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Windows Home Server: Unbelievably bad storage
Mar. 12, 2008

Believe it or not, recently I've seen several Microsoft products -- Windows Server 2008 and Hyper-V virtualization -- that I think are winners. But then, just when I think Microsoft might finally be getting its technology act together, it comes up with a complete disaster: Windows Home Server.

I never liked Home Server because I couldn't see a point to it. There's really nothing it gave users that they couldn't already get with any one of the dozens of cheap USB hard drives or NAS (network-attached storage) devices now on the market. If users wanted more, any version of Linux and Samba could turn any old Pentium system into a full-powered file server.

What I never even imagined, though, was that Microsoft would ship a basic file server operating system that was fundamentally flawed. Windows Home Server's problem, in brief, is that if you have more than one hard drive in, or attached to, your Home Server, it may destroy your data if you use any of nine programs. The list includes Microsoft Office Outlook 2007, Microsoft Office OneNote 2003 and 2007 and Intuit QuickBooks. In other words, exactly the kind of programs you're likely to use on files on a file server.

To continue reading this article by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols at eWEEK.com, go here.


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