Craster wrote:
2 users on 5 machines. I JUST WANT TO, OK?
Yes. I kinda though there was some arbitrary stubborness going on.
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I want you to make me buy one. Sell it to me.
Well, I don't really know what you want it to do.
Obviously, it's a desktop to log in to and run stuff, so that's your uTorrent sorted. And you can easily run extra software, both standard Windows stuff and special Home Server apps (that mostly amounts to config GUI hooks into the special Home Server interface console I think).
The backup tool is neat. Install Home Server Connector on the PC and out of the box it does bare-metal backups of all drives. Add exclude directories as necessary and define time windows during which the Server will use Wake on LAN to wake up the client PCs and do the backup tasks.
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Backups can be manually preserved forever and started manually. You can configure how long it keeps each backup (default is a daily backup for three days, a weekly backup for three weeks, and a monthly backup for three months). When multiple machines are backed up, files that are common between them are only stored once on the server to save disk space. The device comes with a bootable optical disc that can be used to restore these backups onto a bare machine. None of this is rocket science, but it's easy to configure and look after.
Adding storage is piss easy. Insert drive (internal or USB or eSATA) and it says "should this drive be for backup or in the storage pool?". Select the second option and it adds it into the master storage.
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By default, each share you add is only stored once on the drive; you tick a box for "duplication" and it maintains it on two drives in the pool as a redundant copy.
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I've never seen any OS offer quite such painless config.
On top of that is a ton of HP only software. There's a free iPhone app that will stream music, videos, and photos from one of these servers to an iPhone out on the Internet. There's a Media Collector client tool that runs in the background on each machine on the LAN and uploads all music, video, and photo files it finds into the central storage pool. There's a video converter doodad that, amongst other things, will silently process DVD ISOs and spit out iPhone mp4 files. There's web-based remote access to your stuff, as well as an RDP gateway service. And it has licences for the Twonky and Firefly UPnP media server packages. Shockingly, that's genuine added value from vendor-added software.