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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: October 28th, 2023

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  • Client and server Windows are very similar since Server 2008. A client Windows has many limitations which are mostly non issues for home use.

    The biggest annoyance for me is the update mechanism and how they tried to enforce it more on newer versions and even started crippling the Professional version in many ways. For some time I even felt the need to have a WSUS setup at home.

    Many might also be tempted to run their Windows as kind of mainframe, like a jack of all trades. Virtualization, even in pure Windows environments, opens a lot of possibilities. If something sounds complicated in Windows, just setup a specialized VM to do it. Not that Windows can’t do something, but other tools might be more suitable for people that don’t work with Windows Server day to day. Like, I would never build a firewall with Windows, even though it is possible.




  • For your original question: I would not bother with a CPU with less than 6 physical cores. 4 laptop cores might work, but you can’t upgrade them.

    Laptops have some advantages and if you already have one it is a valid alternative, but I would not bother buying a new laptop.

    Advantages are built in battery as UPS, keyboard and display, but upgrading is very limited. If it has an additional dedicated GPU you might even forward that to a VM.

    32GB ram should work, but with 64GB you will have more possibilities. Some laptops are limited in functionality, but new ones should have the necessary virtualization options. With 6+ physical cores modern laptops have some great virtualization potential, but with modern big/little core Intel CPUs virtualization might need some additional tweaking.

    Cooling wise it might be worth looking for a model that doesn’t push air out in front of the opened display. If you store it closed the limited cooling can cost performance.

    Thunderbolt is a good but expensive way to add new hardware like 10G networking or fast external storage.

    Personally I extended my lab with an old Dell Precision 7540 workstation laptop, which is really great but not cheap.


  • Simple. If services are only accessible through VPN I can’t easily use multiple services at different locations at the same time. Another reason would be that I can’t just use another device to access my service without installing VPN, importing the connection settings and putting a valid logon profile on a device I don’t control.

    My work laptop has 6 or 7 different VPN clients to connect to customers networks. That’s nothing I want to have on my private PC or phone. And if I sit at home and the customer uses Cisco AnyConnect like my company it would be hard to access work resources when working on a client. Services published through accessible gateways (with encryption and authentication) don’t have these problems.

    If you just want to access your own services from your own devices and don’t want to publish it to strangers a VPN is all you need.