From what I've read in the past the main differences with server are
some nice GUI configuration tools and more services turned on by
default. That means that with regular OSX you can do pretty much the
same thing if you don't mind playing around in terminal a bit and are
good with search engines. For web servers there is a common appliance
viewpoint called LAMP or Linux, Apache, MySQL and PHP. The standard Mac
already has all these things, just not all turned on, so there is very
little in the web dev world you couldn't do on a stock Mac or MAMP
setup. Macs also include an SSH server so you can ssh into another Mac
and execute commands remotely. While all the users/groups/rights stuff
would probably be easier with a GUI on OSX server, there is nothing
preventing anyone from doing the same thing the old fashion way on plain
old OSX.
CB
David McLean wrote:
According to Gordon Smith on the Mac access list it is not very accessible and
you'd be better off sticking with Snow Leopard.
On Apr 6, 2010, at 4:26 AM, Simon Fogarty wrote:
Hi Listers,
I've just been looking at the mac mini server machine that is being
advertised on the apple website.
A mac mini 2.53 processor with 4gig ram and runningt the snow leopard
server os.
Has anyone used this OS and how usable is it with voice over?
Simon
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