Windows Small Business Server (SBS)
is an integrated server suite from Microsoft; Designed for running network
infrastructure (both intranet management and Internet access) of small and
medium enterprises with no more than 75 workstations or users. Application
server technologies are integrated to enable businesses with solutions such as
the Remote Web Workplace, and offer management benefits such as integrated
setup, enhanced monitoring, a unified management console, and remote access.
Top 11 Reasons to Upgrade to Windows Server 2008
Microsoft Windows Server 2008, with built-in
Web and virtualization technologies, enables businesses to increase the
reliability and flexibility of their server infrastructure. New virtualization
tools, Web resources, and security enhancements help save time, reduce costs,
and provide a platform for a dynamic and optimized datacenter. Powerful new
tools, like Internet Information Services (IIS) 7.0 and Server Manager,
provide more control over servers, and streamline Web, configuration, and
management tasks. Advanced security and reliability enhancements, such as
Network Access Protection and the Read-Only Domain Controller, harden the
operating system and help protect the server environment to ensure a solid
foundation on which to build businesses.
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Most servers operate at far below their
capacities, with as much as 80 to 90 percent of their processing power
unused, on average. With Hyper-V, the Windows Server 2008 virtualization
solution, a single physical server can host the workloads of multiple Line
of Business servers. Hyper-V helps organizations to achieve optimal use of
their hardware resources and provides the agility needed to adapt to
changing IT needs. New management tools simplify the deployment process
and allow IT departments to manage virtual servers with the same familiar
tools that they use to manage the physical servers in the network.
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Windows Server 2008 provides improvements
and innovations to Terminal Services with solutions, like Terminal
Services RemoteApp (TS RemoteApp), that allow users to access individual
applications, instead of a computer desktop in a Terminal Server session.
These applications run on the host computer and send only the application
windows to the user, requiring fewer resources on the client side, and
reducing administration and deployment costs.
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Many network servers perform specific
dedicated and mission-critical roles within the network. The new Server
Core installation option provides a minimal environment for running
specific server roles. This helps improve reliability and efficiency,
giving the IT department the ability to better utilize existing hardware.
It also simplifies ongoing administration and patch management
requirements by reducing the need to update unneeded files and
functionality.
For network servers that perform specific
network infrastructure roles, the new Server Core installation option
offers a highly reliable and efficient platform. Because Server Core loads
the fewest operating system components required to run core infrastructure
roles, patch requirements are reduced. This provides higher reliability
and security for core network infrastructure roles.
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As Web content gets richer and the Web
becomes a viable platform for delivering business applications, the Web
server is moving to the center of many networks. IIS 7.0 delivers
solutions for today's demanding content, including streaming media and Web
applications in Active Server Pages and PHP. With an updated interface
that makes administration easier, the new modular design of IIS 7.0
enables administrators to minimize the attack surface of the Web server by
installing only the needed components
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The efficient use of bandwidth has a direct
impact on the productivity of users working in remote locations that rely
on WAN connections to the organization’s central servers. The redesigned
“next generation” TCP/IP included in Windows Server 2008 provides vastly
improved performance in a remote location scenario, offering faster
throughput and more efficient routing of network traffic. Using the
combination of Windows Server 2008 and Windows Vista in a branch office
scenario can provide as much as a threefold improvement in throughput over
the WAN connection.
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With the increasing number of mobile users
and corporate partners that must connect to an organization’s network,
protecting the security of that network from outside threats is an ongoing
challenge. Network Access Protection (NAP) in Windows Server 2008 helps
prevent non-compliant computers from accessing an organization’s network.
NAP can verify the health of connecting computers and enforce compliance
with an organization’s security standards.
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Windows Server 2008 provides increased
scalability for the most demanding business solutions and helps keep
businesses operating through unplanned downtime with high availability
features. With support for failover clusters, Network Load Balancing,
dynamic hardware partitioning, robust storage options, and advanced
machine-check architecture, Windows Server 2008 helps safeguard against
single-point-of-failure problems. Simplified deployment and management
help organizations of all sizes take advantage of these features to
improve availability and reliability.
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Companies need to share information with
partners and clients without losing control over that information. Rights
Management Services enables organizations to control how documents are
used—including who can view them, whether they can be printed, even
whether they can be forwarded or deleted—both internally and externally.
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Windows Server 2008 includes Subsystem for
UNIX-based Applications (SUA), a multi-user UNIX environment that supports
more than 300 UNIX commands, utilities, and shell scripts. Users can
maintain one user name and password for Windows domains and UNIX systems,
synchronizing the credentials automatically when one changes. SUA runs on
Windows-based servers without any emulation, providing for native UNIX
performance and enabling UNIX applications to leverage Windows APIs and
components.
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Remote sites, such as branch offices, can
be an IT challenge. Often, there is no local IT staff, making the
deployment of software and security updates expensive and time-consuming.
It can be difficult to enforce security and IP standards in a remote site.
Windows Server 2008 enables remote management that's almost as good as
being physically located onsite, allowing administrators to correct many
problems using remote management. The new Read-Only Domain Controller
provides a safer way to provide Active Domain administration in the remote
infrastructure.
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The Server Manager Console provides a
single, unified console for managing a server’s configuration and system
information, displaying server status, identifying problems with server
role configuration, and managing all roles installed on the server. Built
on the Service Modeling Language (SML) platform, Server Manager allows
administrators to complete tasks with fewer clicks without having to
navigate between multiple tools and interfaces. Server Manager also
interfaces directly with PowerShell, the command-line shell and scripting
language for automation. All Server Manager functions that can be used in
the interface are available to PowerShell scripts. The interface even
helps write those scripts, showing administrators exactly what commands
are behind each button and control, and allowing administrators to record
actions in the UI and save a script based off of those actions.
Also check out Microsoft.com for more information.
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