Jacksteruk309 said:
thanx for the links
I knew that XServe was for servers and PowerMac was a desktop, but I keep hearin about stuff like people switchin to Mac and puttin Linux on there PCs and usin them as servers, so why cant ya just use a PowerMac as a server?
Thanks
jack
the definition of a server is a software application that does some task for another piece of software called a client. for example, apache webserver which is installed by default on OS X and the "serves" web pages to safari,mozilla,ie, and other "clients". in other words, any piece of hardware that runs a server application can be called a "server", but it is really the software that is doing the serving. so in your example, with a Powermac, if someone were to enable personal web sharing (apache) the powermac would be a server. so my powerbook running personal web sharing, ssh, ftp, etc would become a server.
what makes Xserve different from a standard Mac though is the fact that there is no video card. it is made to sit in a "rack" along with other servers and rack mountable devices like routers, switches, etc. to access Xserve you must use a "client" to remotely access Xserve.
You could also, install OS X server on a PM and it would accomplish the same thing, but the Xserve is designed specifically for operation where they need more than one server in a small space.