Transfer Snow Leopard to Snow Leopard server question..

Just wondering, if I use TimeMachine backup(Snow Leopard), and trandfer system to Snow Leopard server, is it working? My point is according to my understanding, Snow Leopard server doesn't have iLife. what will happen with my iPhoto iMove,etc...after transfering...
Thanks

hi taylor,
Your photos, music, videos are all kept in your 'home folder.' You can move your home folder from your old computer (or time machine backup drive) using migration assistant. The only thing you need to check is 'user accounts.'
Migrating the home folder from the old computer would be faster then using the time machine backup.
You will also need to install ilife, you would want to install ilife from an ilife install disk.
What are you running server on? usually a servers is not used as your work computer. It's usually a separate computer dictated to sharing resources.
it's also important to note time machine dose not back up many of the services you can host on server.

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    Hello Ben,
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  • SNOW LEOPARD SERVER PROBLEMS REQUIRE CERTIFIED CONSULTANT TO HELP

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    Hi Brian,
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    Ok so the esiest way to explain this is to tell you what i just went through.
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  • Lion server or Snow Leopard Server?

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    Not_So wrote:
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  • DNS Configured-Best Practice on Snow Leopard Server?

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    First my set-up: I have Verizon FIOS and have set up my Actiontech Router into bridge mode to the Time Capsule so that the Time Capsule grabs the public IP address. The Snow Leopard Server has a dedicated private IP from the Time Capsule through the DHCP reservation. I have a dynamic DNS setup which consistently points to the public IP address assigned to the Time Capsule. After starting services on Snow Leopard Server, I can see the port mappings created on the Time Capsule by the server allocated to the server's dedicated private IP address. However, the File Sharing (AFP, SMB) entry can't be enabled because the ports used for those services conflict with the ports opened by the Time Capsule to enable backups from client Time Machines (TCP Ports 548, 139). Therefore, any external access to those ports are going to the Time Capsule and not routed to the Snow Leopard Server.
    Two questions:
    1. Should I map the DNS hostname to the Time Capsule on the Hostnames screen on AirPort utility? While this will enable remote access to the Time Capsule (so that if my client computers are outside coming from the Internet), will this mess up remote access to the Snow Leopard Server?
    2. How do I get around the problem of the port conflicts between what Time Machine needs to get to the Time Capsule for backups versus enabling the ports for AFP and SMB on the server?

    I actually found an Apple support tip and am posting it here to answer the question:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/TS2963
    Bottom line: you can't have both devices doing file sharing unless you set up VPN access.

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