Home Servers will render CD Racks obsolete
Posted on Mon, 21 Jul 2008 00:59:10 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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By Antony Bruno
DENVER (Billboard) - Converting to a fully digitized entertainment library is a
good way to cut down on clutter in the house. So what replaces the CD rack once
you do?
The 500 GB hard drive that comes standard on most home computers today? Soon,
even that won't be big enough to store and organize the massive amount of
digital music, video and photography that consumers are accumulating as part of
the emerging "terabyte lifestyle."
That opens the door to a new market, one that for now remains a niche
afterthought to most people: home servers.
Most digital media today is stored on an individual computer and then synched to
one device or another or streamed through a home network to an entertainment
system or other appliance. The drawback with such a system is that all files
will be lost should the hard drive crash, and it's very difficult to synchronize
files across multiple computers, devices and users without overlap.
By contrast, a home server acts as a central storage hub for all the content in
the home, and multiple devices can link to it in order to stream or otherwise
access music, video or other content. A home server will even automatically
backup and reconcile content stored on any connected device. And servers are far
less prone to crashes.
The home server market is currently all potential, with only an estimated
400,000 U.S. households employing one today, according to multiple analyst
reports, dominated primarily by tech enthusiasts and IT pros installing them in
their homes.
But Forrester Research projects the U.S. market will grow to more than 4.5
million households by 2012, while the Diffusion Group predicts it surging to as
high as 21.5 million in all of North America by 2015.
Driving this growth, of course, is digital content. It's hard to measure just
how much content is now stored on home computers, but based on reported
activity, it's certainly on the rise. A Forrester Research survey shows that the
number of people viewing or managing photos on their computers rose from 26% of
survey respondents in 2002 to 47% in 2007. The percentage of those owning an MP3
player went from 3% to 36% during the same time frame.
"The digital assets that people have are clearly climbing, and with that comes
the potential need for a home server," analyst J.P. Gownder says. Diffusion
Group senior analyst Ted Theocheung notes that the average computer user will
have up to 2 terabytes of content stored by 2010.
But increased storage capacity is not enough to jump-start the market. The real
appeal of the home server is its synching, streaming and management
capabilities. The more devices in the house that need access to the same
content, the more need there is for a home server.
According to Forrester, the number of homes with multiple computers increased
from 25.8 million in 2002 to 47.8 million last year. These computers are
increasingly being connected via a home network, the penetration of which has
doubled in the same time period from 12% to 24%. And that's not even including
the proliferation of iPods, mobile phones and other portable devices that need
access as well.
"There needs to be something beyond backup to make the home server story come
alive for consumers," Gownder says. "The server category has to demonstrate
application extensibility where it's projecting things you couldn't do
previously rather than just being a source of backup and storage. It needs to
proactively help people with their media."
Hewlett-Packard's Media-Smart Server line, for instance, allows users to store
their entire iTunes library on a server, from which any computer in the home
network can then stream music. French company LaCie offers its Ethernet Disc
Mini Home Edition service that does much the same.
Microsoft, and its Windows Home Server software that it launched in January, is
expected to rule the home server market for the next five years, during which
PC-based servers will be the dominant solution. But Theocheung says the real
spike in consumer adoption won't come until after consumer electronics companies
begin building server-like functions into their entertainment system products,
which will overtake the PC as the primary source of such store-and-synch
capability. In particular, he expects cable operators to be leaders in this
transition, doing for servers what they did for DVRs by including the
functionality in set-top boxes.
"That changes the whole model," Theocheung says. "If you have to buy these
yourself, the trend is going to be slower. But when service providers latch onto
this and let you just add $5 to your $100 monthly cable bill, it's not a
noticeable impact. Then you're going to see some action."
Perhaps when this market begins to expand, music subscription services like
Rhapsody and Napster will place support for their technology on these home
servers. Rhapsody in particular has been aggressive about making its service
compatible with non-PC music appliances. Meanwhile, the move to digital rights
management-free downloads for purchased content will also be a key step toward
ensuring that digital music takes advantage of the coming media server boom.
Following are some home server options:
PC-BASED
HP MediaSmart Server ($600): Five hundred GB of storage on a single hard drive;
supports up to four additional drives; features a Gigabit Ethernet connection
and four USB 2.0 ports.
Fujitsu Siemens SCALEO Home Server (Europe only): Choice of two 500 GB or two
750 GB of storage; includes a Gigabit local area network and four USB 2.0 ports.
CONSUMER ELECTRONIC
Seagate Mirra ($350): Five hundred GB of storage; provides network file backup
to connected PCs; monitors any folders users choose to back up and synch via a
LAN; includes remote access.
Apple Time Capsule ($300/$500): Choice of 500 GB or 1 terabyte of storage;
integrated with Mac OS Leopard software for automatic file backup; offers
built-in extension to the Airport Extreme Wi-Fi base station. LaCie Ethernet
Disk Mini-Home Edition ($200): Five hundred GB of storage; doubles as a home
networking hub; can stream to multiple devices and provide remote access to
content via any Web browser; includes USB 2.0 ports and Gigabit Ethernet
networking functions.
COMBO
Sony HES-V1000 ($3,500): Five hundred GB of storage with 200-disc Blu-ray DVD
changer; integrates with Sony PlayStation 3 and Sony TVs that include the
XrossMediaBar, a multi-option, onscreen menu that offers access to content from
home networked devices and Internet-based sources like online music and movie
services.
Harman Kardon DMC 100 Digital Media Center ($3,500): Two hundred fifty GB of
storage; delivers up to four streams of music, video and photos at the same time
to up to four devices; automatically rips inserted CDs to the hard drive for
digital backup; records and plays content from various media cards and USB
devices.
Reuters/Billboard
© Copyright 2008 Reuters.
Photo:
HP EX470 MediaSmart Home Server with 500GB storage, available on Amazon for $599.99.
Posted on Mon, 21 Jul 2008 00:59:10 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
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