Yeah, it's an AMD dual-core Neo, but since no one seems to know what that is, 
I've given up trying to explain it :) Atom seems to have more recognition.

FWIW, my team has another one of these sitting in the office (again because 
it's quiet/cool). It's running SharePoint 2010 with about 6-7GB of documents, 
which we access using SharePoint Workspace and Outlook. For BAU, I don't think 
the CPU gets much above 5%

I did a quick check on my server at home, and Perfmon.exe was using more CPU 
than anything else :) I ran a few admin tools, copied some files, checked the 
spam filters etc. Exchange is receiving around 50,000 messages/day (>99% spam 
:)), yet the VM is using about 3% of the host's CPU.

Given that we used to run these things on 500Mhz or lower specced servers, I 
think CPUs running at 1.3Ghz (or more) these days, should provide sufficient 
grunt for server Ops. IMHO disk is the biggest bottleneck. Put a couple of SSDs 
into your server and see what happens. I think you'll be pleasantly surprised :)

Cheers
Ken

From: Steven M. Caesare [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, 5 April 2012 11:33 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: recommendations on home server

Cool.. glad it's working for you.

I've had an atom-based machine. And when compared to another box that had 
practically the same disk specs, I could definitely feel the difference just 
for simple workstation tasks.

Perhaps it could be mitigated some with fast disk, additional RAM, etc... but 
I'm not sure I'd be comfortable recommending atom based devices as VM platforms.

Both my VM hosts are ProLiant dual CPU P4 HT-enabled Xeon's running at 2.8Ghz. 
Not the latest, but no slouches either.  I'd have to say that if I'm bouncing 
back and forth between a DC, my IIS box, and say Exchange, I can see some CPU 
hit. I just swapped one of these boxes in to replace an older Dual-CPU P-III 
box with the exact same amount of RAM, and identical disk. The only real 
difference is CPU horsepower, and I can tell a difference.

But as YMMV has held true for you, it's another option for folks to consider. 
Especially if heat/noise are larger factors than raw performance.

-sc

PS- As other folks have pointed out, Atom's aren't actually supported... are 
you running them anyway, or when you say "effectively has a dual-core Atom CPU" 
does that actually mean something else?




From: Ken Schaefer 
[mailto:[email protected]]<mailto:[mailto:[email protected]]>
Sent: Wednesday, April 04, 2012 10:30 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: recommendations on home server

Doing admin work takes up very little CPU... How much CPU is required to create 
a new user or issue a new cert or print a document?

Loading Exchange Management Console, or doing a WSUS server cleanup seems to be 
limited by disk I/O. Using SSDs speeds this up significantly. Even installing 
Exchange 2010 was less than 2 minutes.

On my second Proliant I have SCVMM and SCOM - even those just run along without 
consuming much CPU. Disk I/O is usually the bottleneck.

Cheers
Ken


~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
~ <http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/>  ~

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