Pretty much.

I believe Essentials has the same license grant as standard (one guest server 
VM) but I wouldn't quote myself on that. You'd have to license additional VMs 
beyond that.

Thanks,
Brian


Thanks,
Brian Desmond

w – 312.625.1438 | c – 312.731.3132

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Kurt Buff
Sent: Friday, January 26, 2018 1:21 PM
To: ntsysadm <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [NTSysADM] Server build recommendation

I've never played with Windows Essentials, and have very little experience with 
Hyper-V, so I'll need to do some more reading.

Let me parrot back to you, to make sure I understood what you said.

I can set up the new machine with Windows Essentials as a Hyper-V host, and use 
that, with the same media and license, to run a VM that will be the DC.

Is that correct?

If it is, could I also stand up a Win10 VM (with its own license, of course), 
and use that to run their property management software?

How many VMs does a license for Windows Essentials support? I don't see a need 
for more than two at this point, and the hardware will certainly support their 
needs, but I want to get myself educated before I go in there and make a mess.

Kurt

On Fri, Jan 26, 2018 at 7:57 AM, Susan Bradley <[email protected]> wrote:
> In SMB space I don't see VMware as the virtualization platform of 
> choice. I see HyperV, not to mention in a single host, you either go 
> with what we used to do:  Host is not domain joined, hanging off the 
> dhcp/dns of the firewall with static entries.  Or what you can do what 
> we do now in the 2012 R2 and later era which is domain join the host 
> to the DC-VM and it doesn't freak out and boots just fine without DCHP/DNS.
>
> I wouldn't use VMware.  I would do HyperV, and I would make these VMs. 
> You never know even in SMB when you have a need for a virtual machine 
> to stand up and test something, or a need for another server to put 
> the application on.
>
>
> On 1/25/2018 8:29 PM, Kurt Buff wrote:
>
> VMware really wants a DNS server at boot time. If your DNS server is a 
> VM on that host, it isn't there for VMware.
>
> This is a problem, to say the least.
>
> It's really the only reason why I have a DC on it's own physical host 
> in my server room.
>
> Kurt
>
> On Thu, Jan 25, 2018 at 7:36 PM, Susan Bradley <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Why two hosts?
>
>
>
>
> On 1/25/2018 7:09 PM, Kurt Buff wrote:
>
> I had further discussion with them today.
>
> The LOB is Timberline property management software, and they're 
> adamant about keeping it in-house. They were also set on Dell, so we 
> finally settled on a Dell T430, with an H330 RAID card, and two 1tb 
> NLSAS drives, and 16gb RAM. The Windows Essentials will come from 
> Amazon for a lot less than what Dell was charging - and they weren't 
> bundling Essentials with this machine anyway.
>
> They have moved their email to gmail (which was news to me - last I 
> had heard from them they were still using their SBS 2003 Exchange).
>
> They also wanted to keep their RD1000 unit for backups, which seemed 
> pretty reasonable - actually, they'll be getting a new RD1000 bundled 
> into the new machine, and probably keep the old one for an emergency 
> spare.
>
> I'm going to turn that server into a combined AD/DNS/DHCP and file 
> server, and  I think I can convince them to keep their Timberline 
> software on a domain-joined Win10 machine - I just gives me the 
> shivers to install third party software on a DC.
>
> I didn't save them much on pricing (maybe $100-200), but I think I got 
> them a much better machine.
>
> And, as a followup, once they have ordered it and it's in house, I'll 
> be waling through their guy on setting it all up.
>
> If I could, I'd virtualize it all, but doing that right would involve 
> two hosts, and more servers than they need, I think that it's pretty 
> good the way we went.
>
> Kurt
>
> On Thu, Jan 25, 2018 at 9:11 AM, Susan E Bradley, CPA/CITP/CFF, GSEC 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> What LOB needs do they have?  What storage?
>
> Premise peeps:  The Gen 10 Microserver doesn't have the fans it once 
> had, my peeps are recommending HP ML110e
>
> Cloud peeps:  Do they really need a server or a rethinking of what 
> they do needs to be done and office 365/mapped drive to Sharefile or 
> Google drive would be a better plan going forward.  What LOB is 
> keeping the need for the on premise server?
>
> These days, check that chip to see if it will get a spectre/meltdown 
> patch.
>
>
> On 1/25/2018 8:18 AM, Rick Berry wrote:
>
> I'd suggest the consideration of something aftermarket as an option 
> for them (since you said the words 'property management company' and 
> having supported a few of those in the past I'll make crass 
> generalizations about budget
> limitations/thriftiness)
>
> www.buysellservers.com  ... you can go build a 1U dell for instance 
> with what you want in it (like a real RAID card) and also still get a 
> drac/warranty/etc at aftermarket prices.
>
> We normally do new ourselves, but I'm also not against getting the 
> occasional 1U 'a few years old but with a fresh warranty' dell for 
> swiss-army-knife server basic stuff like a dc/dns/ad/dhcp box.
>
> So sometimes we'll grab something like an R420 poweredge and put a 
> RAID card in it/drac it and even ESXi it to internal USB bootable for 
> a few grand less than new (but still with new hd's)
>
> Just throwing it out there, I know folks sometimes cringe at the 'used'
> market but in certain situations it works.
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected]
> [mailto:[email protected]]
> On Behalf Of Kurt Buff
> Sent: Wednesday, January 24, 2018 6:46 PM
> To: ntsysadm <[email protected]>
> Subject: [NTSysADM] Server build recommendation
>
> The owner of a small 5-6 person property management company has 
> approached me to help acquire a new server. They're currently running 
> a 10+yo machine with SBS 2003, and wish to replace it.
>
> They've migrated their email to gmail, so don't need exchange, but do 
> want a DC for account management, DHCP/DNS, etc., so they're looking 
> to go with Server Essentials.
>
> The fellow he's nominated at his firm to be their sysadmin is quite 
> green, and got a quote from Dell for a tower box with a software RAID 
> card, and I told them to hold off on that purchase, while I look at 
> alternatives.
>
> I was leaning toward an HP Microserver, but haven't played with one in 
> years, and it looks like the current generation is using an AMD 
> processor, and doesn't come with a RAID card to support RAID1.
>
> Anyone have a recommendation they can make regarding hardware?
>
> Kurt
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>


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