The SMTP service won't go away unless the next version of SharePoint doesn't require it for dealing with incoming mail.
Discussions
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I TOLD YOU SO!

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14 hours ago, cbae wrote
Well, damn, I was right the first time. Having 5 users requires no CAL purchase. Having 6 users requires purchase of 6 CALs. Having 10 users requires purchase of 10 CALs. That's a huge penalty to go from 5 to 6 users.
You get 5 users with TFS and the 6th user requires an additional CAL. So you only have to purchase 1 CAL for the 6th user.
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Isn't it just included in your companies MSDN subscription?
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I replaced my iPhone 4 screen for the second time at the weekend.
When I took it apart I realised that I might not have replaced every screw last time I opened it up. This may have been the cause of my native camera app not working anymore (although a third party app worked) Also my headphones remote stopped working.
Anyway after putting it all back together again I realised I have failed to replace a small piece of metal which I seem to remember came from where the battery connects to the motherboard.
It seemed so small and insignificant and I had already spent a couple of hours on it, I threw it in the bin.
Well the consequence is that now unless I am about 12 inches away from the wireless router I am unable to get a signal.
I'm guessing this may be to do with battery interference of some sort. I am also now worried about brain tumours, and I can't keep the phone in my jeans pocket anymore.
Oh well, roll on the iPhone 5
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@Sven Groot:I originally thought it was to do with the speed of neutrinos or something, then I came to the thought that it might have something to do with Steve Jobs being gone. But after I while I figured it out.
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@ManipUni:Yeah but I'm in the UK ?
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Each man actually paid $8.33 as $25 / 3 = $8.33
Add a $1 refund = $9.33
$9.33 * 3 = $28
$28 + $2 = $30
Just in case anyone was struggling

Although I preferred my original answer of the hooker's tip...
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I've tried various home setups in the past but the one I've currently settled on which has worked the best for me is the following:
I have a central NetGear ReadyNAS box with 4 x 1TB disks raided to give 2.7TB worth of storage and redundancy.
For media content I use a Mac with iTunes pointing all content to the NAS box. I use iTunes to centrally manage all media and serve it up to two Apple TV devices. iTunes on Mac is pretty good software and I've not found the same seemless experience with any other product out there.
I have two low end Dell Poweredge servers, one for a domain controller and web server and one for public facing TFS and SharePoint 2010, that I use for work.
Backup of my work Dell Laptop is done with Windows backup, which takes all my Documents folder and creates a system image every night and plonks it on the NAS drive.
I have a Time Machine drive for backup of the Mac also.
Every important bit of data is stored on the Raided NAS drive which gives me some comfort, the only thing missing at the moment is off site backup which I need to sort out. Problem is I have around 2TB of data on the NAS drive that ideally I would need backed up.
