--
Charlie.
http://msmvps.com/blogs/russel
"G. Morgan" <usenet...@gawab.com> wrote in message
news:6bgcf59r7oij95m93...@4ax.com...
>I hear a lot of good things about Windows Home Server, and have d/l the
>trial
> and the Power Pack 3 Beta. I would like to see full functionality and
> auto-starting if the host O/S is Win7 and WHS runs on a VM, and would this
> be
> advisable? I plan to dedicate a machine if I like it and buy it, but
> would
> putting it in a VM have any disadvantages? How much machine will I need?
> I
> still want to use Win7 for everyday tasks.
>
> Pentium 4 2.8 GHz (single core)
> 2GB RAM
> Nvidia 6950gt (265M)
> Win 7 Pro
>
>
I am looking forward to trying out Power Pack 3 as soon as it becomes
available. I didn't get a chance to try out the beta.
If you run your WHS under Virtual Server you can use SCSI virtual hard drives,
which do not have the 127 GB limitation.
Virtual Server is not supported on Windows 7 (will not install, even), but there
are ways to make it work.
--
David Wilkinson
Visual C++ MVP
How is that going to work? Don't you want/need your WHS to be running all the
time (or at least when your Windows 7 install is running)?
Personally I think it is a big mistake for MS not to support WHS in a virtual
environment. It's based on server 2003 which *is* supported as a guest.
I also think it is a mistake not to support Virtual Server on a Windows 7 host.
Actually, both these scenarios very likely work. But if getting Virtual Server
to run on Windows 7 is too much of a pain (it really is a pain), there is always
the free VMWare Server.
No it doesn't. And installing printer drivers, like many things you would like
to do in WHS, is not supported. It might work, but the drivers for many consumer
printers will not install on a server OS.
What I do is have the host be the print server.
As I said, you may get it to work. But installing any print driver in WHS is not
officially supported.
One of the advantages of running WHS in a virtual machine is that you do not
need to do anything unsupported in the WHS (except run it in a virtual machine...).