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Skip Navigation LinksPC Authority > Features > Expert guide to Windows Home Server
Expert guide to Windows Home Server
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FEATURE

Expert guide to Windows Home Server

by Ross Burridge  on Mar 26, 2008
Tags: Windows | home | Server
"geller wrote: Home Server is cool, but who's going to go to that length for backups? Maybe if you're an SMB or home office, but i can't see many people bothering. What IS cool is MAc time ..."
 
Find out how Microsoft’s impressive new OS will share and back up all the data on your home PCs, among other tricks.

It’s not often that an operating system emerges almost fully formed, but that’s what happened in January 2007 with Windows Home Server (WHS). Though work on codename “Q” or “Quattro” began in 2004, it was another three years before Bill Gates referred to it in his CES keynote address.

Suddenly, we were presented with a domestic OS that promised not only to manage network storage, but also to automatically backup all of the data on all of our home PCs. Need more storage space? No problem, just add another hard drive to the storage pool. No fuss over drive letters or moving data from one disk to another – it’s handled automatically. What’s more, you could gain access to all your home files remotely via a web browser and even turn the device into a web server, hosting photo galleries for friends to view.

Now, a year after WHS first appeared on the radar, it’s ready to go. WHS will generally come pre-installed on a NAS-like device from an OEM manufacturer or system builder, but it’s also available to buy in a system builder version.

On a self-build WHS system, the installation of the server software itself is straightforward – far more like Vista’s hands-off approach than the complexities of Server 2003, and reasonably quick, too. In this feature, we’re going to explore the features and benefits of a completed WHS setup, and how to manage and set up the software for your home network.

Connector and console
Strictly speaking, WHS is a superset of Windows Server 2003, although wholesale changes have been made. New services, as well as a new front end, have been added to make it more suited to domestic use and, much to the chagrin of enthusiasts, many of the more complex elements have been removed, most notably Active Directory support. As far as the average user is concerned, though, you can forget all of that. All the arcane admin tools are safely hidden away, with practically everything you’ll need exposed in just two elements – the client-based Connector and the server-based Console.

Once it’s connected to the network, you’ll need to set up user accounts for each Windows user and then install the Home Server Connector on each client: the installer can be found on the server, or run from the bundled CD.

Once installed, the Connector administers scheduled backups and gives sundry warnings about network health, both on the PC itself and other basic issues on the network, such as a failed backup or disabled Windows firewall. It’s also how you get to the other main component – the Console.

Copyright © 2009 Dennis Publishing
This article appeared in the April, 2008 issue of PC Authority.
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Comments: 3
Thoughts on this article? Add a comment below.
Invicta
Mar 29, 2008 12:24 AM
Awesome feature, I have been considering setting up a home server for a while now. This sortof convinced me too =P


Comment made about the PC Authority article:
Expert guide to Windows Home Server?
Find out how Microsoft’s impressive new OS will share and back up all the data on your home PCs, among other tricks.

What do you think? Join the discussion.
geller
Mar 29, 2008 10:28 AM
Home Server is cool, but who's going to go to that length for backups? Maybe if you're an SMB or home office, but i can't see many people bothering. What IS cool is MAc time Capsule - copy to portable hard drive (easy/cheap to buy, simple to use), incremental backup, and no need for separate machine.

And PlayStation 3, Xbox - these things are actually where the future lies in connecting your TV to your msuic, videos etc. not the PC \:d/ .
[size=9]It's your friend [/size]:
smadge1
Mar 29, 2008 5:19 PM
geller wrote:
Home Server is cool, but who's going to go to that length for backups? Maybe if you're an SMB or home office, but i can't see many people bothering. What IS cool is MAc time Capsule - copy to portable hard drive (easy/cheap to buy, simple to use), incremental backup, and no need for separate machine.

And PlayStation 3, Xbox - these things are actually where the future lies in connecting your TV to your msuic, videos etc. not the PC \:d/ .


I have been using WHS since RC1, and it's been great to finally implement a multi-pc backup solution, that I've never had before.

once you setup your server, you install an unobtrusive connector program on each client computer, and the backups are automatic.

it's really designed for people with 3 or more computers. A single computer is easy to manage backups, but what if your household has 10 PCs? Some households could even have 2 WHS boxes to share the load. (you can only connect up to 10 PCs to a WHS box)

The future of WHS lies in the media integration, being a new product, a lot of that functionality either doesn't exist or is just added on.

WHSv2 is expected out next year some time, no word yet on expected feature-set though.

If this OS sounds like something you could use, grab an eval copy and try it for yourself, it's a great OS.

And as far as HTPC goes, yes, I've been considering buying an XBOX 360 for this purpose. But the lack of a Blu-ray drive is a pain, I don't want an Xbox and a PS3.
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