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| Computer Room |
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Guest Room | |||||||
| Merlins_Rook WinNT4 Server
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Castlerock_Keep WinNT4 WS | ||
| 2 OPEN PORTS |
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1 OPEN PORT | ||||||
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MASTER BEDROOM |
2 OPEN PORTS | |||||||
| Cathedral_Keep Win2000Pro (Primary System)
DSTINSON.COM |
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Kids' Room | |||||||
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3 UNASSIGNED WIRE PORTS | ||||||||
| Ironsmith_Keep Linux Workstation |
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802.11b | ![]() |
Knights_Hall WinME | |||
| Crusaders_Hall Laptop Port |
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802.11b | ![]() |
Archers_Hall WinME | ||||
| RT-311 DSL Router DCHP Server INTERNET DSL |
INTERNET Verizon DSL ![]() |
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802.11b linksys ![]() |
^ ^ ^ |
802.11b wireless access point | ||
| Created 10 October 2000 Modified : Copyright ©2002 DStinson.Com | |||||||||
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Server-based Family Network
We've come along a long ways from the old 10Base2 netwrok. Starting the first of March 2001, the Stinson Family Network, STIN_NET, shed its old peer-to-peer (PTP) network and went to a server-based network. The new server hails as Merlins_Rook and is a dual-Pentium III with 512Mbytes of memory and running Windows NT4 Server. While the server network now requires more work to maintain, a few advantages have made the change worthwhile. Fewer Personal AccountsAs I now have 7 computers, with an occasional laptops from visiting relatives, personal accounts are much easier to maintain and more private. Maintaining "open" single-user systems means nobody can save personal settings and maintaining 7 personal accounts on 7 machines means having a total of 49 accounts. And any of those 49 accounts can freely access personal files such as my email, my Navy reserve files, financial, web pages, etc. This does mean learning to use user-level access, instead of share-level access, however it allows better control of what files can be accessed or denied by the user. Account RoamingWith the user's account hosted on the server, a script written into a user's logon allows the account tol "follow" the user from computer to computer, remembering favorite settings. Try that with a PTP network! If you are not a scripting heavy, fear not, many of these scripts can be found on the Internet. Disk StorageEven as I am typing this, my kids are screaming for more disk space. I tell them "Disk manangement! Disk management!" I too, am looking to get more space so it is only a matter of time. But buying larger disks for each computer gets expensive. It's about $80 for a 20GB Hard drive and about $100-110 for a 40BG disk for me. That's about $300 is disks for about 80GB of storage. But at the current time, it would cost me about $150 for a single 100BG hard drive at some of my favorite vendors. Rather than upgrade every computer, if I place this on the server, which already has a single 60GB disk, that becomes 160BG of disk space available to everyone on the network. In Windows NT 4.0 Sp4 or better, you can limit the amount of space the kids want to chew up by setting disk quotas in the System Policy Editor. Back Up UtilitiesBackups are easy problem. back up the server storage only. Folks want their files backed up, guess where they are going to store their data? Anything on the other systems is their responsibility. Sounds cruel? I have to maintain my workstation just like my other users do, as well as the server. This is a household, not a corporation. "...And kids, after you clean your room, I want you to get rid of unneeded files on your hard drives".. |