interesting)
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*ahem*
People have been doing the same thing with many other OS's for a number of years. I have a cheap PC running XP with a bunch of disks and it does a fine job handling print, media and web serving duties. Linux or *BSD would work just as well (the only reason I don't use one of those is that I have some software running on it which is Win only).
The thing that WHS is doing is making this easier for the average user. For one thing, making it contr
hardware appliance? (Score:2)
This type of niche is best filled by an appliance, with real HW. Wait, that means it will cost money, which puts it out of the niche market.
'splain this to me, anyone? I call bullshit. (Score:2)
WHAT?
Whatever happened to bloat being bad? (Score:2)
DLNA is one of those horribly complex things that works when it works and fills an entire career of debugging when it doesn't work. It seems to have been originally a very simple way for anyone to get home networking but as more companies became involv
Re:First?! Hmm... (Score:5, Interesting)
Many of the things in WHS are things I've been saying I was going to do for years. "I'm going to set up a SAN for all our documents and pictures," I keep saying, "and I'm going to schedule nightly rolling backups for all the PCs in the house." Well, I just don't have time. But if I could go out and pick up a $1500 PC, click a few buttons, and be finished... I'd do it.
My major concern is the same as yours: will it actually do what I want? If it does, great, but what if it doesn't? At least if I buy $1500 worth of commodity hardware and cobble up a home-grown solution, I can make it do SOMETHING. So the hardware+software option looks like it might be a bad deal; I think I'll do better if I buy my own components with an eye toward the manual solution, in the event that the software proves inadequate.
Hey, I may work at Microsoft, but I'm not stupid. Since when is v1.0 of anything trustworthy? Screw the party line, I want my shit to work. I'll give it a fair shake, but if it rolls over and plays dead, it can stay there.
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Install instructions:
1. Boot PC with CD/DVD
2. Click a few buttons
3. Be finished
Re:First?! Hmm... (Score:5, Funny)
I could be wrong, but I don't think it's likely enough to investigate.
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> things so they never have to bother doing
> so again.
The day I need to be or hire a UNIX admin to run my home network, I will kill myself.
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You do pay a plumber to do plumbing, or an electrician to setup electricity, or a mechanic to service your car, don't you? How is this different? Don't come with the "I can do this myself". Sure you can because you learned something about it. I can't do plumbing, I can't install electricity and I can't service my car, but I damn well can maintain my own Unix servers.
A plumber probably does his own plumbing, but pays a mechanic to service his car....
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I think that the dedicated home-server distros like Smoothwall or maybe Coraid's NAS distro would be more what he's looking for. They're not much harder to set up than a typical broadband router -- you just install from a CD and then do your
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NSLU2 for $50? (Score:2)
But a neat box nonetheless. I suspect that it's probably worth the cost even if you have an old PC kicking around, just because of the reduced power consumption over the system's lifespan.
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if you're a tech geek with server experience, of course this isn't the product for you, just like you won't be using some fully automated linux installation if you've been compiling your own kernels since the age of 12.
choo choo, it's the obvious train. last stop: you.
on another note
i'd probably like it. easy to set up, that's the way i want it
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Because you couldn't get Windows setup on your own (with your stellar credentials of being some guy on the Internet) we must conclude that only the crazies are using Windows? That's a very poor argument. You never even come close to explaining why you couldn't get the setup working. Your comparison to how you setup a Linux server is meaningless because we don't know what caused you problems with the Windows server;
Based on your language of "picked S
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Apache has the majority of the web server market. I
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My windows boxes don't become unstable after weeks of running.
If you only had the 2nd problem, I would have guessed you had a bad driver.
Since you also had the first problem, my guess is you are just clueless.
Editing some
Linux, BSD, Windows, all work fine as servers if you aren't an idiot.
Re:You have to be crazy to pick WHS (Score:5, Funny)
And Macs work great if you are! ; )
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I'll have to agree with BillyG on this, I do find X [x.org] very easy to use.
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As for stability, I've had an XP Pro machine doing file and print services for four years straight except for occasional sp upgrades and patch restarts - say once every month or two. It has never crashed (BSOD), and runs 24/7 otherwise, though its really only loaded during the workday, "serving" 3 client machines.
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1. To share files on Windows Server 2003 in a workgroup environment, you have two choices. You can either create a login for each person that will access them on the server or you can set the NTFS permissions to "Everybody->Read" on your shares. Make sure that share permissions are "Everybody->Full Access" - this actually isn't a security hole sin
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Shutup. (Score:2, Insightful)
At the MOST you have to say "Yes, I know it's dangerous to share my pr0n". Click Yes and you're sharing.
Drop the OSS fanboy attitude.
Re:You have to be crazy to pick WHS (Score:5, Insightful)
IIS isn't that difficult. Changing the setting from integrated windows security is, seriously, 2 or 3 clicks from the control panel.
And what do you mean you couldn't get the file server to work? That's as simple as SHARING A FOLDER and giving it appropriate security settings.
And no, it's not "idiot proof" but you're talking about a SERVER PRODUCT. A standard license runs for $999. It's meant for PROFESSIONAL ADMINISTRATORS, it's NOT meant for the home. Thus, WHS.
And by the way, had you actually paid $999 for the legit license (which, I'm guessing, you didn't) you could've called Microsoft and gotten help. I don't know what's worse, complaining about pirated software not working right (assuming you didn't buy the license), or giving up on $999 software after, apparently, hardly giving it a shot (assuming you did buy the license).
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The default server role screens that come up lead you away from the easy way to accomplish many tasks. They also changed basic things about how the windows UI and the windows Server UI work in 2003 to make it sufficiently confusing for people who have basic experience with the older windows server products. The "Manage your Server" interface from 2000 is still there
Re:You have to be crazy to pick WHS (Score:4, Insightful)
Not to mention, you can click a checkbox on it and it never gets displayed again.
And you're right, "My Computer" is hidden. In fact, the screen is blank of all icons except the Recycle Bin. Windows XP is the same way. Adding these icons is pretty simple, but in any event the start menu was still there.
If this guy had trouble getting to a folder that he could right click and share, it should be obvious that he is in no way qualified to administer a server.
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I know, your home server has been very stable and reliable and for the most part of these two years, I have tunneled my hacking attacks through it. Keep up the good work!
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This has been done millions of times now. It works. We're not talking NT4 here.
The hour for that kind of baseless FUD is well past. 8 years ago you would have had a point, but you've missed a few boats since.
Further, it is complete bullshit that someone who can't even get a windows 2003 server up and running with basic file sharing and web services would have an easy time setting up Mandrake, Samba and Apache.
I'm sorry, but your FUD is show
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Crapshoot? I think not.
Purest, refined bullsh*t (Score:4, Informative)
There is nothing, repeat nothing in Vista that locks down non-DRM content, you can rip CDs and DVDs with the same tools you used in XP and Vista does nothing to them. How long will mindless knee-jerk anti-MS folks continue to push this BS.
Here's a challenge, find one example of Vista applying DRM to non-DRMed content, come on, just one example!!!!
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Well, I've been running it for about 18 months and it has never done anything to my non-DRM content except play it without hesitation.
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You could always read the article which would help explain it to you, but if that's too much trouble here are the highlights: 1. Simple storage administration, no drive letters, one big filesystem, if you need more capacity just add more disk and the OS takes care of integrating it into the storage p
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For example, Windows Home Server supports automatic redundancy so if a drive fails, you don't lose the data. But they don't use RAID, they use a setup so that you can just plug in additional internal and external drives, and the drive is automatically added to the pool of available drives. But each piece of data automatically exists on two of the hooked up drives.
Quotiing from the article:
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Heh, In the days of real computers we had to beg, just to use Kermit! [wikipedia.org]
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Really, is there anything new and compelling, other than that nice interface? (And I'm told MythTV has a nice interface, too...)
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If you have family members (aka parents) that need it but don't know how to do it, unfortunately yes.
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