By
Tom Krazit
Monday, January 08 2007 12:28 PM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,61979928,00.htm
Hewlett-Packard is betting that the time has come to turn couch potatoes
into server administrators.
The company unveil its MediaSmart Server on Sunday evening in conjunction
with the keynote address by Microsoft's Bill Gates at the Consumer
Electronics Show in Las Vegas. The server, to be based on a new edition of
Windows called Windows Home Server, will let consumers share and back up their
media collections on a home network.
If it's January, and the PC
industry is clogging up Las Vegas, that means it's time for another round of
pitches about how PC technology is poised to take over the living room. Faced
with maturing growth in developed economies, PC companies have been searching for ways to convince
people to add second and third PCs to their homes as digital entertainment hubs.
Sales of PCs with Microsoft's Windows XP Media Center Edition have been
brisk, but there's no
evidence that outside of a small group of tech-savvy enthusiasts, those PCs
are being used to access content from the outside world and stream it around the
home.
What is happening, however, is that more traditional TV and movie studios are
starting to offer
their wares over the Internet through outlets like Apple Computer's iTunes
Store or Amazon.com's Unbox service, or through their own Web sites. If people
are ready to start buying video online, they're going to need to store and manage those videos somehow.
Enter the MediaSmart Server. Now, this isn't something that even remotely
resembles the "big iron" servers that run corporations. And there's nothing new
about the home server concept; people have been using desktop PCs as servers for
years.
What is new is the promise that you don't need a training class in Windows
server administration to run the MediaSmart Server, said Kathy Miner, a product
manager with HP.
"There's some very elegant yet simple things that have been done" to make
this product easy to use, Miner said. The server automatically backs up PCs
connected to a home network, enables file-sharing between networked PCs and lets
users access files remotely. That's pretty standard stuff for a server, and HP
already has a product called MediaVault that does many of the same things. But
HP believes that along with Microsoft, it has figured out a way to make this as
painless as possible.
To find out, you'll need to fork over several hundred dollars. Pricing for
the MediaSmart server has not been finalized, but it will cost more than HP's
$599 MediaVault product when it arrives in the third quarter, Miner said. The
MediaSmart server will come with Advanced Micro Devices' 1.8GHz Sempron
processor and four hard drive bays, although HP has not determined exactly how much capacity will be available.
HP also introduced two new PCs at CES, the TouchSmart IQ770 PC and the
Pavilion tx1000us notebook. The US$1,799 IQ770 is an all-in-one design that HP
envisions as a family hub, with an HP-designed calendar application that lets
members of a household leave digital notes for each other without marking up the
finish on the stainless-steel Sub-Zero fridge. It comes with a 19-inch
touchscreen display.
The tx1000us notebook is HP's first Tablet PC for consumers and is designed
as an entertainment option. Both notebooks will ship with Microsoft's Windows Vista Home Premium in the coming weeks.