I think you are asking if a Windows based TSM client with a SSD disk and an
i3 CPU is good for making backups of a NAS storage device.
The SSD storage in the client for nas backup doesn't really serve any
purpose, the i3 CPU might be a limiting factor if you have many
simultanious streams on a
I think the question is actually in the topic of the message, which windows
version to use.
I don't think it wil really make any difference (though I don't know the diff
between those two versions either). Just use the one common in your
organisation and if both are euqually welcome, use the
Good one Remco, I didn't read that well enough.
For what it is worth I agree with your answer. :-)
On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 1:17 PM, Remco Post r.p...@plcs.nl wrote:
I think the question is actually in the topic of the message, which
windows version to use.
I don't think it wil really make
Reply-To: ADSM: Dist Stor Manager ADSM-L@vm.marist.edu
Date: Thursday, April 10, 2014 at 7:32 AM
To: ADSM-L@vm.marist.edu ADSM-L@vm.marist.edu
Subject: Re: [ADSM-L] Better platform for TSM client for Windows v6.4/7.1:
Windows Server 2012 vs Windows 2012 Server Essentials ?
Good one Remco, I didn't
Folks:
I¹m not well versed in Windows platform specifics, so this question from
one of my customers has me flummoxed - and curious.
The system (³solid state computer with an i3 CPU²) in question will be
dedicated to the backup of a 3rd party NAS device (not NetApp, sadly) so
the TSM client
Could you share more details, I'm not sure to understand you
best regards
2014-04-09 8:40 GMT-05:00 Robert Talda r...@cornell.edu:
Folks:
I¹m not well versed in Windows platform specifics, so this question from
one of my customers has me flummoxed - and curious.
The system (³solid