Heroes Happen Here Launch Events
Attend the upcoming launch of three powerful new products, take a test drive, meet the teams, and leave with promotional copies of Windows Server 2008, Microsoft SQL Server 2008, and Microsoft Visual Studio 2008. Register here.
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Install What You Need with Windows Server 2008
Windows Server 2008 is Microsoft's most full-featured server operating system yet, so it's ironic that one of its most exciting new features is an install option that cuts out most of the other features. Paul Rubens explores why a Server Core installation makes a great deal of sense in many instances.
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Q&A with Bob Muglia: Senior VP, Server and Tools Division
Bob Muglia, senior vice president, Server and Tools Division, discusses Microsoft's new interoperability principles and the steps the company is taking to increase the openness of its products.
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Q&A with Lutz Ziob, GM of Microsoft Learning
Lutz Ziob, the general manager of Microsoft Learning, talks about how IT professionals can become certified heroes within their enterprises by getting trained and certified in Windows Server 2008.
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For something designed to (among other things) reduce the heat inherent to high-density server farms, it is slightly ironic that server blades have become the hottest item in the server world. In the past year, this developing technology has created a strong market for itself with vendors springing up whose entire strategy evolves around a blade-based product line (as in the case of RLX and Egenera) and other vendors that have created blade-based lines of business (as is the case of a Intel and Compaq).
During the past several years, the Internet has changed the course of server usage from single, carefully placed servers (consider the history of mini- and mainframe computers) to installations of multiple servers or high-density server farms. The PC revolution has also been part of this change, which has seen many large centralized computers replaced by numerous, much less expensive servers based on PC technology.
Cost has always been a big factor in this change, but the Internet accelerated the use of multiple servers to handle the scalability, redundancy, reliability, and performance that heavily trafficked Web sites require.
Today, many organizations find the concepts behind using large numbers of servers compelling even while finding the reality difficult. Amassing servers has a physical aspect wherein a lack of space, high heat, and complex cabling are serious problems. Then too, there are problems associated with securing, managing, and coordinating a large number of servers.
All of which, of course, in the end adds up to cost.