SuperSite Blog Daily Update: September 25, 2010

It's Saturday, so there were the usual kids' sports events and whatnot. But there's no rest for the wicked.

I discovered a Marketplace notification on my Windows Phone this morning, so I'll need to write up my first errata/addition (this falls into the addition category) for the book. I'll do so on the Windows Phone Secrets blog later today.

New gear alert: Our Dell laser printer has been jamming a lot lately, and using better paper and cleaning it out didn't help. So we bought a new one. I'll add this to the next edition of What I Use, but for now, it's a Dell Color Laser Printer 3130cn. It's humongous--easily two and a half times the size of the previous printer--and equally heavy. But it seems to work well so far. They're $220 off right now, by the way.

New gear alert #2: When I heard Roku had completely revamped its line of excellent (and very cheap) set top boxes, I decided to grab one as a comparison for the Xbox 360 S, Google TV, and new Apple TV. I ended up getting the Roku XD|S, which has 1080p output, dual-band Wireless-N, and a USB port for (eventually) playing back local videos (that functionality won't ship until November, Roku says). My quickie initial reaction is simple: The quest for the perfect set-top box continues. This Roku is decent, but it's slow to boot up, slow to function, and lacks some basic features that other players have. For example, you can access your Netflix Instant Queue, but no other Netflix content, a far cry from what's available on the Xbox 360. Ah well, it is only $99.

I blew away my Aurora server today and will (re)install normal Windows Server 2008 R2 so I can get Hyper-V. I'll install Aurora (and SBS 7) in a VM today. Ultimately, I decided that what's more important at home is the media sharing stuff, so the Vail server will stay up and running as-is. It's working great.

And I've reverted to Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 after a few weeks on Halo: Reach. What can I say? MW2 multiplayer is like crack. My gamertag is Paul Thurrott, I'm going through the sniper rifles right now, and I am no fan of campers. :)

Discuss this Article 3

Dr. Daniel Jackson
on Sep 25, 2010

"My quickie initial reaction is simple: The quest for the perfect set-top box continues"

Tell me about it....

Dipsh t Admin
on Sep 27, 2010

"Tell me about it...."

Yeah, really.  I've been trying to dump cable since the beginning of the year, but nothing gives me all of the "channels" and features I want.  Each solution comes up short in some major ways.  It may be partially my mindset, but most of it is actual deficiancies.  You start to need more than one device to fill the void.  Since most new TV's only have 2-4 HDMI ports, that starts to be a less and less appealing option, even if you could justify the extra cost from cable TV savings.

Waethorn
on Sep 27, 2010
Something tells me that Aurora may not be supported on Hyper-V in production environments. Looking at HP's upcoming offering, it looks like it'll be more like an appliance-server OS geared towards OEM's (kind of like the way Windows Home Server currently is). I could see big issues crop up with backup and bare metal restore if they allow VM support too. Of course, Microsoft supported running SBS 2008 in a VM and there were similar issues there too. Who knows at this point - it's still in beta. We've already built a number of pedestal (tower) server machines for clients based on SuperMicro's AMD Micro-ATX server boards with 1P Opteron 4100 processors, with the hope that they will upgrade to Aurora when it ships. The nice thing about these is that they offer quad and hexa core processing for light virtualization, but are the same price as their desktop chips (starting at about $100 for a quad-core). Virtualization is good option for server workloads especially with platform migration being a big advantage, but I don't know that it's fitting for Aurora. I think that Aurora is still designed for bare metal install. Running additional workloads, such as SQL Server for LOB apps, should probably be done on a separate, more-powerful box. We've been looking at options for building Aurora servers based on SuperMicro's Atom-based Mini-ITX motherboards and Chenbro's really nice storage server cases with removeable hard drive bays, but the Server 2008 R2 requirements might be an issue for validation - minimum requirements for Server 08 R2 are a 2GHz processor, but the Atom dual-core 1.66GHz should be fine for just storage workflows with SATA 3Gbps support, GbLAN, IPMI support, and Matrox G200 video, which is on the Windows Server catalog. I guess it boils down to how fast your AD DC can process account credentials. I wish there were just Mini ITX server-validated motherboards for either Opteron 4000's or Xeon 3000's, then it wouldn't be a compromise of performance over form-factor. Also, we're wondering how the Atom systems would hold up against the new VIA M'Serv S2100 barebones system. Here's some links in case anyone is wondering about the parts I'm talking about: SuperMicro Atom boards (X7SPA-HF is the one we're looking at because it's designed for server usage): http://www.supermicro.com/products/motherboard/Atom/ SuperMicro Opteron 1P Micro-ATX boards: http://www.supermicro.com/Aplus/motherboard/Opteron4100/ Chenbro Mini-ITX cases for storage servers: http://usa.chenbro.com/corporatesite/products_cat.php?pos=33

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