Silicon Shecky

Infosec Practitioner

  • About
  • Categories
    • General
    • Computers
    • Software
    • Rants
    • Security
    • Internet/Music
    • Reviews
    • Microsoft
    • Hardware
    • Mobile Computing
  • Links
    • Infosec
      • Burbsec
      • Infosec Exchange Mastodon
      • Hacks4Pancakes Blog
      • Krebs On Security
      • Bleeping Computer
  • Archives

Connect

  • Bluesky
  • LinkedIn
  • Mastodon
  • RSS
  • Twitter

[footer_backtotop]

Copyright © 2025 ·Sixteen Nine Pro Theme · Genesis Framework by StudioPress · WordPress

SBS 2008 notes and observations

June 8, 2009 By Michael Kavka 3 Comments

Now having completed a full SBS 2008 deployment, I feel I can give some thoughts and a more proper review of the system.

Overall SBS 2008 is a very nice and slick system. There are some nice changes to it from SBS 2003, but there are also some things that you do need to watch out for.

First the positives about it. The install process is very smooth and simple. Really a base preconfigure took an hour of my time and a couple hours to download patches and updates. The help files in the actual SBS console are way better than the help in SBS 2003. They actually explain how to move files and folders such as the user folders to different drives, something you had to look up on the net with SBS 2003. They also have gotten rid of the licensing feature, so while you still need to purchase CALs, you don’t install them directly on the server. The also have one wizard for setting the server IP and Internet connectivity. Also it will try to discover any router/firewall and attempt to allow you to configure it ( I did not test this feature out). Also you can set it up to automatically redirect user folders (i.e. My Documents) to the server with just the check of a box.

Downside though are somewhat more annoyances than anything else. First off, you cannot run the Internet Connection Wizard if there is another DHCP server running on the network (say from a firewall/router). This can be a pain due to hunting down DHCP servers. Also the password policy wizard I found to be incomplete. Considering this was a new network, and I gave users a default password that they were going to change after everything was set up, I had to go through group policy to change the fact that passwords had to be active for more than 2 days before you can change them. This decision was not available in the password policy wizard and did make things a little more difficult until I found the policy and figured out that it had to be set to 0 days and this was after setting it to undefined did not produce the desired result. Finally, my last complaint is updates. Basically that you actually have to tell the update system to search for more than just OS updates. If you don’t it will not find the Exchange, SQL, or other items that are part of SBS 2008 and will need to be updated (not to mention Microsoft trying to force IE8 down our throat by making it a high priority update).

Even with these few minor issues, I think that SBS 2008 is a definite step up from SBS 2003 and one that will be good for many future uses.

Filed Under: Computers, Reviews, Software Tagged With: Microsoft Review, SBS 2003, SBS 2008, SBS 2008 Review, Server Review

RSS Taggart Institute Intel Feed

  • Jaguar Land Rover to restart production following cyberattack October 7, 2025
  • AI-Enabled Influence Operation Against Iran October 7, 2025 Bruce Schneier
  • Too salty to handle: Exposing cases of CSS abuse for hidden text salting October 7, 2025 Omid Mirzaei
  • Britain eyes satellite laser warning system and carrier-launched jet drones October 7, 2025 Dan Robinson
  • Understanding the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act (CISA) Expiration October 7, 2025 brent.kelley@guidepointsecurity.com
  • UK Home Office opens wallet for £60M automated number plate project October 7, 2025 Lindsay Clark
  • Credential stuffing: £2.31 million fine shows passwords are still the weakest link October 7, 2025 Eirik Salmi
  • Businesses fear AI is exposing them to more attacks October 7, 2025 Eric Geller
  • A Snapback Solution for Ukraine October 7, 2025 Samuel Charap
  • Pair of lawsuits challenging Trump's targeting of Chicago get first hearings October 7, 2025 Chris Geidner

Browse by tags

Active Directory Android Antivirus Apple Beta Chrome Computers Exchange Exchange 2007 Firefox General Thoughts Google InfoSec Internet Explorer iOS iPad IT Linux Mac Malware Microsoft OS OSx Patches Rants SBS SBS 2008 Security Security Patches Server SMB Software Support Surface TechEd Tweets Ubuntu Verizon Virus Vista vulnerabilities Windows Windows 7 Windows 8 XP