![]() The way that I’m about to show is very very hard. The biggest reason to use it is indeed point number 1. It can’t do it all extremely well, but it’s certainly able to get the job done. A reasonably competent technician can throw one up in about half an hour Requires updating and patching a Windows box.While this is only really a problem on large deployments, it can cause really weird problems sometimes. Can only really process one transaction at a time.This is a big one for me, as it conflicts with my preferred deployment method of using MDT or another provisioning tool to do the “push off,” let the system install, and configure the rest through Server Manager on a remote system. Personally, I have an aversion to throwing away money, even if it’s somebody else’s money. It’s just that it’s almost always, in my own opinion, a better idea to go with another option. That’s not to say that it’s a very convenient server role, which it absolutely is, or that it doesn’t have a place, which it sort of does.
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