fjca wrote:
Also, that Dell server won't run forever either. A PERC 6 means a 9th/10th gen model, or an early 11 th model, so we are talking about a 2008-2009 machine. They ran fine, in fact, I've got a few still running, but Dell does not support them anymore, I have a third party maintenance contract for them, and already have a pile of decommissioned models for spare parts. That does not seem to be the case with your customer... you can of course buy a used part on eBay, but that takes time to buy, to ship, to install, etc... warranties are not just for the part, they are mainly for the SLA...
If it's just for Lansweeper, my advice to you is to forget the Windows 2003 license, and just install a Windows 10 VM with SQL Express on the server, and run the latest Lansweeper version on it. Even if it was some bugs, it adds support for more devices, more hardware information, Cloud scans, Exchange scans, etc...
From a license perspective it is a license violation to run a copy of Windows 10 workstation in a VM unless you buy a Volume License copy of Windows 10. Many people probably don't know this but Mickydoodle buried an exclusion for virtual machines in the retail shrink-wrap license. The minimum order on a VL purchase is $500. The fact is that it's cheaper to find an old Core 2 someone threw away in a dumpster, install 10 on it, get the free digital license from Microsoft and have at it. MS activation servers do not hand out free digital licenses for activation requests from virtual instances of windows 10.
Technically, that also requires a 64bit VM and the older hardware could not run 64 bit virtual guests (but could run 32 bit virtual guests) due to missing CPU instructions Intel added into later CPUs. Yes you can run 32 bit versions of 10 but Lansweeper doesn't support 32 bit anymore as a host platform.
There is zero liability to a software vendor for handing out free copies of software. In order for there to be liability you have to have a contractual relationship and that requires a monetary transaction. Please don't use the lame old excuse of "liability" as a catch-all. Particularly when their actual purchasing contract boilerplate disclaims all liability! Good grief! Don't you even know that Microsoft permits you to download prior versions (some insecure) of their own software under volume license? Liability? Liability my gluteus maximus!
Thanks for telling me that they ignore requests for older software. Translation, thanks for telling me they are d ** s who don't have the courtesy to even say "company policy is to do a scorched earth on older software copies" then gaslight you into thinking you're better off with their new schlotz. I won't waste time waiting for them to respond and somewhere I must have an older copy buried somewhere along with their announcement a few years ago when they released it saying how it was the greatest thing since sliced bread and we would all need to hyperventilate until we downloaded and installed it. Funny how it's always the same with software companies - whatever junk they are pushing today is always the most supremely best stuff there is then a year later the exact same version isn't worth wiping your a z z with. Why, it's almost like they insert software vulnerabilities in software like easter eggs to guarantee they have something in the future to convince the sheeple to buy their new stuff. <eyeroll> Or maybe it's just coding by people who don't give a hoot about buffer overflows and other security sloppy programming.
Now as for older hardware - they invented backups to answer that question. But, I get it. After hardware gets to a certain age it has a higher chance of developing a fault. That's why it is common practice to move it into hosting NON-CRITICAL software like Lansweeper.
I can do what I need to do at the customer with a spreadsheet. It's more convenient to do it with an old copy of Lansweeper that will run on the antique server. If said antique server sputters and dies then no big deal. I can always find a replacement for antique hardware. The trick is finding additional NEW hardware at the same price (free)