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My wife works in a small office situation where there are 3 computers
connected by a small local area network. Her computer is the unofficial hub of the office, the computer where most of the client files are located. The other 2 computers tap into her system in order to have access to those files. She has now been given official clearance to begin looking for a replacement computer system for her office as a result of her system being 7 years old. With respect to recommendations: outside of trying to get the fastest hard drive(s) (the budget will allow), the most memory (also tied to budget), and an adequate video card, is there any specific hardware recommendations that might be made with respect to her particular computer serving as the hub of the office? With respect to this local area network situation? As it is now, whenever people are attempting to access files, it slows down her system quite noticeably. |
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husky86 wrote:
My wife works in a small office situation where there are 3 computers connected by a small local area network. Her computer is the unofficial hub of the office, the computer where most of the client files are located. The other 2 computers tap into her system in order to have access to those files. She has now been given official clearance to begin looking for a replacement computer system for her office as a result of her system being 7 years old. With respect to recommendations: outside of trying to get the fastest hard drive(s) (the budget will allow), the most memory (also tied to budget), and an adequate video card, is there any specific hardware recommendations that might be made with respect to her particular computer serving as the hub of the office? With respect to this local area network situation? As it is now, whenever people are attempting to access files, it slows down her system quite noticeably. It will be easier to manage if all PCs run the same OS. If you plan to replace the pseudo-server PC with something that runs Vista, then you should also replace the other PCs with Vista PCs; alternatively, if you want to continue with XP (I'm guessing) on the client PCs, then try to get another XP PC for the pseudo-server PC. And, if you opt for Vista, plan on some learning curve for all users. For the HD, don't look for speed: all standard PC HDs run 7200 RPM, and the speed variation is pretty minor. Look for capacity, and don't be tempted to get some no-name brand. Also, larger HD caches will help performance a bit, but don't spend major extra $s for that. For a pseudo-server PC, I'd get an Intel Core2Duo CPU, so that one core will be available for the local user while the other core handles the networking (and disk serving) traffic; don't get hung up on getting the fastest such CPU, since you'll be charged a hefty premium for the last ounce of speed. {It seems to me that Intel's CPUs are better than AMD's right now, but I'm certainly not afraid of AMD stuff.} As for memory, get at least 1GB for XP or at least 2GB for Vista. More RAM will help performance -- 2GB for XP and 3GB for 32-bit Vista. Also, since those PCs are not for gamers, integrated graphics should suffice and will save a few $s. Just my opinions. -- Cheers, Bob |
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Hi
Take a look at the HP Media server. It runs Windows Home Server. http://www.wegotserved.co.uk/2007/11...nds-on-review/ What type of Windows is running on the other computers is Not so crucial.\ Upgrading each computer to Giga Network card, and connecting it to a Giga Switch can improve significantly the Network performance. Jack (MS, MVP-Networking) "husky86" wrote in message ... My wife works in a small office situation where there are 3 computers connected by a small local area network. Her computer is the unofficial hub of the office, the computer where most of the client files are located. The other 2 computers tap into her system in order to have access to those files. She has now been given official clearance to begin looking for a replacement computer system for her office as a result of her system being 7 years old. With respect to recommendations: outside of trying to get the fastest hard drive(s) (the budget will allow), the most memory (also tied to budget), and an adequate video card, is there any specific hardware recommendations that might be made with respect to her particular computer serving as the hub of the office? With respect to this local area network situation? As it is now, whenever people are attempting to access files, it slows down her system quite noticeably. |
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Thanks for this info. We are still trying to decide between this situation
and a basic server situation. "+Bob+" wrote: On Thu, 11 Sep 2008 02:37:02 -0700, husky86 wrote: With respect to recommendations: outside of trying to get the fastest hard drive(s) (the budget will allow), the most memory (also tied to budget), and an adequate video card, is there any specific hardware recommendations that might be made with respect to her particular computer serving as the hub of the office? With respect to this local area network situation? As it is now, whenever people are attempting to access files, it slows down her system quite noticeably. If you use her desktop as a "server", she will continue to experience slowdowns unless you buy a very high power machine. Even then she will still take speed hits when someone pulls a large file or otherwise absorbs the disk drive's time. My suggestion would be to keep her system on the network as a file server but only as that. Don'd do anything else with it. Buy her a new desktop that can take care of her needs for less money and everyone is happy. I use a very small system as a file server running the largest server OS (win2003 enterprise) and it works just fine for a small office. You don't need much horsepower for a file server. |
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Thanks very much for this information
We actually like the cost of this potential Home Server situation quite a bit. It's much less expensive than the ML110 entry-level server offered by HP. (With even a basic configuration we are still talking about nearly twice the price.) After contacting an HP representative about the Home Server today, he actually tried to talk me out of it, saying that it probably wasn't fast enough or powerful enough for our small office situation (even though I explained to him that we are only talking about 3 computers being hooked up). It seems to me that he was more interested in making a more expensive sale. I could be incorrect about this, but it was the general feeling that I got. After looking at the link that you provided, I'm of the opinion that this Home Server would still be adequate for our needs. To give you a few more technical specs regarding the operation: This is a financial services business. We are sharing files from Office 2007 Pro, UltraTax, and Peachtree accounting software. That's it. Those are the only associated program files that need to be shared. So we are still thinking that a server situation would be better than having my wife's computer serve as the hub. Just wanted to get a double confirmation on this. Many thanks! "Jack (MVP-Networking)." wrote: Hi Take a look at the HP Media server. It runs Windows Home Server. http://www.wegotserved.co.uk/2007/11...nds-on-review/ What type of Windows is running on the other computers is Not so crucial.\ Upgrading each computer to Giga Network card, and connecting it to a Giga Switch can improve significantly the Network performance. Jack (MS, MVP-Networking) "husky86" wrote in message ... My wife works in a small office situation where there are 3 computers connected by a small local area network. Her computer is the unofficial hub of the office, the computer where most of the client files are located. The other 2 computers tap into her system in order to have access to those files. She has now been given official clearance to begin looking for a replacement computer system for her office as a result of her system being 7 years old. With respect to recommendations: outside of trying to get the fastest hard drive(s) (the budget will allow), the most memory (also tied to budget), and an adequate video card, is there any specific hardware recommendations that might be made with respect to her particular computer serving as the hub of the office? With respect to this local area network situation? As it is now, whenever people are attempting to access files, it slows down her system quite noticeably. |