Hanselminutes Podcast 71 - Windows Home Server - Interview with Charlie Kindel
My seventy-first podcast is up. I've talked about Windows Home Server on my blog before and even said once that I was more excited about WHS than Vista. I've personally been running it for about 6 months now at home and I love it. In this episode I sit down with Charlie Kindel, the Product Unit Manager (PUM), behind the Windows Home Server team. This guy has worked for Microsoft for 17 years, so he knows his stuff. He helped design and ship COM/DCOM. Oy. Get some old hardware together and go get Windows Home Server RC1. Also check out the Home Server SDK as there's a USD$50,000 Developer Contest for the Best Home Server Add-Ins.
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Check out their UI Suite of controls for ASP.NET. It's very hardcore stuff. One of the things I appreciate about Telerik is their commitment to completeness. For example, they have a page about their Right-to-Left support while some vendors have zero support, or don't bother testing. They also are committed to XHTML compliance and publish their roadmap. It's nice when your controls vendor is very transparent.
As I've said before this show comes to you with the audio expertise and stewardship of Carl Franklin. The name comes from Travis Illig, but the goal of the show is simple. Avoid wasting the listener's time. (and make the commute less boring)
Enjoy. Who knows what'll happen in the next show?
About Scott
Scott Hanselman is a former professor, former Chief Architect in finance, now speaker, consultant, father, diabetic, and Microsoft employee. He is a failed stand-up comic, a cornrower, and a book author.
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But... does it (can it) incorporate mac/osx computers in the system? I assume that it could be a "nice" file-sharing platform for mac. However, I HOPE it would go beyond that and would also allow (third party?) remote control of the macs as well ;-)
Another question is if the platform can also act as a WEB SERVER? This way we could have our "practice" sites on WHS, before we put it on the web. (i.e. supporting, ASP, PHP, mySQL, ....)
Thanks!
Terry
And i fully agree that it's somehow more exciting than Vista.
Sad to see that the Add-In competition is limited to US/Canada residents... looks like T.H.A.W ("The Home Automation WiiMote") will have to be put on the back burner until i find a US citizen to front for me...
lb
Have the folks at Mozy made any positive noises with regard to WHS?
I have managed to acquire a copy of Server 2003 Standard which is a little bit over-kill for my needs. The big downside though, is that Mozy won't work with it. They want you to use MozyPro instead which costs considerably more.
TTFN,
Damian.
Great podcast! Thanks.
Great show as always Scott :)
Something I’ve been trying to figure out though (not being on the Beta program but finding the prospects of WHS very interesting) is, what is the extent of the IIS implementation on WHS?
Any idea what version of .NET is supported / will be supported. .NET 2.0 is obviously supported as that’s what Bertrands photo handler uses in Adrew Grants post on how to set up a photo page in WHS .
If it's not supported out of the box, is there the extensibility in WHS to install .NET 3.0, etc.??
Thanks and keep up the good work with the podcast!!
What was the fourth of the four innovations Charlie Kindel was so proud about? He mentioned Drive Extender, Remote Access, Full PC Backup, and ???
Question about Remote Access: If remote access to WHS works via port 443 even when port 80 is blocked by the ISP, and since port 443 traffic is--by definition--encrypted where port 80 traffic is not encrypted, why would anyone ever want to use port 80 to access their WHS?
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