While many Windows Home Server users are nervous about the Active Directory domain configuration in Windows Server 2012
Essentials, connecting and using client PCs in this environment is
fairly painless and seamless. In fact, it’s not much different from
using Windows 8 with a Microsoft account or local account.
While
I’ll be examining the many administrative issues that arise while using
Windows Server 2012 Essentials in future articles and just focus on the
client experience here, we should at least touch on one important and
related point. This article does assume that you’ve installed the server
and are ready to start adding clients to the new domain you added
during Setup. That all happens through a single (but important) Setup
screen:
Done? Good. Here’s what it’s like to join and use this domain.
From
any Windows 7 or Windows 8 PC (Pro or higher: Domains do not work with
the “home” versions of Windows), navigate with IE or anther web browser
to the new server’s web site, which is preconfigured with page for
downloading and installing the so-called Connector software. This page
can be found at http://server-name/connect where, obviously, server-name is replaced with the actual name of your server. (This is the third value you entered in the Setup screen shown previously.)
The
software you download and install here achieves a few things. First, it
configures your PC to connect to the domain, rather than to a
workgroup, as is the (silent) default in Windows 7 and 8. You will need
to supply a valid domain user name—you’re prompted to create two such
accounts during Essentials 2012 Setup, one an administrator and one a
standard user, but you can (and maybe should) create other domain
accounts in the server’s Dashboard at any time—and then reboot the PC,
during which time the configurations are made, some automatically, and
some in response to a short wizard you’ll need to step through.
Once
it’s done, you can now sign in to the domain. The first time you do
this with Windows 8, you’ll see an empty sign-in screen with text boxes
for your domain account’s user name and password. It notes the domain
name (THURROTT in my case) below the password box.
Don’t worry, though: Subsequent sign-ins
work just like before where the user name is pre-filled in, and if you
want, you can use a PIN or picture password as before, too.
When you sign-in and navigate to the
desktop, you’ll see some information about migrating files and
applications from your old user account to the domain user account—this
is straightforward and involves that old standby Windows Easy
Transfer—and two new Essentials 2012 applications, Launchpad and
Dashboard.
The Launchpad application is a simple
front-end to some common server tasks—Backup, Remote Web Access, shared
folders, and Dashboard—and provides a server alert notification, which
you will find to be annoying and “noisy,” offering up way too many
notifications about unimportant server events. (More on that in the
future.) I usually configure Launchpad to always startup minimized so I
don’t need to deal with it. But you can (and should) spend a bit of time
looking at the Launchpad settings, which let you tone down or even
remove server alert notifications, among other things.
Dashboard is a RemoteApp version of the
Dashboard management console you can also run directly on the server.
This lets you administer the server without signing into the server
interactively or using Remote Desktop.
I’ll be writing a lot more about actually
administering this server later, so for now you can pretty much forget
about most of this, though I do recommend thinking about configuring PC
backup if you intend to use Essentials 2012 for that purpose. You can
configure backup from the Launchpad application, or through the
Dashboard in Devices.
At
this point, Windows 8 should be working exactly as before, with one big
difference: You’ve lost the ability to automatically connect to online
services and sync settings through your Microsoft account (since you’re
now signing on with a domain). So if you run one of Windows 8’s
connected apps, you’ll be prompted to add a Microsoft account.
Rather than doing this, however, you can follow the advice in my article Windows 8 Tip: Sign in to a Domain and Still Use Live Services and globally link the domain account to a Microsoft account. You do this through PC Settings, Users.
Just tap the Connect your Microsoft
account button, enter your Microsoft account credentials, and Windows 8
will work exactly as before.
And
that, really, is the point: With just about zero configuration, you can
be up and running with Windows Server 2012 Essentials very easily, and
despite the fact that there’s now a domain running in your environment,
it works much as with Windows Home Server: Centralized PC backup works.
You’ve got a central location for your important documents and other
data. You can share media as before (once you enable it on the server),
though not over a homegroup. (Essentials 2012, like all domain-based
Windows Server versions, is not homegroup compatible.) It’s all very
similar, nearly identical really.
But
there are additional benefits, too. Essentials 2012 supports Storage
Spaces, so that centralized storage can be made redundant, cheaply and
easily. Windows 8 PCs connected to the server automatically utilize
Essentials 2012’s centralized File History backup functionality (in
addition to the traditional image-based backups). This means that File
History is stored on the server, with a portion of it cached on the PC,
too, so it works when you’re not connected to the network.
You can also optionally implement a very
simple set of group policies via a wizard that will apply security
settings for Windows Update, Windows Defender, and the firewall on each
connected PC, ensuring that your PCs are always secure. And as part of
this wizard, you can configure folder redirection settings, by which you
can redirect any or all user folders to the server, providing a more
seamless experience for those that sign in to different PCs regularly.
More
on that later. For now, the important thing to know is that while using
a domain can add some complexity, as you’ll see when we look at the
Dashboard and other administrative interfaces, it doesn't have to be
very different for users. In fact, it’s almost identical.
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