Why install Small Business Server 2000?

Before moving on with the SBS2K project I will digress a little and go over the reasons I am pursuing SBS2K versus the Linux alternative. First of all the most important business task I am looking at improving is my email and shared folder storage. About a year ago I installed a Toshiba M500D server on my local network. Since cost was a major consideration I picked it up off of Ubid. My objective at that time was to install shared folders, install a local intranet server to prototype web page changes, and to practice for the MSCE server exam. So I added 512K of memory, installed W2K server, and was off and running. A couple of months later I started focusing on making improvements to my email system, Outlook. I was pulling mail from my ISP and storing it in Outlook. The problem was that I needed to get to my mail from different machines on my local network. There are many solutions in this area but I settled on a IMAP implementation from IMA. They had both a W2K version and a Linux version. I know this sounds corny but I liked the idea of a migration path to Linux. So I installed the W2K version and moved my most of email folders out of Outlook to the IMAP server. I had a few problems with IMAP but nothing serious to me. The biggest problems were:

  1. Moving and deleting nested mail folders
  2. Running rules on IMAP folders.
  3. Backup and recovery was pretty ambigous
  4. The IMAP server did not like my local domain name suffix, .local. It has several form validation routines that reject any suffix greater than 3 characters.

Recently I was pondering these problems and whether I should fork over the money for software maintenance when Microsoft made me a very appealing offer. They said if I signed up as a partner and went to a Small Business Server training class they would give me a NFR copy of SBS2K. They further said that they had a channel promotion in which they would give me an up to $500 rebate if I sell SBS2K to a new customer. When I put on my small businessman hat and looked at my problems, I concluded that SBS2K could be very appealing. A small business could get a quality email server, firewall, and SQL server for a little bit more than the price of the W2K server. For all the people who just want to use their PC rather than understand how they work, this is much more appealing than a Linux/IMAP solution. So I went to the class. Harry Brelsford was the instructor. Harry is a consultant whose business is focused around SBS2K and writing books. He conducted a very practical class and naturally recommended we follow the recommendations in his book, SBS2K: Best Practices, to minimize support issues. I was impressed enough to buy a copy of the book. Of course, I bought it off of Ebay to save a few bucks. Now I am waiting for my copy of SBS2K and reading the frequent posts to the SBS2K newsgroup on Yahoo.

This Website Project

I am in the midst of several new projects, SBS2K, Redhat 7.2 Server, and this website. All of these projects combine small business objectives with a learning project. This website started out on a trial with Radio Userland. I wanted a weblog with categories that was not only easy to use but could integrate RSS easily. I looked at Greymatter and Movable Type since I had limited myself to PERL initially. The hosting provider were I wanted to place this site wanted more money for PHP/Mysql so I eliminated some very nice weblog packages that relied on it. The more I looked at the various packages the more important RSS became to me. So RSS drove me here. This site has some bugs but it has most of the features I want, a lot of potential, and is inexpensive. I have decided I am going to keep this site as my Consulting/Personal website and I have started working at feeding news updates via RSS site to another site, Legacy Farm Ltd. The Small Business Server 2000(Microsoft) and the Linux Server projects both involve email/intranet issues and I will talk out loud about them over the next couple of weeks.

" We Were Soldiers Once…And Young"

Bertrand Russell. “Patriotism is the willingness to kill and be killed for trivial reasons.” [Quotes of the Day]

Carl von Clausewitz. “No one starts a war–or rather, no one in his senses ought to do so–without first being clear in his mind what he intends to achieve by that war and how he intends to conduct it.”

cover cover 

I just finished reading the book, “We Soldiers Once… And Young” and recently read the book, “Black Hawk Down”.Both of these books are great “war” stories. Despite almost thirty years that separate the events, both stories are very similar. They are action packed with lots of blood and gore sandwiched between individual acts of heroism. The movie “Black Hawk Down” with its great cinematography and sound is in my opinion better than the book. However I found these great “war” books difficult to read in this environment of a pending war with Iraq. The tactical advantage of the United States in Viet Nam and Somalia was their technological superiority. The weakness of the United States remains its unwillingness to sustain casualties to achieve a military objective. All of this sounds too much like the current situation with Iraq. I doubt the current administration has the political stomach to fight an urban war like as they did in Black Hawk Down. They definitely do not want to repeat the political and military mistakes from Viet Nam in Iraq. If for no other reason than the current situation in Iraq, these are important books for you to read.

CTEA Act revisited

This is a good article about the ongoing digital rights issue. It focuses on the 1998 Copyright Term Extension Act(CTEA) that extends copyright protection from 20 years after the author's death to 70 years. I don't see where the CTEA promotes the arts by protecting their economic value and thereby fosters greater incentives to create.

BusinessWeek: A Case to Define the Digital Age. A Supreme Court ruling against the CTEA would be the first major victory for digital-rights activists, who want more books, music, and images to enter the public domain. And it would be a grand defeat for corporations, which claim they would forfeit billions in lost revenues. [Tomalak's Realm]