Windows Home Server

Windows Home Server Information, tips and tricks!

Archive for the ‘ Home Server ’ Category

Whenever I’m confused on how to do something and am looking for some help, YouTube is one of the first places I go. Without fail, I can always find some form of video that gives me the answer I need. The Windows Home Server team has also seen the benefits of YouTube, and we thought it would be helpful and fun for our customers if we started making our own videos!

Now, with the new creation of our Windows Home Server videos, we have made our very own Windows Home Server channel on YouTube. On the channel, you will find variety of different videos including:

  • Team interviews – learn about Windows Home Server’s team members and how they use the product in their day-to-day lives.
  • Windows Home Server overviews – if you are still learning about Windows Home Server, watch an overview on how it can beneficial in your home or even a small business.
  • Informational how-to screen casts – each how-to video will show you how to use various features of Windows Home Server.  

Be sure to subscribe to the channel so that you can watch all of our newly added videos!

-Nicole

Popularity: unranked [?]

Today Microsoft announced that effective June 30, 2010, Microsoft will discontinue future development of Windows Essential Business Server (EBS)the infrastructure solution we designed specifically for midsize businesses. This blog post is to specifically answer the question around whether the change affects other Microsoft solution products.

The short answer is, no.

In no way does today’s EBS announcement impact Windows Small Business Server, Windows Home Server and Windows Server 2008 and R2.

Our decision to discontinue future plans for Windows Essential Business Server was based on several factors, but most notably in response to midsize businesses making a rapid shift towards technologies such as management, virtualization and cloud computing as a means to cut costs, improve efficiency, and increase competitiveness.  As it happens, those technologies are offered today through other Microsoft solutions, and midsized customers are adopting them, including Windows Server 2008 R2, Microsoft System Center, Microsoft Exchange Server, and the Microsoft Business productivity Online Suite (BPOS).

We believe that streamlining our server product portfolio will provide clarity for customers and partners to determine which option might be right for them.

Microsoft remains fully committed to small and medium-sized businesses. EBS customers can look forward to continued support and a number of options for continuing with EBS or transitioning to other technologies.

For more information, click here.

Popularity: unranked [?]

“Heigh-ho, Heigh-ho

It’s home from work we go . . . “

A familiar song from your youth? That’s right, "Heigh Ho" is a song sung by the seven dwarfs in the 1937 animated film, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, as they come home from (and go to) work. It is the movie’s most popular song, but, while most people mistakenly sing "it’s off to work we go," the lyrics are really “it’s home from work we go.” Just a little trivia for you. 

So what does this have to do with Microsoft? Well, I point out “it’s home from work we go,” because we all want to get home to our Windows Home Server, now don’t we? And Windows Home Server is now in one of the coolest homes around, the Innoventions Dream Home in Tomorrowland at the Disneyland® Park in Anaheim, California. The home delivers on Walt Disney’s vision for showcasing cutting-edge technologies that make life better and easier.   

This home of the future has recently been updated and now features the HP MediaSmart EX495 Home Server. You can check out a virtual tour of the home here. Hint: look behind the desk in the family room where the white arrow is pointing. You’ll see other cool Microsoft products in the home, including an Xbox 360 Elite and Microsoft keyboard and mouse.

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The Innoventions Dream Home was first introduced in June 2008 with Microsoft as an original exhibitor , and the home has been a huge hit since then. The home, which shows how a connected digital lifestyle can simplify and enhance many aspects of daily family life, is a perfect showcase for how Windows Home Server helps families centralize and connect their digital experiences.

The Innoventions Dream Home is both a show and a showcase, offering guests a hands-on experience with new in-home technologies, some that are practical and some that are just truly astounding – like the Magic Mirror, a virtual mirror that projects accessories, hairstyles and clothes from your closet onto your reflection, allowing you try out different "looks."

Also, check out the Taylor Morrison Dream Home Giveaway contest on the Innoventions Dream Home site. Depending on where you live, looks like you could be in the running to win the home of your dreams – the perfect place to put your Windows Home Server!

- Stephanie

Popularity: unranked [?]

Many small business owners know the benefits of having a server in the office, but cannot always justify the price of one or the additional IT cost that goes along with it. So what is the other option if owners want the benefits, but not the cost? Windows Home Server of course! Windows Home Server is a perfect fit for Small and Home Offices and comes at a much lower cost than other larger servers. Feature sets of Windows Home Server such as user permissions, expandable storage, remote access, and data protection are something that a business should not live without.

Last year in our 2009 user survey, we learned that the number of home-based businesses using Windows Home Server nearly tripled in the last year. This seems to indicate that HP was onto something by introducing their Data Vault into the market – the first Windows Home Server to specifically target the SOHO space.

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*HP Storage Works X500 Data Vault

It is very exciting for us to see the home server category and Windows Home Server quickly propelling into the SOHO market. Because of this, we are happy to share our newly created SOHO page with you! Now a part of our Windows Home Server Web site, you can learn more about how Windows Home Server will help make your business more efficient and effective.

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On this new page, you can watch case study videos and see first-hand how Windows Home Server has been positively affecting small businesses. You will even have the opportunity to buy your very own HP Data Vault!

Be sure to also check out some other resources related to Windows Home Server in your small office including Windows Home Server for small businesses, and a previous blog post on the top 10 reasons to use Windows Home Server in your SOHO.

Enjoy!

-Nicole

Popularity: unranked [?]

After writing my previous blog post about how Windows Home Server and Zune worked together, I received an interesting e-mail with a great question. “What does Windows Home Server provide with Zune that Windows Media Center could not do on its own?” I realized at that moment, some readers are not fully aware of the full Windows Home Server feature set – especially when you integrate your Windows Home Server with other Microsoft products.

Windows Home Server provides a lot of added benefits to the Windows Home Server + Zune + Windows Media Center scenario. Let’s first talk about what Windows Media Center and Zune are capable of.

Windows Media Center is a beautiful interface found inside consumer Windows 7, Vista, and XP SKUs that offers a clean crisp user experience to watch TV through your computer. Your TV signal can come in through satellite, cable or even the internet (IP TV). Windows Media Center is capable of recording TV from those available signals (except for IPTV which is available by demand). Now if you add Zune to this scenario, you can use your Zune software to convert the recorded TV into a compatible Zune format. However, this happens during your Sync which can take some time.

Onto the Windows Home Server feature set you might find beneficial in these scenarios. For those of you already familiar, you can skip ahead to “Now back on track!” section, but I’d recommend reading all of these scenarios as a refresher.

Let’s first talk about backup!

Windows Home Server provides a lot of added features to your digital home. A definite must have for anyone with 2 or more PCs, broadband internet and the need to safely store their digital memories. On that note, we’ll begin by talking about how Windows Home Server protects your PCs and your content. Out of the box, it provides the ability to back up 10 different computers, automatically on a nightly basis. This isn’t your normal backup that just provides restore of your files and folders. This backup will restore your entire computer! Imagine your hard drive completely blows up, like a “mission impossible” note, your files incinerated with a puff of smoke. Makes you sweat a little bit with stress doesn’t it? Especially for you married couples. You wouldn’t want a divorce over losing some pictures of your wedding, or worse, your newborn child! Replace your hard drive, pop in the Windows Home Server restore CD and your computer is restored exactly how it was the night before. Yes! Programs, files, pictures, folders, even your desktop wallpaper, back exactly how you left it. Catastrophe averted!

On the go?

If you’re like me, you have a light-weight laptop, small hard drive but plenty of time to snap pictures and videos at whim. Of course, I am pretty geeky so I have my heavy duty Windows Media Center computer running at home. Though, I never tend to use my powerful Media Center PC because of the convenience of the laptop. I like to walk around the house doing various things, browsing the web and eventually heading to a specific room. Why isolate myself to a single desk? Because of this type of dynamic situation, I like to store my files in one, easily accessible location that has a lot of room. Windows Home Server makes a great storage device by allowing me to expand my storage space by simply putting in a new drive and clicking add! Windows Home Server also provides a FREE customizable domain name. What that means is you can go to your home server through the internet by typing in your own domain name, http://<YourName>.homeserver.com. The “YourName” part of the link can be anything you’d like (well as long as it’s not taken and isn’t blocked by bad etiquette). Windows Home Server will make sure your IP address is always synced with your domain name and that it’s secure with the FREE SSL certificate that it gives you. This allows remote desktop sessions to all supporting home computers as well as access to your shared folders. You can upload and download content at anytime from anywhere.

There are many more features of Windows Home Server, so please, head to our website to learn more!

Now back to the original blog post topic…

Adding Windows Home Server to the Windows Media Center + Zune scenario gives you a couple of extra benefits you didn’t have before. First, the compressing of the video is done ahead of time and not ‘real time’ during the sync. Secondly, you can compress AC3 audio TV content. My previous blog post explained how to install the AC3 filter to make this possible. Most, if not all, the digital content being broadcasted will require this. It is a great workaround for those of you already trying to do this! Now add in all the features that Windows Home Server provides to the list, and WOW, you have quite the feature set.

Here’s a little recap:

Windows Media Center + Zune

  • TV acquisition
  • Zune software will Sync non-AC3 TV Content during a sync
  • IPTV content on-demand
  • Ability to go mobile with your TV Content

Windows Home Server + Windows Media Center + Zune

  • TV acquisition
  • Home Server will compress TV content ahead of sync – AC3 content included
  • IPTV content on-demand
  • Ability to go mobile with your TV Content
  • Remote Access to future recordings while you are on the road.
    • You can download these videos (which are already compressed and a LOT smaller) and sync them after download completes to your Zune while away from your home!
  • Increased storage capabilities without having to be a techno expert

JB

Popularity: unranked [?]