From: BrianB on
Thank you, Cliff. Which product carried by TechSoup to choose is probably
me biggest question. SEPP sounds like a good choice. Though the suggestion
from Milhouse to let the server run bare is pretty close to how it's been
running for over a year now.

Brian

"Cliff Galiher - MVP" <cgaliher(a)gmail.com> wrote in message
news:%23Dn$pf87KHA.980(a)TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...
> Techsoup carries symantec endpoint protection. That is designed to run on
> a server, is not terribly expensive, you can pick up licenses for the
> client machines as well so you centralize your control, AND it is light on
> system resources.
>
> Generally I don't recommend AV products, because in reality they all do a
> similar job (if one was a drastic failure *OneCare COUGH* then it doesn't
> survive the marketplace. They are all good, and the interface is a
> personal preference thing.
>
> I'm breaking my rule this time because of techsoup. They don't carry the
> breadth of choice, but knowing what they carry and finding the "right"
> product can be tough from their site. So here I am, actually making a
> recommendation.
>
> SEPP 11.0 with enough licenses to cover your clients.
>
> -Cliff
>
>
> "BrianB" <brian.notthis.bygland(a)boeing.notthis.com> wrote in message
> news:uyKNae47KHA.1888(a)TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...
>> I support a church with not much budget and too fancy a network. I have
>> two servers (SBS 2008 and Server 2008) and several clients. The clients
>> all have NS Essential Security and as such are fairly protected. But I
>> have nothing on the servers. What would you suggest for the servers that
>> does not cost an arm and a leg? The servers are used for fire sharing,
>> Exchange, and SQL Server. I can get decent prices through TechSoup.org,
>> but I don't know which products to consider.
>>
>> Thanks
>> Brian Bygland
>> Kent United Methodist Church
>>