  rainblood12 Would You Like Fries With That?
join:2002-11-16 Union, NJ clubs:
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| [Other] WinXP server 2k3 questions
i was thinking about upgrading to win server 2k3, im unfamiliar of this type of os i was wondering if its any different that winxp? From the screenshots it looks almost exactly the same but i was wondering if it can run standard windows problems like internet explorer or nero etc.
Thanks in advance. |
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  Djdeadly
join:2000-11-03 San Jose, CA | Yes you can run Internet Explorer and Nero. You just have to know what services to turn on and off. |
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  Bink63 Tweet THIS Premium join:2002-10-06 Everywhere
| reply to rainblood12 Inertnet Exploder is still tightly integrated with Server 2K3, so no worries there and I have had no problems running Nero with 2K3 either.
My question would be, why do you feel the need to run an Enterprise-level server operating system?
There's really nothing in Server 2K3 that isn't available in XP, as far as an end user would need.
Regards,
Randy -- Legacy Consulting |
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  Djdeadly
join:2000-11-03 San Jose, CA
| said by Bink63 :
There's really nothing in Server 2K3 that isn't available in XP, as far as an end user would need.
2k3 has better memory management then xp |
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  rainblood12 Would You Like Fries With That?
join:2002-11-16 Union, NJ clubs: | reply to rainblood12 Yes thats what i was hitting for, winxp just loves the memory. |
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  Bink63 Tweet THIS Premium join:2002-10-06 Everywhere
| reply to Djdeadly said by Djdeadly : 2k3 has better memory management then xp
Really only when you're talking about memory in the >2GB range.
XP handles up to 2GB of RAM quite well, it's only above that threshold that 2K3 has an advantage.
There are so many unneeded services running with a server OS that most end users are only going to end up creating another unintentional zombie system for the script kiddies to co-opt and that isn't such a good thing for the Internet community as a whole, is it?
Granted, 2K3 is *more* secure out of the box than 2K, but there are still gaping holes that can be exploited by any dipstick that probes the system in question.
Regards,
Randy -- Legacy Consulting |
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