If it is just a file server, I recommend webfaction (recommended to me by 
someone on this list). They recently offered
an upgrade to 100gb for the same low price.

Depending on how many people have to access it, you might check out a VPS. Some 
like infinitelyvirtual will 'rent'
terminal server licenses. It is reasonable for a small number of users, not 
sure if they have volume discounts. I like
this because if you run out of power, you can simply add memory or CPU cores 
and disk space. For us it was much less
expensive than continuing to maintain our own servers in house. Also, you 
access with RDP which means you can get full
speed performance with your old win2000 computers.

Outsourcing has set me free. I no longer have to worry about the servers going 
down when I am not there.

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "M Jarvis" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, July 24, 2012 9:48 AM
Subject: [NF] web server specs


My hardware skills and knowledge are woefully out of date... I've been
tasked with spec'ing out a new web server for our intranet. Our
current one is something like 12 years old, running out of space, and
frankly our big fear is that it will just up and die some day soon.

Mostly it just stores documents and runs some queries, does some light
web form work, nothing terribly demanding. What makes it so special is
that it is a mission critical machine (hospitals love their
documentation).

We have plans to virtualize servers down the road, but there is time
pressure to do something with this server right now.

It specs out as: Win2K, SP4, x86 AT box, 523K RAM, Seagate drive
partitioned as C: (4 gig - OS), D: (13 gig - data/other).

We have a media server available so the replacement won't have to do
much serving of streaming media or other heavy lifting.

I want to migrate the functionality to a CMS such as Drupal or
similar, so one of my concerns is to have enough horsepower to run the
CMS in addition to the documents etc that are on the machine. It would
be great to get a document management system in place as well but so
far that hasn't come up in this go-around.

What sort of size and capabilities should I be looking for? Bigger and
Faster sure, but what are folks putting into/on servers these days?
We're a windows shop (other than our phone system) so I'm stuck with
running that.

I'm hoping to gather some ideas then pass this off to our network guy
to do the actual pricing and ordering.

TIA,

-- 
Matt Jarvis
Eugene, Oregon USA

[excessive quoting removed by server]

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