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Posts Tagged ‘server’

Intel Rolls out New Core i7, Server Chips

Intel is bringing its “Nehalem” architecture into mainstream PCs through its new Core i5-570 processor, which is aimed at multimedia-intense applications. The new chip is aimed at systems that run around $1,000, a drop from the high-end Core i7 processors unveiled a year ago that were targeted at high-end systems that cost as much as $1,700 or more. Intel also launched its Xeon 3400 Series chips, which are Nehalem-based processors aimed at the SMB market. And Lenovo announced two new ThinkServer systems powered by the new Xeon 3400 chips.
– Intel is bringing its “Nehalem” chip architecture to the mainstream PC and
low-end server spaces.
Intel Sept. 8 unveiled its “Lynnfield” chips, including the first Core i5
processor. The new chips come almost a year after the chip maker rolled out the
first of its Core
i7 processors, which were…


Pluck to Launch Social Media Application Server

Social media company Pluck has created an application server to let customers customize the social media experience for users. Pluck 4 will still let customers accessorize Websites with profiles, blogs, comments, ratings and reviews, as it has done for media outlets like USA Today. But it will also let customers build their own widgets to run on the application server. Pluck is one of the stronger players in the so-called white-label social media market, in which companies provide blogs syndicating RSS feeds, forums and photos, and video tools that other companies license to use, customize and brand as they choose.
– Update: Pluck, the social media
software maker acquired by Demand Media in 2008, has created a programmable
environment to let customers customize the social media experience for users.
Pluck 4 is a social media application server that comprises a full
presentation, scripting and data management…


Global Server Market Declines in Q2: IDC

The worldwide server market hit historic lows in the second quarter as the global economy continued to hammer the technology industry, according to analyst firm IDC. However, the aging of the server population and the introduction of new server processors from Intel and AMD promise an upswing in sales and revenue for the second half of 2009 and into 2010, the analysts said.
– The global recession continued to batter the worldwide global market in the second quarter, but IDC analysts expect sales to pick up in the coming quarters.
In numbers released Sept. 2, IDC found that second-quarter global server revenues declined 30 percent to $9.8 billion over the same period in …



LABS GALLERY: Windows Server 2008 R2 Stands Out Most for Hyper-V, Win 7 Features

Windows Server 2008 R2 is a modest upgrade to Microsofts server operating system line that stands out most for its improvements to Hyper-V virtualization and for new features targeted at Windows 7 clients.
– …



REVIEW: Windows Server 2008 R2 Serves as Virtualization, Windows 7 Foundation

With this R2 release of Windows Server 2008, Hyper-V gains the ability to shift virtual machines from one host to another without interruption. This version of Windows Server is also the first in a decade to be released in tandem with a new Windows client (in this case, Windows 7). As such, Windows Server 2008 R2 includes many features that make it and Windows 7 better together.
– Windows Server 2008 R2 is a modest upgrade, but its one that’s worth paying attention to for organizations tracking Microsofts foray into server virtualization–Hyper-V–as well as for companies looking to deploy Windows 7 in the short term.
With this R2 release, Hyper-V gains the capacity for shif…



Do Hyper-V’s Improvements Make It a Stronger VMware Rival?

Hyper-V, part of the Windows Server 2008 R2 platform, provides some improvements that were absolutely necessary for Microsoft to even think of competing with VMware’s latest offerings. Are they enough? eWEEK Labs’ early look at the new Hyper-V shows that Microsoft still has a lot of ground to cover.
– Microsoft released Windows Server 2008 R2 with a newly improved version of
Hyper-V. Even so, VMware is still miles ahead in terms of the features and
innovation that lay the foundation for sustainable virtualization for midsize and
large enterprises.
In fact, I think VMware with its just-release…



Intel Online Calculator Measures Server Performance, Efficiency

On its Website for IT professionals, Intel has introduced a calculator that customers can use to determine the performance and power efficiency of their servers. The calculator takes into account everything from the age of the server to the number of cores on the processor to the energy consumption at both idle and full utilization. Many technology vendors, including Sun, AMD, VMware, HP and Dell, offer online calculators that help businesses measure everything from energy consumption to ROI.
– Intel has introduced a new calculator on its Website for IT administrators
that lets them determine the performance and efficiency of their servers.
The tool, on the Intel Premiere IT
Professional site, also lets IT folks find out what their server
performance and efficiency could be if they mad…



Chip Shot: New Tool Scores Server Efficiency

The Intel Premier IT Professional site offers a new server efficiency tool that gives IT professionals a snapshot of their current performance and energy efficiency versus what it could be by turning up the number of processor cores and use of virtualization. It also compares their data centers with those of other IPIP members.

Oracle Price Hikes May Be Part of Procurement Game

Oracle’s raising of prices on three database components by as much as 40 percent prompts Microsoft to advertise its SQL Server 2008 and options as remaining at the same price point. One analyst suggests that Oracle’s price bump may be a play to appeal to procurement managers, who can earn bonuses and salary perks based on bringing in steeper discounts on infrastructure products.
– Oracle
recently increased the costs of a few database products, leading Microsoft
to address the issue in a corporate blog post affirming the value of SQL Server
2008.
However, Oracle’s move may be a play to appeal to procurement managers, in
order to build a greater degree of customer loyal…


Microsoft Earnings Fall Sharply Ahead of Windows 7 Launch

Microsoft felt the effects of the global recession, including declines in the PC and server markets, as its earnings declined 17 percent from the same quarter in 2008. Although Microsoft came in below Wall Street Estimates with $13.10 billion in quarterly revenue, it can look forward to a possible earnings bump later in 2009 with the release of Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008.

Microsoft took a hit to it earnings during its fourth financial quarter of 2009,
reporting a 17 percent decline in year-over-year revenue. Overall, Microsoft earned $13.10 billion for the quarter,
coming in more than $1 billion below Wall Street estimates.

Although Microsoft hit several tech…


Microsoft Windows 7, Windows Server 2008 R2 Released to Manufacturing

Microsoft announces that Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 have been released to manufacturing. In addition, Microsoft says it plans to release a family pack that would allow Windows 7 Home Premium to be installed on up to three PCs. Microsoft is presumably hoping that a high rate of adoption for its new products will improve its flagging finances.
– Microsoft
announced the release of both Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 to
manufacturing on July 22.
The two platforms represent a major part of Microsoft’s grand strategy, as
it seeks to capitalize on technological trends such as virtualization that are
rapidly changing the face of IT. T…


12 Reasons Why Unix Won’t Disappear Any Time Soon (and 3 Reasons It Might)

Oracle’s $7.4 acquisition of Sun Microsystems may be raising as many questions as it answered, not the least of which is, what will the software giant do with Sun’s extensive server portfolio? And what Oracle does with Sun’s UltraSPARC line of servers could have an impact on Solaris’ future. Sun’s Unix OS may be expanding its reach into the x86 server space, through deals with Dell, Hewlett-Packard and IBM, but it has a major presence in Sun’s UltraSPARC server customer base. The Oracle-Sun deal raises the same questions many in the industry have had about the future of Unix, particularly given the continued rapid growth of x86 server sales and the increasingly Unix-like workloads that those less-expensive systems can carry. However, while there may be some questions about Unix’s long-term viability, there are plenty of reasons to expect that the operating system will be around for years to come. (Many thanks should go to IDC analyst Jean Bozman, Pund-IT Research analyst Charles King and Sageza Group analyst Clay Ryder for their contributions to the list.)
– …


Labs Gallery: Citrix XenServer 5.5 Makes Advances in No-Cost Server Virtualization Space

Version 5.5 of the no-cost Citrix XenServer provides improved backup and snapshot capabilities, as well as the ability to integrate with Microsoft Active Directory. However, while the no-cost version will be suitable for modest-size organizations, data centers that must ensure high performance will need to move up to the Essentials, which costs from $2,700 to more than $5,000 per server.
– …


How to Get More Out of Your Home Network

 How to Get More Out of Your Home Network

For most people, a wireless router is just a way to share your broadband Internet connection across the several computers and wifi-enabled devices  in your house. Your router is not just a point of connection to your cable or DSL modem, though – it connects every other computer and device in your house in one big network. With not much work at all, you can easily take advantage of this to make home-wide backups simple, to centralize your music collection, to share household files and services, and even to operate computers on other rooms. We’re used to going over the Internet to share resources on other computers, but all the Internet is is a gigantic, industrial-strength version of the network in your own home.

A quick overview of your home network

Your router is a simple device, really – all it does it bounce data from one computer to another. When I upload a picture from my laptop to my Picasa account, for example, my laptop requests a connection from my router, which accepts the connection and requests the file, which my laptop sends. Then the router readdresses the data in my photo to the modem, which readdresses it to a router on my broadband provider’s network, which sends it out onto the Internet bound for the routers at Picasa. (OK, I’m simplifying a little, but that’s the basic gist. All I’ve really left out are the order of priests who chant the holy invocations that run the Internet.)

Out on the Internet, every computer has an address, a crazy number that looks like this: 74.125.127.147 (that’s Google’s homepage, if you’re wondering). On your home network, every computer has an address, too – a crazy number that looks like this: 192.168.10.4 – the last two digits being anything from 0 to 255. On the Internet, the URLs we’re familiar with (google,.com, lifehack.org, etc.) are aliases for those crazy numbers – their secret identities. The crazy numbers are the “IP address”, the location of the computer we’re looking for. On our home network, we’re stuck with the crazy numbers (for now – in a moment I’ll show you how to replace them with more memorable addresses.) 

To find out the IP addresses of the computers on your home network:

  • On Windows, open a command line (Start > Run and type “cmd”) and type “ipconfig” – several lines will come up, including your IP address.
  • On Mac OSX, look under your system preferences.
  • On Linux, use your magic telepathic powers to mind meld with the machine. When that doesn’t work, try “/sbin/ifconfig” at the command line.

Now, unless you got fancy when configuring your PCs, your router technically assigns a new IP address to each computer when it logs onto the network. In practice, I find that routers tend to assign the same IP address to the same PCs pretty consistently, but to be certain you can go into your computer’s network settings and copy the IP address, subnet mask, and default gateway in, giving each computer a permanent IP address.

Here are some things you can do to get more out of your fancy home network:

1. Centralize content to one main computer

I have a desktop PC that’s on all the time that I use as the central “hub” in my home network. Because it has the biggest hard drive in the house, I use it to store all my documents, media files, photos, and everything else. Most files Are opened from and saved to that single My Documents folder; if I need a file on another computer – for example, if I’m going to be working on something while traveling with my netbook, it gets saved to a Windows Live Mesh folder and automatically synced back to the hub whenever I’m online.

You don’t need any special software to open files from or save files to another computer on your network – not usually, anyway. Even on mixed networks, most contemporary operating systems include software to allow them to communicate with other OSes. I find that even streaming audio and video across my home network is hitch-free – so I can watch a video on my netbook in the bedroom even though the file’s on my desktop in the living room.

2. Backup like a superstar

Since everything important is on one computer, I only have to backup from that computer. All new files are copied to an external hard drive from that computer every night using SyncBack. For redundancy, I also backup that computer to Mozy. The My Document folder on my two laptops is mirrored on the hub computer using Windows Live Mesh (which means they’re also backed up online at the Windows Live Mesh homepage).

3. Run a server

Since I do some web design from time to time, I have a webserver running on my home network – on the hub, naturally. Installation is simple: download XAMPP, run the installer, and you’re done. XAMPP installs Apache, the industry-standard web server; MySQL, the industry-standard relational database; and PHP, a scripting language. I also have a Rails server running on the same computer, from when I was using Tracks, a Ruby on Rails-based GTD app.

So, for instance, let’s say I’m working on a new website. I create a new directory in the “htdocs” folder in the XAMPP directory and install Wordpress into it. Then, from any computer in the house, I can type “192.168.10.4/newfolder” to work with Wordpress, just like I’d installed it on the Web. That looks ugly, but to be honest, I don’t type all that: I type “olympus/newfolder” into my browser, because I’ve modified the hosts file – on which we’ll talk in just a moment.

4. Use any computer in the house directly with VNC

Let’s say I’m on the couch and I want to check something on the desktop but I don’t want to get up. Easy – I fire up UltraVNC and voila – the screen from my desktop appears on my netbook (well, some of it – I have a 20” widescreen on my desktop and a 9” screen on the netbook, so I have to scroll around a little to see the whole screen…).

UltraVNC is free, open source, and simple to use. Download it and install it on every computer. It will install both a client, for viewing other computers on the network, and a server, for sharing the host computer’s screen with others. To view another computer’s desktop, run the VNC client, enter the IP address of the remote computer, enter the password, and that’s it – you can go full-screen and it’s like you’re sitting right in front of the remote computer.

Here’s one thing I use this for: Olympus, my hub computer, is right next to the TV (thankfully it’s a really quiet computer) and has TV-out. So I run Hulu Desktop (or other video) on the hub, in full screen mode, feed the image to my TV via an S-Video cable, and use my netbook as a remote control using VNC to access Olympus’ desktop. Perfect.

5. Edit your hosts file to give your networked PCs easier-to-remember names

If you do a lot of network stuff, you’re going to get tired of typing “192.168.100.114” and the like. It would be much better if you could just use words like you do on the Internet, right?

You can do that easily enough by adding entries to your computer’s hosts file. Normally when you enter a URL into a browser, the computer sends out to your ISP’s DNS servers to translate that word into an IP address, but first it checks the hosts file – if the hosts file gives an IP address, it skips the DNS lookup on the Internet. What this means is that you can assign the IP addresses of your computers names that are easy to remember, like “minerva”, “mercury”, and “oracle” (those are computers and devices on my home network – I”m sooooo clever!).

To change your hosts file:

  • Go to c:\winnt\system32\drivers\etc\ on Windows 2000 and XP Pro or c:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\ on Windows XP Home and Vista and open the file called “hosts” in Notepad (or another text editor; in Vista, you have to run Notepad as an administrator).
  • Open Terminal.app on Mac OSX and enter “$ sudo nano /private/etc/hosts “ without the quotes.
  • Go to /etc on Linux and open the file “hosts”. Most likely.

There should be a line that says “127.0.0.1 localhost” – don’t touch that. Below it, start entering lines like this for each computer on your network: [IP address]<tab>[Desired name]

So, for example: 192.168.10.2 olympus

Don’t forget the tab between the IP address and the new name.  Notice I skipped 192.168.10.3 – that’s the computer I’m writing on now, and if I want to access it from itself, I just type “localhost”. Now, when I type “olympus” int  the browser window, it connects to that computer. Since XAMPP is running there, I get the home page for Apache – which I could replace with something of my choice, but I haven’t.  If I want to run Tracks, which runs on port 3000, I would type “olympus:3000” into my browser.

6. Share a printer

It’s stupid to have a printer attached to every computer in the house. Instead, I have a single laser printer attached to the hub, and I can print to it from any PC on the network – as long as the hub computer is on, which it always is. (Technically, because I have a networked printer, I could plug it directly into the router, but the router’s up near the ceiling and I don’t want another cable hanging down, so I connect it to the hub PC instead). Although I don’t currently have a color inkjet for photos, when I did, it was connected to the hub PC too.

To share a printer, just go into the Printer settings on the computer it’s connected to, right-click, and select “Sharing…”. Turn on printer sharing. Now, go to “Add printer” on the other PC, and search the network for your printer. If all goes according to plan, your computer should install teh drivers from the host computer, and you’re set. If it doesn’t go well, you may need to use the install disc or download te drivers from the manufacturer’s website, and follow the instructions for installing a network printer. (It’s more complex on OSX and Linux, but google “share printer” and your operating system’s name and I’m sure you’ll find easy enough directions.)

The End

Do you have cool network tips to share with your fellow Lifehack readers? Share your network setup in the comments!


Dustin M. Wax is the project manager at Stepcase Lifehack. He is also the creator of The Writer’s Technology Companion, a site devoted to the tools of the writing trade. When he’s not writing, he teaches anthropology and gender studies in Las Vegas, NV. He is the author of Don’t Be Stupid: A Guide to Learning, Studying, and Succeeding at College.

Follow him on Twitter: @dwax.



Steeleye Announces Protection Suite for Windows Server

Cost-conscious businesses looking for a disaster recovery might turn to Steeleye’s latest version of Protection Suite for Windows Server.

Data and application availability management specialist
Steeleye Technology announced the latest version of their SteelEye Protection
Suite (SPS) for Windows Server, a combined high availability and disaster
recovery solution for Windows Server 2003 and Windows Server 2008. Integr…


Steeleye Announces Protection Suite for Windows Server

Cost-conscious businesses looking for a disaster recovery might turn to Steeleye’s latest version of Protection Suite for Windows Server.

Data and application availability management specialist
Steeleye Technology announced the latest version of their SteelEye Protection
Suite for Windows Server, a combined high availability and disaster
recovery solution for Windows Server 2003 and Windows Server 2008. Integrating


IBM Lotus Foundations Reach Adds Instant Messaging, VOIP

IBM Lotus Foundations Reach brings VOIP, instant messaging, presence and several more messaging and collaboration tools to its Lotus Foundations Start appliance. The offerings are aimed at Microsoft’s Office, Small Business Server and Office Communications Server suites. IBM also created widgets to let users access LinkedIn and TripIt from Lotus Notes.
– IBM July 15 said it is adding instant
messaging, VOIP, file transfer and several more options to its Lotus Foundations appliance, a Linux-based collaboration
server the company makes for its business partners to sell small to midsize
businesses.
IBM next month will offer Lotus
Foundations Reac…


Promise Technology Offers Digital Media Server

Promise’s NAS media server offers cost-conscious businesses and home office users power and performance while reducing the amount of power needed to run it.
– Promise Technology, known as the originator of SATA/ATA redundant
array of inexpensive disks (RAID) products, announced a digital media server
aimed at small business and home office users, the SmartStor NS4600. The
server, priced at $399.00 and available through retail and reseller channels,
of…


Promise Technology Offers Digital Media Server

Promise’s NAS media server offers cost-conscious businesses and home office users power and performance while reducing the amount of power needed to run it.
– Promise Technology, known as the originator of SATA/ATA redundant
array of inexpensive disks (RAID) products, announced a digital media server
aimed at small business and home office users, the SmartStor NS4600. The
server, priced at $399 and available through retail and reseller channels,
offer…