Windows Home Server Team Blog

"Your guide to all things Windows Home Server"

January, 2009

Recent Blog Posts
  • Windows Home Server Team Blog

    Windows 7 and Windows Home Server

    • 9 Comments

    The Windows Home Server team is excited to see the progress and excitement around the public beta release of Windows 7

    From the Windows 7 Beta Download "How to Backup a PC" page, you will see this important note near the bottom of the page.

    Note: The backup methods described here do not preserve installed programs—only data. When the Windows 7 Beta expires on August 1, 2009, you'll need to reinstall a prior version of Windows or a subsequent release of Windows 7 before the expiration date, as well as any previously-installed programs.

    You can read about installing the Windows Home Server Connector software on a PC running Windows 7 over at HomeServerHacks.   But before you update a PC to Windows 7, you should install the Connector software and backup your machine to your home server, so you have an image-based backup that you can return to for testing the upgrade scenario with future builds of Windows 7.

     

    If you run into a bug with using the Windows Home Server Connector on the beta release of Windows 7, please let the home server team know through our Connect site.  A few people have notified us that we incorrectly display "Windows Vista ..." for the operating system name in the Windows Home Server Console and the Windows Home Server Remote Access page - we already have a fix in the works for those bugs. 

     

    The Windows Home Server automated image-based backup and restore solution works with PCs running Windows XP and Windows Vista today, and should also work with Windows 7.  Please download the Windows 7 beta and try it out ... let us know if you have any issues.

     

    t.

     

    p.s. If you don't have a home server yet, now might be a good time to get going ....

  • Windows Home Server Team Blog

    Home-based Businesses

    • 7 Comments

    Product-Icon_sm  Windows Home Server was designed for consumers and home-based businesses.  In our recent customer satisfaction survey conducted in North America and Europe, we discovered that 25% of the early purchasers of Windows Home Server are running a business out of their home.

    This led me to do a little digging into the home-based business market to understand a little more about it, so I thought I would share some of the high-level facts about USA home-based businesses that I learned from recent research studies conducted by AMI Partners.

    • There are over 16 million home-based businesses in the USA, approx. 2/3 of all businesses in the USA
    • Close to 15 million of these businesses have at least 1 PC
    • On average these businesses have 2 PCs, 1 desktop and 1 notebook PC
    • Over 80% have a broadband Internet connection
    • All up, they spend close to $700 million each year on backup and storage solutions

    Windows Home Server is helping home-based businesses automatically backup their PCs every day, provides a central and secure place to store files so that you can access them from any PC within the home, or while away from the home-based business with the built-in remote access capabilities.

    image 

    t.

  • Windows Home Server Team Blog

    Hard Drive Not Found and Data Recovery with Windows Home Server

    • 3 Comments

    Now that Windows Home Server has been available for almost a year and half, I am amazed at how many people do not protect themselves with a Windows Home Server from a Dead Hard Drive or Disk Crash and from these four terrible words strung together in white text on a black screen, "hard drive not found"  . As Joel Evans,  DriveSavers breathes life into a dead drive eloquently put it," In computer circles a well known statement when it comes to hard drives is that it’s not a matter of “if” a hard drive dies but “when”". What he also pointed out is the simple fact that if you send your drive to an expert company to recover the data from the drive it will probably run you about $1500 US. Did you see that? $1500!!!!!!!!

    How much is a Windows Home Server again? oh yeah, about a third of that.

    There are plenty of Data Recovery companies out there, but why would you want to wait for a failure just to put yourself through that financial strain? Besides, there are no guarantees that one of these Data Recovery companies will be able to recover all of your information from your drive. And if you are reading this post and you are now having to go down this painful and expensive path of getting your data recovered, why don't you take out an insurance policy and buy a Windows Home Server?

    In the event that you encounter the horrible "hard drive not found" message and you now realize you have a "dead hard drive", and you have a Windows Home Server, Data Recovery via the Restore Computer Wizard will take you about 1 hour, minus the time it takes you to run out to your local computer hardware store to get a new hard drive. The new hard drive that you purchase just has to be at least the same size as the previous drive. Little known fact, if you want to upgrade your current hard drive with a faster larger drive, you can perform the same steps with the Restore Computer Wizard to put your new hard drive in place. Simply run one final backup of your pc, shut down, pull your old drive, install your new hard drive, boot your pc with the Home Computer Restore CD and follow those 6 simple steps to you newer, faster, expanded capacity pc.

    Thanks for letting me vent a little on this. I guess working for a tech company blinds to the reality that not everyone is aware of the solutions we are working on. I would much rather prefer that our customers were aware now of Windows Home Server than after the fact, So, that they do not have to endure the pain of a hard drive failure, but alas, this is the reality. Heck, I still know many fellow employees who are initimately aware of the full capabilities of a Windows Home Server, yet they have chosen to go it alone and take the risk of a failure. I will just have to bite my lip when my neighbor comes over one day and tells me that his hard drive failed.

    Thanks again,

    Kevin Beares
    Community Lead (Windows Server Solutions Group)

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