Windows Vista Forums
Vista Forums Home Join Vista Forums Donate Windows 7 Forum Vista Tutorials Tags

Welcome to Windows Vista Forums. Our forum is dedicated to helping you find solutions with any problems, errors or issues you are experiencing with Windows Vista. The Vista forum also covers news and updates and has an extensive Vista tutorial section that covers a wide range of tips and tricks.

Go Back   Vista Forums > Windows Live > Live OneCare

I am curious about the use of Windows Home Server with very many and very large files . . .

 
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 05-19-2008   #1 (permalink)
Stan Shankman
Guest


 
 

I am curious about the use of Windows Home Server with very many and very large files . . .

Greetings all,

What is the most number of gigabytes or terabytes can be reasonable be
expected to work well with a Windows Home Server?

Does anyone out there run a bunch of terabyte drives? To hold, say 10 or 20
terabytes? How practical would that be?

And what about drive failure?

I know WHS will re-build a single drive, but what if the unthinkable should
happen.
If the file structure gets disrupted, will that mean that all of the disks
are unreadable?
Is there any way to remove a disk from a home server and place it in, say,
and XP box and do some file recovery on it?
You see, it seems to me like very big data pools and very big drives go
hand-in-hand with very big risk.
Is it recommended that WHS be used for such huge data pools? What are the
alternatives?

What is the best way to backup a huge-data-pool-WHS? Can one WHS backup
another? Is that done?
Is it recommended?

I am just curious about all this as I am thinking about building such a
large capacity Home Server system.
- Stan



My System SpecsSystem Spec
Old 05-19-2008   #2 (permalink)
StephenB
Guest


 
 

Re: I am curious about the use of Windows Home Server with very many and very large files . . .

This newsgroup is for Windows Live OneCare.
For Windows Home Server, you probably should visit the Home Server Community
Forums -
http://forums.microsoft.com/WindowsH...=338&SiteID=50

-steve

"Stan Shankman" <stantheman@xxxxxx> wrote:
Quote:

>Greetings all,
>
>What is the most number of gigabytes or terabytes can be reasonable be
>expected to work well with a Windows Home Server?
>
>Does anyone out there run a bunch of terabyte drives? To hold, say 10 or 20
>terabytes? How practical would that be?
>
>And what about drive failure?
>
>I know WHS will re-build a single drive, but what if the unthinkable should
>happen.
>If the file structure gets disrupted, will that mean that all of the disks
>are unreadable?
>Is there any way to remove a disk from a home server and place it in, say,
>and XP box and do some file recovery on it?
>You see, it seems to me like very big data pools and very big drives go
>hand-in-hand with very big risk.
>Is it recommended that WHS be used for such huge data pools? What are the
>alternatives?
>
>What is the best way to backup a huge-data-pool-WHS? Can one WHS backup
>another? Is that done?
>Is it recommended?
>
>I am just curious about all this as I am thinking about building such a
>large capacity Home Server system.
>- Stan
>
--
Stephen Boots
MVP Windows Live
Windows Live OneCare Forum Moderator
sboots@xxxxxx
My System SpecsSystem Spec
 

Thread Tools
Display Modes



Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Home Server or Windows Server 2008 Brian Vista networking & sharing 4 03-28-2008 11:32 AM
Slow networking between Vista Home Premium and Windows Home Server Quentin Vista networking & sharing 7 02-29-2008 05:40 AM
Can't copy large files between Vista Computers and Windows 2003 Server R2 Ralph Musgrove Vista networking & sharing 8 01-09-2008 07:26 AM
Unable to share large files across home wireless network dsweida Vista networking & sharing 9 11-29-2007 10:40 AM
windows slows down while downloading large files eddiebaby Vista General 2 10-01-2007 03:26 AM


Vista Forums is an independent web site and has not been authorized,
sponsored, or otherwise approved by Microsoft Corporation.
"Windows Vista", the Start Orb, and related materials are trademarks of Microsoft Corp.
© Designer Media Ltd

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53