Thanks, Peter

(PS - any cranky comments I might make about what I'm discovering.. are not directed at you, even in your honorary 'capacity', I trust you realize ;-) But y'know? this thing's a beast! Amazing they got This many tailfins all running.. this (dare *I* say) umm reliably, in present simple case.

Not clear from text if absence of a T1 eliminates VPN? Likely now - a cable modem for their net access. ISDN 2nd choice if cable's too long delayed. Per p.219, seems IPSec with W98SE at my end would do for security. (Believe SE => SP1?)

There's only the one super-server and some laptops + a 12-port switch; router seems a likely next adjunct w/cable modem. Max likely clients soon: 6 (!) maybe incl. one for dial-up as alternative. (They have beaucoup extra phone lines anyway; would need a modem on one. I have a spare standalone Hayes Optima I could toss in)

Can see I'll need the guy who helped set this up (and who will help, I found) for some time.. before I'd try to implement any new service, on my own. It will help for me to become clearer about the options for RADIUS, to make to-do list more sane. Gotta ration Pro help priorities.

Next: add printer (!) and .doc what's happening. Dare I run a normal Canon install for a BJC-1000 on W2K Server for local use? Do W2K servers like printer installs while they're trying to serve?

Thanks for lore.. and book tip! I see this is a trivial network by biz stds; yet W2K has all these layers - presumes a massive trees / forest worldwide enterprise. I'll have to hope that Tullock's few-page hints are enough. (And the 8K pages - index.)

Would there were a Ref. which omits the WAN and concentrates exclusively on simple services 'neat', as in undiluted. Call it Miniscule Resource Kit?


Cheers,

Ashton

PS - if you were using this fancy ProLiant for this simple network, would you consider Linux a cheaper long-term maintenance choice? (Assuming ProLiant RAID, HP DAT drivers are available, and ignoring cost of help re transition)

In the end, daily maintenance will have to be by amateurs, either way - checking logs, backups, etc. It's a charity, not a business.