in the Microsoft press tent at the Customer Electronics (CES) Indicate,
windows 7 pro key, Microsoft is showing off just a few protypes of its just-announced Windows Household Server solution. have been rumors circulating over the past month that Windows House Server might possibly be according to Windows Vista, that's not the case,
microsoft windows 7 ultimate upgrade key, said solution director Steven VanRoekel. Windows House Server units that are being developed by a number of hardware makers,
office 2010 Professional Plus license, including Hewlett Packard, will include at their heart a variety of Windows Server 2003 technologies. (Home Server isn't Windows Server 2003-based,
microsoft office 2010 Professional 64bit, VanRoeckel clarified; rather, it is a custom conglomeration of various Windows server components. Residential home Server team is working closely with the Windows Live unit, VanRoeckel confirmed. "By the time we launch (in the second half of 2007, in time for the back-to-school buying cycle), we will have some (kind of deal) with Windows Live OneCare," VanRoeckel said. "One idea will be to have OneCare back up to the Windows House Server." When I asked VanRoeckel whether the still-unannounced LiveDrive virtual-storage service also could well be part of the Windows Household Server equation, all he would say is that LiveDrive "will figure into the same discussion (as OneCare)" in some way. Microsoft was displaying off several Windows Home server prototypes developed by original device manufacturers (ODMs). ODMs build hardware for OEMs, or system vendors. On display: "hockey puck" prototype, created as a reference design by Microsoft itself. The Inventec Residence Server IHS2B.500, a two-drive, 500GB configuration that allows for horizontal or vertical placement in a home/home office. Quanta Computer S36, an Intel-based,
office 2007 Ultimate serial, two-bay system, with an expansion bay for support of up to six additional drives 64-bit AMD Live! House Media server A couple of Intel-based "Model 1" and "Model 2" systems