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February 28th, 2008

Microsoft's free enterprise search is a must try

Posted by George Ou @ 2:21 am

Categories: Desktop, Infrastructure, Microsoft, News, Servers, Vista

Tags: Google Inc., Enterprise Search, Search Engine, Enterprise Search Engine, Microsoft Windows Server, Microsoft Corp., Search Result, Microsoft Windows, Search, Servers

At the Heroes Happens {here} event in LA yesterday which saw the launch* of Windows Server 2008, one of the relatively hidden gems of the event in my opinion was Microsoft’s free** Search Server 2008 Express.  It’s is a streamline install of Office SharePoint Server 2007 with almost all the enterprise search features that most users would want and is a must download for any Windows Server shop.

Even if you didn’t own Windows Server 2003, 2003 R2, or 2008, it would seem like a great way to build a very cheap enterprise search engine appliance with a minimal Windows Server 2003 or above license and a simple 1U server for less than $2000 which is a LOT less than a $30K starting price Google Search Engine appliance with a 500K document cap.  Update 7:28PM - Wiredguy in the talkback pointed out that Google’s Mini search appliance starts at $3K, but that only indexes 50K documents and it doesn’t tie in to Active Directory as seamlessly and lacks Exchange support.  If you’re a Windows shop with an IIS server sitting around with low CPU utilization which is quote common, adding Microsoft’s Search Server 2008 Express costs nothing.

So why would you want an enterprise search engine for your company or organization?  Windows Vista (and XP users who add Windows Desktop Search or Google Desktop Search) know how useful it is to have relatively instant indexed search results for any document or email in their computer.  But those benefits stop at the local computer because you don’t want every user crawling the network data resources redundantly since it would bring the whole network and server infrastructure to a halt.

An enterprise search engine gives you a centralized intranet website where users could go to a URL like search.mycompany.com and find any document in their entire corporate LAN (and to a lesser extent the WAN and some Internet sites due to bandwidth considerations).  Google’s online search engine is great but it’s stopped dead in its tracks at the corporate firewall and there’s no way it can search your Exchange or Lotus Notes mail server or your file server documents.  The enterprise search engine bridges an essential gap between desktop search and google.com.  Documents or emails that would have been glossed over and forgotten about instantly pop up on the enterprise search server.

The search results are security-trimmed and active directory integrated so that the user will only see the documents that they have permissions to access.  With an Intranet IIS web server set for seamless Active Directory authentication, the user merely goes to the search portal and they’re logged in automatically.  The server can also be tuned to crawl the network at off-peak hours with full or incremental searches.

Microsoft’s Search Server Express comes preloaded with the following search connectors.

  • File servers
  • Web sites
  • SharePoint websites
  • Exchange Server public folders
  • Lotus Notes

To make Search Server 2008 Express work, you’ll either need a free SQL Server 2005 Express database backend or Microsoft SQL Server 2005 and above.  Using the free SQL Express will limit the server to 1 GB and 4 GB database size.  Under most document sizes, a 4 GB index should allow you to index more files than the 500K document cap imposed by the $30K edition of the Google Search Engine appliance.  Buying a SQL server license will still end up being far cheaper than buying the Google appliance.  No matter what your opinion of Microsoft, I think this is one of those things that’s definitely worth a try.  Enterprise search is finally affordable and it should become a fixture in any company’s server room or datacenter.

 

* This was also a 3-month post launch party for Visual Studio 2008 and 6-month pre-launch party for SQL Server 2008.

** People who already own a copy of Windows Server 2003, 2003 R2, or 2008.

George Ou is Technical Director of ZDNet. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 45 Talkback(s)
RE: Microsoft's express search and FAST acquistion
Is this based on FAST technology?

Is MSFT planning on buying FAST and moving the customer base or moving express to FAST technology?

This is a bit of uncertainity i would like some advice on.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: pn_ Posted on: 04/02/08 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Clients  Yagotta B. Kidding | 02/28/08
Google has/had an issue  Bill4 | 02/28/08
Wrong. You merely need to log in manually with your AD credentials.  georgeou | 02/28/08
What if you don't have AD  nucrash | 02/29/08
Can those work with SharePoint?  SMFX_ | 03/01/08
I think I will pass  nucrash | 02/28/08
Search has one benefit  deaf_e_kate | 02/28/08
Try it before you knock it  georgeou | 02/28/08
well we use google's one and it's great  stevey_d | 02/28/08
How can it work on something that doesn't exist?  GuidingLight | 02/28/08
Read digity's response  georgeou | 02/28/08
Good luck with that effort.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/29/08
Yeah, Sure. Just like Vista is a Must Try  Jeremy W | 02/28/08
Why should anyone place any credence in you?  GuidingLight | 02/28/08
Its so sad you had no clue what the topic was. (nt)  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/29/08
Like buying a car for the cup holders  Chad_z | 02/28/08
This isn't sharepoint  georgeou | 02/28/08
Gave it a try and loved it  digity | 02/28/08
Log your story as a Search Hero  cwalt | 02/28/08
Great point  georgeou | 02/28/08
google mini appliance is $3000 not $30K.  stevey_d | 02/28/08
Google says it's $30K  georgeou | 02/28/08
Yes, the Google Mini is $2,990  WiredGuy | 02/28/08
I have it installed on a 1,300 dollar machine  GuidingLight | 02/28/08
Possibly nice if...  zkiwi | 02/28/08
It works for non MS shops as well  georgeou | 02/28/08
Oh?  zkiwi | 02/28/08
Having organized data is not an indexed search substitute  georgeou | 02/28/08
Ah...  zkiwi | 02/29/08
Again, NEITHER is a substitute for the other  georgeou | 03/01/08
Organized storage? Do you have any users?  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/29/08
Have fun then when you get audited then...  zkiwi | 02/29/08
There's different levels of organization  georgeou | 03/01/08
you can use Google Desktop Search like this  stevey_d | 02/28/08
SBS 2007 doesn't exist  NotParker | 02/28/08
So Google is ripping us off?  GuidingLight | 02/28/08
Uh oh, you rained all over his parade.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 02/29/08
SBS 2007?  NotParker | 02/28/08
How Open Source has influenced Windows Server 2008  D. T. Schmitz | 02/29/08
Can those work with SharePoint?  SMFX_ | 03/01/08
Search Server Express runs as a streamlined standalone  georgeou | 03/01/08
Great tool for the price...  amitchell@... | 03/03/08
Good points, but labor costs come in different shapes and form  georgeou | 03/03/08
RE: Microsoft's free enterprise search is a must try  spameater | 03/15/08
RE: Microsoft's express search and FAST acquistion  pn_ | 04/02/08

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