That Windows isn't very well suited for servers compared to Linux. It's like they took the desktop version and mixed it up a bit.mikkel wrote:
What are you trying to say?Freezer7Pro wrote:
Windows Server 2008 - Windows Vista Home Basic.mikkel wrote:
Yeah, what kind of idiot would use an operating system designed for the environment it's going to be put in?
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
For what Finray wants to do, Windows is no worse than linux.Freezer7Pro wrote:
That Windows isn't very well suited for servers compared to Linux. It's like they took the desktop version and mixed it up a bit.mikkel wrote:
What are you trying to say?Freezer7Pro wrote:
Windows Server 2008 - Windows Vista Home Basic.
Yes, of course, but that's FinnyJenspm wrote:
For what Finray wants to do, Windows is no worse than linux.Freezer7Pro wrote:
That Windows isn't very well suited for servers compared to Linux. It's like they took the desktop version and mixed it up a bit.mikkel wrote:
What are you trying to say?
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
Then you aren't a very smart person. Windows servers are designed to be deployed in Windows environments, and they do just fine at that. Using Linux for simply sharing media and storage between Windows machines adds unnecessary complexity, with few to no redeeming qualities.Freezer7Pro wrote:
That Windows isn't very well suited for servers compared to Linux. It's like they took the desktop version and mixed it up a bit.mikkel wrote:
What are you trying to say?Freezer7Pro wrote:
Windows Server 2008 - Windows Vista Home Basic.
"Windows isn't good for servers" is a popular phrase uttered by people who heard someone say it somewhere, but don't really know why that is, and don't have any original opinions on the matter.
Last edited by mikkel (2009-02-23 08:07:32)
Windows is ok for home usage and such, but I wouldn't use it for anything serious. I'm no Linux nerd, and even I run a Linux server distro on my server.mikkel wrote:
Then you aren't a very smart person. Windows servers are designed to be deployed in Windows environments, and they do just fine at that. Using Linux for simply sharing media and storage between Windows machines adds unnecessary complexity, with few to no redeeming qualities.Freezer7Pro wrote:
That Windows isn't very well suited for servers compared to Linux. It's like they took the desktop version and mixed it up a bit.mikkel wrote:
What are you trying to say?
"Windows isn't good for servers" is a popular phrase uttered by people who heard someone say it somewhere, but don't really know why that is, and don't have any original opinions on the matter.
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
I'm sorry, but based on what I've been reading in here and in other threads, the operating system choices that you make don't exactly serve as credible testament to the quality or application of these systems.Freezer7Pro wrote:
Windows is ok for home usage and such, but I wouldn't use it for anything serious. I'm no Linux nerd, and even I run a Linux server distro on my server.mikkel wrote:
Then you aren't a very smart person. Windows servers are designed to be deployed in Windows environments, and they do just fine at that. Using Linux for simply sharing media and storage between Windows machines adds unnecessary complexity, with few to no redeeming qualities.Freezer7Pro wrote:
That Windows isn't very well suited for servers compared to Linux. It's like they took the desktop version and mixed it up a bit.
"Windows isn't good for servers" is a popular phrase uttered by people who heard someone say it somewhere, but don't really know why that is, and don't have any original opinions on the matter.
The characterisation of the people who categorically denounce the use of Windows on servers was supposed to serve as a prompt for you to provide at least some form of original thought or qualified argument against it. Just throwing that out there.
Windows on servers absolutely does have its place. Both in trivial and critical application infrastructure. I think you'd be hard pressed to find any large corporation that could disagree with that sentiment.
Perhaps. I just don't see how the Windows UI, and update system in particular would work very well on a server. The former eats your RAM for breakfast, albeit that might not be an issue on high-end stuff, the latter is pretty self-explanatory. I wouldn't imagine running Windows on, say, a webserver. However, I'm no pro, and I'm certain there are places for Windows, too. I just think that for the majority of server-oriented tasks, Linux is more suitable.mikkel wrote:
I'm sorry, but based on what I've been reading in here and in other threads, the operating system choices that you make don't exactly serve as credible testament to the quality or application of these systems.Freezer7Pro wrote:
Windows is ok for home usage and such, but I wouldn't use it for anything serious. I'm no Linux nerd, and even I run a Linux server distro on my server.mikkel wrote:
Then you aren't a very smart person. Windows servers are designed to be deployed in Windows environments, and they do just fine at that. Using Linux for simply sharing media and storage between Windows machines adds unnecessary complexity, with few to no redeeming qualities.
"Windows isn't good for servers" is a popular phrase uttered by people who heard someone say it somewhere, but don't really know why that is, and don't have any original opinions on the matter.
The characterisation of the people who categorically denounce the use of Windows on servers was supposed to serve as a prompt for you to provide at least some form of original thought or qualified argument against it. Just throwing that out there.
Windows on servers absolutely does have its place. Both in trivial and critical application infrastructure. I think you'd be hard pressed to find any large corporation that could disagree with that sentiment.
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
This is sorta OT
how hard would it be to get a P3/4 rig, stuff it full of HD cap and set it as a media centre for a house, with approx 4-5 pc's connecting via wireless and wired?
how hard would it be to get a P3/4 rig, stuff it full of HD cap and set it as a media centre for a house, with approx 4-5 pc's connecting via wireless and wired?
Small hourglass island
Always raining and foggy
Use an umbrella
Always raining and foggy
Use an umbrella
not hard.FatherTed wrote:
This is sorta OT
how hard would it be to get a P3/4 rig, stuff it full of HD cap and set it as a media centre for a house, with approx 4-5 pc's connecting via wireless and wired?
Though streaming movies via wireless isn't great.
edit - This is how I have it set up. one PC is wired to the server, 3 others wireless and 1 via powerline.
Last edited by Jenspm (2009-02-23 09:59:37)
How long would it take to drag and drop a movie across the wireless? Distance would be minimalJenspm wrote:
not hard.FatherTed wrote:
This is sorta OT
how hard would it be to get a P3/4 rig, stuff it full of HD cap and set it as a media centre for a house, with approx 4-5 pc's connecting via wireless and wired?
Though streaming movies via wireless isn't great.
edit - This is how I have it set up. one PC is wired to the server, 3 others wireless and 1 via powerline.
Small hourglass island
Always raining and foggy
Use an umbrella
Always raining and foggy
Use an umbrella
UI resource usage in server versions of Windows is negligible. The "update system" has no more significant impact on performance than updating your Linux distribution and applications with any sort of package manangement system.Freezer7Pro wrote:
Perhaps. I just don't see how the Windows UI, and update system in particular would work very well on a server. The former eats your RAM for breakfast, albeit that might not be an issue on high-end stuff, the latter is pretty self-explanatory. I wouldn't imagine running Windows on, say, a webserver. However, I'm no pro, and I'm certain there are places for Windows, too. I just think that for the majority of server-oriented tasks, Linux is more suitable.mikkel wrote:
I'm sorry, but based on what I've been reading in here and in other threads, the operating system choices that you make don't exactly serve as credible testament to the quality or application of these systems.Freezer7Pro wrote:
Windows is ok for home usage and such, but I wouldn't use it for anything serious. I'm no Linux nerd, and even I run a Linux server distro on my server.
The characterisation of the people who categorically denounce the use of Windows on servers was supposed to serve as a prompt for you to provide at least some form of original thought or qualified argument against it. Just throwing that out there.
Windows on servers absolutely does have its place. Both in trivial and critical application infrastructure. I think you'd be hard pressed to find any large corporation that could disagree with that sentiment.
Windows operating systems are designed to interoperate with other Windows machines. Ask yourself which is better; doing all of the media and file sharing tasks that are intended to be done on this server natively, or implement it through a hacked-together application based off of interpretation of a proprietarily obscured half-way open protocol? There's no sense in running hurdles when all you want to do is get from A to B.
Last edited by mikkel (2009-02-23 10:14:11)
My brother says he uses ~2 minutes for a normal series episode (~180MB). I'll check the exact speed later tonight, when he's not gaming D:FatherTed wrote:
How long would it take to drag and drop a movie across the wireless? Distance would be minimalJenspm wrote:
not hard.FatherTed wrote:
This is sorta OT
how hard would it be to get a P3/4 rig, stuff it full of HD cap and set it as a media centre for a house, with approx 4-5 pc's connecting via wireless and wired?
Though streaming movies via wireless isn't great.
edit - This is how I have it set up. one PC is wired to the server, 3 others wireless and 1 via powerline.
Last edited by Jenspm (2009-02-23 10:10:38)
As I said, they do have their uses. If you just want to get from point A to point B, of course you should take the easiest way. But if you want to get from point A to point C and then back to point A before going to point E, they aren't optimal, if you get what I mean.mikkel wrote:
UI resource usage in server versions of Windows is negligible. The "update system" has no more significant impact on performance than updating your Linux distribution and applications with any sort of package manangement system.Freezer7Pro wrote:
Perhaps. I just don't see how the Windows UI, and update system in particular would work very well on a server. The former eats your RAM for breakfast, albeit that might not be an issue on high-end stuff, the latter is pretty self-explanatory. I wouldn't imagine running Windows on, say, a webserver. However, I'm no pro, and I'm certain there are places for Windows, too. I just think that for the majority of server-oriented tasks, Linux is more suitable.mikkel wrote:
I'm sorry, but based on what I've been reading in here and in other threads, the operating system choices that you make don't exactly serve as credible testament to the quality or application of these systems.
The characterisation of the people who categorically denounce the use of Windows on servers was supposed to serve as a prompt for you to provide at least some form of original thought or qualified argument against it. Just throwing that out there.
Windows on servers absolutely does have its place. Both in trivial and critical application infrastructure. I think you'd be hard pressed to find any large corporation that could disagree with that sentiment.
Windows operating systems are designed to interoperate with other Windows machines. Ask yourself which is better; doing all of the media and file sharing tasks that are intended to be done on this server natively, or implement it through a hacked-together application based off of interpretation of a proprietarily obscured half-way open protocol? There's no sense in running hurdles when all you want to do is get from A to B.
And what I meant with the update system is the "Your system needs to be restarted for the updates to take effect" part.
Wireless g tends to get about 2-3MB/s. Do the maths with whatever file size you want.Jenspm wrote:
My brother says he uses ~2 minutes for a normal series episode (~180MB). I'll check the exact speed later tonight, when he's not gaming D:FatherTed wrote:
How long would it take to drag and drop a movie across the wireless? Distance would be minimalJenspm wrote:
not hard.
Though streaming movies via wireless isn't great.
edit - This is how I have it set up. one PC is wired to the server, 3 others wireless and 1 via powerline.
Last edited by Freezer7Pro (2009-02-23 10:39:55)
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
Why not? How is it even relevant to you dismissing the use of Windows servers in this thread, considering the simple tasks outlined?Freezer7Pro wrote:
As I said, they do have their uses. If you just want to get from point A to point B, of course you should take the easiest way. But if you want to get from point A to point C and then back to point A before going to point E, they aren't optimal, if you get what I mean.mikkel wrote:
UI resource usage in server versions of Windows is negligible. The "update system" has no more significant impact on performance than updating your Linux distribution and applications with any sort of package manangement system.Freezer7Pro wrote:
Perhaps. I just don't see how the Windows UI, and update system in particular would work very well on a server. The former eats your RAM for breakfast, albeit that might not be an issue on high-end stuff, the latter is pretty self-explanatory. I wouldn't imagine running Windows on, say, a webserver. However, I'm no pro, and I'm certain there are places for Windows, too. I just think that for the majority of server-oriented tasks, Linux is more suitable.
Windows operating systems are designed to interoperate with other Windows machines. Ask yourself which is better; doing all of the media and file sharing tasks that are intended to be done on this server natively, or implement it through a hacked-together application based off of interpretation of a proprietarily obscured half-way open protocol? There's no sense in running hurdles when all you want to do is get from A to B.
Last edited by mikkel (2009-02-23 11:10:42)
For remote and web managed servers, I don't see the point in having things like a GUI installed.mikkel wrote:
Why not? How is it even relevant to you dismissing the use of Windows servers in this thread, considering the simple tasks outlined?Freezer7Pro wrote:
As I said, they do have their uses. If you just want to get from point A to point B, of course you should take the easiest way. But if you want to get from point A to point C and then back to point A before going to point E, they aren't optimal, if you get what I mean.mikkel wrote:
UI resource usage in server versions of Windows is negligible. The "update system" has no more significant impact on performance than updating your Linux distribution and applications with any sort of package manangement system.
Windows operating systems are designed to interoperate with other Windows machines. Ask yourself which is better; doing all of the media and file sharing tasks that are intended to be done on this server natively, or implement it through a hacked-together application based off of interpretation of a proprietarily obscured half-way open protocol? There's no sense in running hurdles when all you want to do is get from A to B.
We should drop this or continue by PM, this is far off topic.
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
You may not see a reason, but that speaks to your lack of qualification, not the usefulness of a GUI in certain applications.Freezer7Pro wrote:
For remote and web managed servers, I don't see the point in having things like a GUI installed.mikkel wrote:
Why not? How is it even relevant to you dismissing the use of Windows servers in this thread, considering the simple tasks outlined?Freezer7Pro wrote:
As I said, they do have their uses. If you just want to get from point A to point B, of course you should take the easiest way. But if you want to get from point A to point C and then back to point A before going to point E, they aren't optimal, if you get what I mean.
We should drop this or continue by PM, this is far off topic.
This is far off topic because you're trying to avoid having to reason why you're advising against the use of Windows operating systems to perform the tasks outlined in this thread.
Last edited by mikkel (2009-02-23 11:18:05)
Here is how the network in our house works:
Xbox 360 wired to the router - this plays all our movies, music, tv shows etc
My server wired to the router
My brother's music server wired to the router
All of our laptops wireless to the router, with streaming setup
It's simple but it works. And there is no streaming lag. Even with the removal of the 360, I can't see there being lag issues really.
Xbox 360 wired to the router - this plays all our movies, music, tv shows etc
My server wired to the router
My brother's music server wired to the router
All of our laptops wireless to the router, with streaming setup
It's simple but it works. And there is no streaming lag. Even with the removal of the 360, I can't see there being lag issues really.
I'm with mikkel on this one.
Freezer, honestly, have you ever used a Windows server for any length of time? For what tasks?
I've managed several Windows dedicated gaming servers over the past few years, that were run on Windows Server 2003. I experienced absolutely no problems, or any lack of functionality whatsoever. Furthermore, despite heavy use the gaming servers never had any lag and didn't need much if any maintenance. The box was nearly full too.
I don't know what you're on about using a lot of resources, but that tells me that you have clearly not used a Windows server for any length of time. I can tell you that running several game servers, the CPU usage was never over 50% (E6600) and the memory was only about 1.5GB (out of 2GB) and that was running like 2-3 BF2 servers and a few COD4 servers, plus teamspeaks, and a web server, along with the administration UI's.
For such a simple task, you don't even need a server OS. I have my web server running on a gutted version of Windows XP Pro, and it does absolutely fine for what I need it to do. I could run it in Linux, sure, no problem...however that's completely unnecessary.
Despite the fact that Linux may be better for large scale servers, that is irrelevant as this is clearly not a large scale server. He simply wants to store files, and then share them across his network. You do not need any special OS for this, pretty much any OS will work flawlessly for this task.
There's no reason to run Linux here, except to extend your e-penis by saying you have a Linux server. And after all the headache, ask yourself if that is worth it, or if you just want a functioning hassle-free file server.
Freezer, honestly, have you ever used a Windows server for any length of time? For what tasks?
I've managed several Windows dedicated gaming servers over the past few years, that were run on Windows Server 2003. I experienced absolutely no problems, or any lack of functionality whatsoever. Furthermore, despite heavy use the gaming servers never had any lag and didn't need much if any maintenance. The box was nearly full too.
I don't know what you're on about using a lot of resources, but that tells me that you have clearly not used a Windows server for any length of time. I can tell you that running several game servers, the CPU usage was never over 50% (E6600) and the memory was only about 1.5GB (out of 2GB) and that was running like 2-3 BF2 servers and a few COD4 servers, plus teamspeaks, and a web server, along with the administration UI's.
For such a simple task, you don't even need a server OS. I have my web server running on a gutted version of Windows XP Pro, and it does absolutely fine for what I need it to do. I could run it in Linux, sure, no problem...however that's completely unnecessary.
Despite the fact that Linux may be better for large scale servers, that is irrelevant as this is clearly not a large scale server. He simply wants to store files, and then share them across his network. You do not need any special OS for this, pretty much any OS will work flawlessly for this task.
There's no reason to run Linux here, except to extend your e-penis by saying you have a Linux server. And after all the headache, ask yourself if that is worth it, or if you just want a functioning hassle-free file server.
I've said that 2-3 times.CrazeD wrote:
There's no reason to run Linux here, except to extend your e-penis by saying you have a Linux server. And after all the headache, ask yourself if that is worth it, or if you just want a functioning hassle-free file server.
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
No, you just said how much Windows fails at servers.
I sorta skim read through 3/4 of the thread, but if going with Linux for a server, I'd recommend Ubuntu server edition,
Since it's based off of Debian, you get the magic of Apt-get install, so no need to compile and figure out crap.
Although I currently run Ubuntu Server on my server, if/when I finally get a new server, I'll probably switch to Windows Server 03 because then I can run it as a domain controller, and apparently that makes file sharing a sinch.
Since it's based off of Debian, you get the magic of Apt-get install, so no need to compile and figure out crap.
Although I currently run Ubuntu Server on my server, if/when I finally get a new server, I'll probably switch to Windows Server 03 because then I can run it as a domain controller, and apparently that makes file sharing a sinch.
I'm sure he is talking from reams of experienceCrazeD wrote:
No, you just said how much Windows fails at servers.
I'm just saying I don't find it optimal for many things compared to Linux. I ran stripped XP Pro/Server 2003 on my server for a while, and even if it worked, Ubuntu has been a much more pleasant experience.CrazeD wrote:
No, you just said how much Windows fails at servers.
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
If all you need is a place to dump files why not something like Amazon S3? It's subscription based but the storage is cheap and you don't need any hardware.
Because consumer-level internet connections are just as fast as internal networks.THROBBING.:.RHOMBUS wrote:
If all you need is a place to dump files why not something like Amazon S3? It's subscription based but the storage is cheap and you don't need any hardware.
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP