- #HP MEDIASMART SERVER EX470 CPU UPGRADE UPGRADE#
- #HP MEDIASMART SERVER EX470 CPU UPGRADE SOFTWARE#
- #HP MEDIASMART SERVER EX470 CPU UPGRADE MAC#
- #HP MEDIASMART SERVER EX470 CPU UPGRADE WINDOWS#
If you are upgrading your day-to-day server, make sure you take precautions to ensure that your precious data is preserved.
#HP MEDIASMART SERVER EX470 CPU UPGRADE UPGRADE#
The upgrade to V3 went without a hitch, although this was a factory default installation so no data was retained from the V1 testing.
#HP MEDIASMART SERVER EX470 CPU UPGRADE MAC#
#HP MEDIASMART SERVER EX470 CPU UPGRADE SOFTWARE#
If you read our original review of the EX495, you will be familiar with the extra goodies that the V3 software brings to the party. If you are worried about your data, you should back it up before the upgrade if you have external disks available. However, the users shared folders and their contents will remain on the server, which means you will need to recreate the accounts after the upgrade. We should mention that the HP V1 to V3 upgrade guide warns you that it will delete all user accounts during the upgrade. With the benchmarks in the bag, the next step was to perform the upgrade to the new V3 software, which gets loaded onto the EX475 in exactly the same way as the original V1 software, so will be familiar territory if you have ever had to rebuild your server. We measured the transfer speed of a 50mb, 500mb and 1tb files so we can compare the times with the V3 software has been installed later on. When complete, the EX475 had its familiar feeling, the console was nice and snappy and the file server was quick and responsive. Our EX475 is untouched and has same hardware as the day it left the factory, so to ensure we have a good idea of its original performance, a V1 factory reset was performed. It isn’t unheard of for owners to also upgrade the AMD Sempron 3400 to something a bit more powerful as well, but we are doing neither for our test server.
#HP MEDIASMART SERVER EX470 CPU UPGRADE WINDOWS#
This specification is sufficient for basic Windows Home Server duties, but if you want to run anything more advanced on your MediaSmart server, then it is common practice to upgrade the RAM to 2gb. This review should apply equally to the EX470 as the only difference between the two models is the amount of 500gb hard disk installed in the factory one for the EX470 and two for the EX475. Reset to V1Īt the heart of the EX475 server is a 1.8GHz AMD Sempron 3400 processor and 512mb of RAM. We are going to perform the V3 upgrade on a stock EX475 to see how it performs and decide if it a wise move without the recommended extra RAM. This review is for all of those early MediaSmart owners who won’t be tackling a RAM upgrade.
Good news, as this upgrade contains some extra features that will add real value to the older MediaSmart servers.īut do all these extra features work on the lower specification servers? In theory they should, although HP does suggest that owners upgrade from the standard 512mb RAM on the EX470/475 to at least 1gb. HP have decided to release their MediaSmart v3 software to owners of the EX47x and EX48x range of Windows Home Servers.