Shhhh. Don't tell anybody but my work laptop is a Macbook Pro. You see we bought a few of them for our test lab to ensure that Macs work great with Windows Home Server's centralized storage (they do).
Once testing was done these pretty laptops were just sitting in the lab unused. I had heard that Apple had released something called "Boot Camp" that would let you run Windows Vista on a Macbook Pro. I figure it was worth giving it a try...
Turns out the Macbook Pro makes a pretty good Vista laptop. Apple's Windows Vista drivers appear solid and it's basically just a well engineered x86 laptop. Mine looks really nice with a big "Windows Home Server" sticker on the cover :-). I've been using it pretty steadily for a few months, however, when I first set it up I didn't expect to use it long (I was just playing around) so I used the default partition size suggested by Boot Camp for my Vista partition (30GB I believe).
After a month or so of use, I found this was not big enough. I was down to just 1-2GB free. How to shrink the Mac partition and grow the Vista partition...?
Windows Home Server to the rescue. See, Windows Home Server's computer restore capability can restore to a larger hard drive (or partition) than the original. So here's what I did:
I did this same routine a few months ago at home when I upgraded my desktop machine with a larger hard disk, so it's useful for that scenario too.
Moral of the story? Windows Home Server Computer Restore is a great tool for dealing with ever changing hard disk sizes. Oh, and the Mac is a pretty nice Windows Vista PC.
-cek
P.S. Remember, you can find a copy of Windows Home Server Reviewer's Guide here. It provides a great overview of what the product does and how it works.
I love it! I have been meaning to move my wife's primary partition to a bigger drive because we under spec'd her box when we first got it, but I didn't want to do the full reinstall, etc...
Thanks Charlie!
Kevin
Next step, allow automated backups and then restores of any OS using our trusty WHS :)
Any hopes of getting the reverse feature? Last night I tried to swap out a 500 Gig drive for an 80 because I wanted to put the 500 in a different machine. WHS would not let me restore because it had an image size for the larger drive, even though only about 30 gig was really used. I was forced to revert to Ghost since it supports downsizing. I was disappointed as this was my first attempt to use the restore feature.
Ask Engadget has a question from Tony ; what's the best easy, efficient NAS-type device? I know exactly