Some Assembly Required

Once in hand, I had to decide on other parts.

The processor was a conundrum. Given that I was building a Windows Home Server, which has all manner of intriguing add-ins, I wanted some degree of CPU power. On the other hand, dropping $200 or more for a socket 775 Xeon seemed like overkill. So in the end, I picked up a Pentium Dual Core E5200, built on the 45nm Wolfdale die and running at 2.5GHz, for about $64.

Memory was no problem – I had a healthy supply of DDR 800 modules in house, so tossed a pair of 1GB Kingston Value RAM modules into the mix. Storage was a bit more problematic – I’d gotten used to having 2TB on hand. I also wanted to stay within  a modest power and thermal envelope. I also happened to have in the lab a pair of WD2002FYPS – the enterprise versions of Western Digitals GreenPower 2TB drives. So in went two of those.

Assembling all the parts into the Chenbro case proved quite straightforward. It’s divided into top and bottom sections, with the motherboard tray in the upper half, and the drive bays and PSU in the bottom half.

The drives screw into trays, which then slide easily into the drive bays.

Next Up: Software

Installing Windows Home Server requires either a CD drive or bootable USB key. I have a Samsung USB optical drive, so used that to install WHS. If you’ve ever installed Windows XP, the installation process for WHS is pretty straightforward.

All the systems in the basement lab are now running Windows 7 x64-bit versions – most running Home Premium, although I’m running Windows 7 Pro x64 on my production box and Windows 7 Ultimate x64 on the graphics test system.

The Windows Home Server connector software runs fine on Windows 7 (even 64-bit), provided you’ve got at least WHS Power Pack 1 installed. Power Pack 1 also solves the pesky data corruption issue that plagued the release version of WHS.

Later this year, Microsoft will ship Power Pack 3, which will enable better integration with Windows 7, including integration with Windows 7 libraries, better power management settings (such as wake up during backups, or LAN access) and better reliability.

I’ve been running the beta of Power Pack 3 over the past few days, and it’s been working without any issues, but most users should just wait for the final version to ship before installing it.

The X Factor Postmortem: Nothing’s Perfect
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  • warriorfan23 - Friday, December 4, 2009 - link

    I want to set up a WHS rig myself, but 1 quick question. Can I stream media to mac osx machines from WHS?
  • dagamer34 - Wednesday, December 2, 2009 - link

    Windows Home Server Power Pack 3 shipped November 24th. Go grab it now!
  • dagamer34 - Wednesday, December 2, 2009 - link

    Also, I still find that the added utilities included in HP's latest MediaSmart Servers far outweigh any gains made from building your own server.

    Things like:

    1) Time Machine support
    2) Superior media streaming support via TwonkyMedia
    3) Built-in video encoder
    4) iPhone streaming app
    5) Mac client
    6) Nicer case compared to home-built server
    7) Probably better thermal policies

    These things are worth spending the extra $100 or so in the long run, at least until Windows Home Server 2 fixes most of these issues.
  • Spivonious - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    My dad has the HP server. HP case only fits one harddrive, the fans are loud, and the whole thing runs a little hot. iTunes streaming doesn't work with PowerPack 3.

    Plus, building it yourself is more fun. :)
  • Exelius - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    HM MediaSmart EX495:

    4 Hot-swap SATA bays, comes with 2 1.5TB drives. Does TimeMachine, iTunes streaming, etc.

    $699 everywhere. And the case looks nicer. And has a warranty. I can understand building some things yourself, but a server that's going to sit in your basement and you can get it cheaper from a vendor? No way.
  • heinzr - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    The HP Mediasmart EX490 comes with a 1 TB disk, and sells for $499 at Newegg, and looks like the better buy. (I doubt that the EX495 comes with 2 disks.)
    I have the EX485, into which I put two additional disks, for about 9 months, and I am very happy with it.
  • heinzr - Thursday, December 3, 2009 - link

    The HP Mediasmart EX490 comes with a 1 TB disk, and sells for $499 at Newegg, and looks like the better buy. (I doubt that the EX495 comes with 2 disks.)
    I have the EX475, into which I put two additional disks for about 9 months, and I am very happy with it.

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