Hey, I just said the same thi..... WAAAAAIT....

 

Yeah!

 

-sc

 

From: Jonathan Link [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, March 25, 2010 1:41 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: How would you go about this?

 

Independent corroboration is never superfluous! 

On Thu, Mar 25, 2010 at 1:33 PM, Andrew S. Baker <[email protected]>
wrote:

Thanks for making my commentary superfluous, SC.  :) 


-ASB: http://XeeSM.com/AndrewBaker



On Thu, Mar 25, 2010 at 10:11 AM, Steven M. Caesare
<[email protected]> wrote:

        We have seem extended server life as well, for a variety of
reasons, one
        particular of which having been a significant number of
applications
        being deprecated, and the development effort is happening on new
        platforms, so there's no incentive to upgrade the old systems ,
as they
        will be EOL'ed once the user base is migrated.
        
        For boxes that may have been failing, we simply VM'ed many of
them
        (often bumping up the resources available to them in the
process).
        
        With the advent of virtualization, I see us adding/upgrading VM
servers
        on a semi-regular basis, increasing the resources given to VM's
and/or
        migrating the heaviest ones to the new boxes, and slowly
retiring the
        old.
        
        The life cycle I suspect look similar to what it did for the
physical
        boxes (3-5 yrs with some maint. Costs), but the VM's they host
will
        likely be much more fluid...
        
        -sc

        
        > -----Original Message-----
        > From: Charlie Kaiser [mailto:[email protected]]
        > Sent: Thursday, March 25, 2010 10:01 AM
        > To: NT System Admin Issues
        > Subject: RE: How would you go about this?
        >

        > +1.
        > While 5 or 6 years ago 3 year server replacements were the
norm,
        that's no
        > longer the case. By the time you put together server cost, OS
license,
        and
        > migration consulting costs, a small business is unwilling to
pay $10
        or so to
        > upgrade their SBS box or exchange server just because it's
old.
        > We're running into many more aged hardware issues than we used
to, and
        > some of them are ugly.
        >
        > ***********************
        > Charlie Kaiser
        > [email protected]
        > Kingman, AZ
        > ***********************
        >
        > > -----Original Message-----

        > > From: Erik Goldoff [mailto:[email protected]]
        > > Sent: Thursday, March 25, 2010 6:29 AM
        > > To: NT System Admin Issues
        > > Subject: RE: How would you go about this?
        > >
        > > "You get five years out of a server? I think you need the
help."
        > >
        > >
        > >

        > > *or* YOU are luckily spoiled !
        > >
        > >
        > >
        > > Yes, a 3 year lifecycle refresh is ideal, but not realistic
        > > budget-wise for MANY out there in the real world. Especially
in the
        > > SMB market, I frequently run into aging servers with some of
my
        > > consulting clients.  You'd be hard pressed to convince them
to
        replace
        > > a server that is currently working as expected with new
hardware
        > > and/or new OS without proving any significant benefit in
features
        over
        > > the existing systems.  The biggest issue on aging servers
that I see
        > > is drive failures, and insufficient drive space/size due to
data
        > > growth.  Data volumes can be replaced/upgraded without an
entirely
        new
        > > server in many if not most cases.
        > >
        > >
        > >
        > > That said, we all know that Windows 2000 ( all flavors
including
        > > servers ) are dropping from Microsoft support July 12th this
year.
        So
        > > the lack of support, service packs, and vulnerability fixes
*will*
        be
        > > a driving factor for OS upgrades which work out well with
hardware
        > > upgrades
        > >
        > > Erik Goldoff
        > >
        > > IT  Consultant
        > >
        > > Systems, Networks, & Security
        > >
        > > '  Security is an ongoing process, not a one time event ! '
        > >

        > > From: Holstrom, Don [mailto:[email protected]]
        > > Sent: Thursday, March 25, 2010 9:15 AM
        > > To: NT System Admin Issues
        > > Subject: RE: How would you go about this?
        > >
        > >
        > >
        > > You get five years out of a server? I think you need the
help. I was
        > > just looking for some help in picking up a file server. I
replace
        all
        > > my workstations and servers every three years. But I only
have 130
        > > workstations and servers.
        > >
        > >
        > >
        > > Your growth estimate is OK as it increases here at the
Museum. That
        is
        > > why I am splitting the data onto several HDs.
        > > Thanks for your help.
        > >
        > >
        > >
        > > From: Jonathan Link [mailto:[email protected]]
        > > Sent: Wednesday, March 24, 2010 4:18 PM
        > > To: NT System Admin Issues
        > > Subject: Re: How would you go about this?
        > >
        > >
        > >
        > > I'm not going to answer your question, instead I'm going to
pick
        apart
        > > your request.
        > >
        > > We really don't have any idea of what your rate of data
growth is.
        > > There are two estimates we can make from the data supplied,
linear
        > > growth or geometric growth.  With linear, you're adding
about 125 GB
        > > of data per year.  With geometric you're doubling your data
every
        ~19
        > > months.  So, if you expect the same growth rate, in 5 years
(assumed
        > > life of a
        > > server) you're at either +625 GB of data or over 8 TB of
data.
        > >
        > > Just taking a step back and looking at it from 30,000 feet,
a server
        > > is the least of your storage concerns if you're doubling
your data
        > > every 19 months or so.
        > >
        > > On Wed, Mar 24, 2010 at 3:38 PM, Holstrom, Don
<[email protected]>
        > > wrote:
        > >
        > > I have a file server that has gone above 1 TB. When I first
came
        here
        > > to the museum a few years ago (8), they had 33 gigs of data
on one
        > > server. I brought in file tape backups until last year when
the
        backup
        > > went out of that range.
        > >
        > > I always used SCSI RAIDs but even now that is a bit high.
        > >
        > > So
        > >
        > > I have ordered a new file server with six HD openings. I am
figuring
        a
        > > pair of 10,000-rpm 150 or 300 gig HDs for the OS, I can go
Server 03
        > > or 08, figuring on 08. I would back up one with the other.
Then for
        > > data, two 2TBS backed up for the main data and two 1.5 or
less for
        > > other data, also backed up.
        > > Then I could/would backup to external 2TB drives for
longevity.
        > >
        > > What thinkist thee? Is there another way I should go? Data
here will
        > > continue to increase at the same rate...
        > >

 

 

 

 

 

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