Will a "server" work as a PC?

broken1

Expert Member
Joined
Jul 25, 2006
Messages
1,686
Reaction score
1
Location
Sandton Area
I can get one of these at a very competitive price from a friend: HP Proliant ML110 G4 Server

Basically, I have no idea what the difference is between this and a pc? My friend claims he's loaded XP onto it but the computer is meant to run Server 2003.

What I want to know is can I use it just like a normal PC. I want to load office, Internet, and Pastel Accounting on it - hook it up to a wireless network and a printer! :rolleyes:

Will this work fine or is it going to give me unexpected hassles I cant deal with?
 
Will work fine yes, It runs XP so there should be no problem. All that differs from a PC and a Server is the Chip. afaik
 
You'll probably need a sound card and a decent graphics card.
 
I think I've got a 64-bit version of Server 2003 lying around here somewhere? But I'm using FreeNAS in the meantime :D
 
Something to watch out for: it may be noisy. Most servers have plenty of loud and fast-running cooling fans.
 
Another thing is if you run any free software they normally give you grief about loading onto a server OS.
 
Nope. anyway, there are ways to fool software to installing. Got CS3 installed on Server :)
 
Wel if youre considering to get rid of it send me a PM ;)

Technically it should all work, i mean its not like u got a quad itanium there with some exotic chips, i do think that it may be a bit noisy compared to the average PC though.
 
Nope. anyway, there are ways to fool software to installing. Got CS3 installed on Server :)

I was ordered by my brother to install XP SP2 on one PC here to be able to install CS3. Do you think I was going to be bothered with that? Also used some trickery, and now CS3 is running on a XP SP1 PC :D
Go Regedit & Google!

i do think that it may be a bit noisy compared to the average PC though.
More noisy than my PC's? No way. My PC's needs a proper de-dusting and I need to get some new hard drives before they will ever run more silent than that Server PC. :sick:
 
Haven't read all this but there's a chance it won't be good for a PC (if you play games).

Make sure it uses PCI-e (not PCI-x [or PCI]).

Make sure it doesn't have a server CPU socket (a CPU upgrade will cost you a fortune if it does).

Make sure it can use un-buffered/registered RAM, ECC RAM costs alot more.

The OS will be a least of your worries, provided there are drivers for the motherboard for the OS you want. A good idea would be to get information on all the components (especially the motherboard) and check it's website for drivers for the OS you want.
 
Top
Sign up to the MyBroadband newsletter
X