Jul 052013
 

Windows Home Server 2011 64-bit English 1pk DSP OEM System Builder DVD 10 Client

Windows Home Server 2011 64-bit English 1pk DSP OEM System Builder DVD 10 Client

  • System Requirements: Processor: 1.4 GHz (x86-64 processor); Memory: 2 GB RAM; Hard Disk Space: 160 GB
  • Quickly set up networks, user accounts, devices, and storage
  • Add any computer to your network: Windows 7, Vista, XP, Mac, or Linux
  • Efficiently share folders, files, and digital media
  • Remotely access your content from any Internet-connected computer safely and securely

Use of this OEM System Builder Channel software is subject to the terms of the Microsoft OEM System Builder License. This software is intended for pre-installation on a new personal computer for resale. This OEM System Builder Channel software requires the assembler to provide end user support for the Windows software and cannot be transferred to another computer once it is installed. To acquire Windows software with support provided by Microsoft please see our full package “Retail” product offe

List Price: $ 63.00

Price: $ 42.47

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  3 Responses to “Windows Home Server 2011 64-bit English 1pk DSP OEM System Builder DVD 10 Client”

  1. 131 of 135 people found the following review helpful
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    Near perfect for the home user, July 5, 2011
    By 
    Geomancer (Northern USA) –

    Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
    This review is from: Windows Home Server 2011 64-bit English 1pk DSP OEM System Builder DVD 10 Client (Software)

    I got this mainly for central storage of all my files. More and more I find myself staying in the living room with my family and just using my laptop then going off into the spare bedroom to use my desktop which held all my files. But I do work from both, so getting files between them is a pain.

    A simple NAS could have fixed that problem, but while shopping for them I saw some that had some interesting features like being able to access files remotely through a web address. They were extremely limited in this functionality though and lots of people complained that it didn’t work well. One company even charges you a yearly fee for this feature. This eventually led me to the HP boxes which worked well and had good reviews, but their price tag scared me. I learned they just ran WHS which I didn’t even know existed, so I looked into building my own. This was about the time they announced the WHS 2011 beta so I decided to wait for that to be released so I could have the most current version.

    I took an unused computer with a dual core AMD Athlon II processor and 8 GB of RAM, put in a 320 GB hard drive, two 1 TB hard drives, and a 750 GB hard drive.

    Installation was effortless and really not much different than installing regular windows. I always build my own computers so I was familiar with the process.

    It broke the 320 GB drive up into two drives, one at about 80 GB for the operating system and the other at about 200 GB for storage (the other three drives I connected after installation).

    I was able to set up the two 1 TB drives in a mirroring configuration for redundancy by going into the disk manager, you are not able to do this from the main Dashboard application. I just thought I’d share that it is possible if you have a little know how or you can search google for videos showing you how to do it.

    Setting up the web access was pretty easy actually and I’m glad to see it runs under an HTTPS connection for free with no certificate errors. Best of all, it can stream your media files. I set the quality to ‘best’ since I did have a full processor instead of the Intel Atom’s the NAS boxes run and the server could transcode video files on the fly just fine. My camcorder uses H.264 in 720p HD which windows normally chokes badly on, but the streaming worked right out of the box with them. The quality is not original quality, far from it, but good enough and will let me easily share with family members without putting them up in places like facebook where who knows when their privacy policies will change.

    Client backups are very handy. I have mine setup to do client backups once daily. It will store the last 7 days worth of backups, then the last 4 weekly backups, and the last 6 monthly backups. That means it keeps the last week worth of backups, for older time periods it will dump the older daily and just keep one for the week, then dump the older weekly and keep a monthly. It will do a full initial backup, then it just keeps track of what files have changed between backups, and adds those files the changed to the backup. That means you do not need your backup drive to be several times the size of your client computers.

    The backups allow you to roll back a computer to any previous backup. Find out you downloaded a virus 3 months ago? You can roll your computer back to a monthly backup before that. You loose 3 months of changes, but better than loosing everything. Hard drive crashed? You can reload your computer to the previous day and it will be exactly like it was the day before the crash. All your files, all your programs, all your settings, everything.

    I only came across two problems so far.

    1) It automatically created shares on the 200 GB partition for things like Music, Documents, and Movies. The problem is I already had folders for this on my 1 TB drives that use to be in my desktop computer. There was no way to edit the path for these share folders that were automatically created. You can move them, but not point them to a different directory. The work around is to remove the shares, then recreate them with the existing folders. A bit of a pain, and again this couldn’t be done entirely from the main Dashboard application. An alternative would be to move the folder to the drive you want it on, then copy all your files over manually into the new one.

    If you are not trying to install drives that already contain data, but are merely going to centralize all your files on the server this won’t be an issue for you. Just move the share folder to the drive you want it on, and then transfer all your files over the network.

    2) In order to configure a server backup, it needs an entire hard drive, it can not be included with any other files and can not be a smaller partition of a larger drive. I had originally intended to break the 750 GB drive into two chunks. One for client backups, the…

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  2. 43 of 44 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Finally, WHS 2011!, June 7, 2011
    By 
    Brett

    Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
    This review is from: Windows Home Server 2011 64-bit English 1pk DSP OEM System Builder DVD 10 Client (Software)

    Several years ago, I bought an HP EX485 that served as my backup solution until recently. The EX485 had Windows Home Server 2007 as its OS and I loved it. It simplified backup and recovery for all of the computers in my household. The ability to recover a single file or backup and restore complete images (similar to Symantec Ghost) was exactly what I needed. I rarely used any of the additional features or add-ins. Fast forward to today, I recently built a new entry level server specifically for Windows Home Server 2011. The updated user interface for WHS 2011 is refreshingly simple and less clunky than its predecessor. Administration is simple and straightforward, even for the novice. Besides computer backups, I use WHS 2011 as a centralized repository for music and movies, where I can stream them to other TVs in my home.

    There is at least one drawback I’ve found with WHS 2011. The drive extender has been removed. With drive extender, you simply plugged in a new hard drive and the OS would automatically add it to the usable storage. With WHS 2011, I opted to use a motherboard with on-board RAID. I mirrored 2x 2TB drives. Since WHS 2011 is built on Windows Server 2008 R2, I simply chose a motherboard that supported that operating system. In other words, drivers that work in Server 2008 R2 should work in WHS 2011.

    Another quirky feature is the Remote Web Access feature. This essentially lets you access files on your server remotely and securely. While the wizard effortlessly guides you through the configuration, it provides little flexibility. I wanted to use my current domain registrar to enable use of my domain name with WHS 2011 and bind an SSL certificate for secure communications. I wasn’t able to figure out how to manually do it and ended up transferring my domain name to GoDadday, one of the options in the wizard. I think Microsoft makes money as an affiliate from GoDaddy. Seems kind of scandalous to me. A minor issue though. GoDaddy in my opinion is reliable and inexpensive.

    Supposedly, WHS 2011 will have a larger variety of add-ons for purchase. Similar to an App Store on your OS. I have yet to utilize any add-ons, but look forward to any unique software that increases the ability of my WHS 2011 box.

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  3. 49 of 53 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Perfect for me – not for everyone, May 28, 2011
    By 

    This review is from: Windows Home Server 2011 64-bit English 1pk DSP OEM System Builder DVD 10 Client (Software)

    Installed WHS 11 on a HP Microserver (8gb RAM, 3 x 2TB Drives). Had to install DVD drive, HD’s and RAM on Microserver before install. WHS11 install took about an hour total. It was painless and easy. The new client connector software installs fast and easy also. Configuration is a breeze. Remote access requires a web address so I just went with Microsoft’s “yourname.homeserver.com” url.

    Had an existing Ver 1 HP EX 470 so I just copied pasted the data over. I didn’t transfer the PC backups from the old server. Couldn’t tell you how to.

    I have a Windows Phone 7 and it works like a charm via the web based client. Can search and download files with ease. Xbox 360 works perfectly also.

    Drive Extender issue wasn’t big for me. I have about 2 TB’s worth of data and have the other two 2 TB drives back it up. If I double my data I can add a forth and final drive and have one of the other two backup drives back it up.

    If you have torrent and ripped DVD’s in the tens of TB range WHS11 is probably not for you.

    WHS11 only runs on 64 bit CPU’s and it runs fast on my dual core 1.3 GHZ AMD system. HD video requires a much faster CPU such as a i5, i7 or some other quad core CPU. I don’t use my WHS11 for video but if you do want to stream HD you have to get a faster power hungry CPU.

    I am glad I did the upgrade from ver 1 WHS.

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