Good point - we have to check first if the drivers for 2008 are available :) And we do have Hyper-V so it might be a good solution for now. Assuming that the drivers exist - what's the best practice then?
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Browse All TopicsWe are currently migrating to a new hardware (and Windows server 2008) our old Windows 2000 box that hosted all office files/folders, DNS, DHCP, DC and print server. In our new setup DNS, DHCP and DC will be hosted on a separate box. My question is what to do with a print server? Keep it with a file server or DC/DHCP/DNS box or a separate box altogether. What's the best practice here? Our office has about 12 printers and about 35 users.
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If the drivers exist I would still put the print server in it's own Hyper-V VM. Honestly it really doesn't matter unless you have some heavy memory program hogs like SQL installed. The print server in Hyper-V has been a good solution cause if we upgrade the servers then we can just move the Hyper-V VM over to the new server without havingt to reinstall the printer software and drivers.
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by: dariusgPosted on 2008-12-12 at 10:25:11ID: 23159651
What I have seen is at this point it is hard to find 2008 print drivers for printers. What I have done is create a VM in Hyper-V to be the print server but if you don't have Hyper-V then you can just install a print server on a another OS like 2003.