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macOS Server: As features are cut, what does the future hold for Apple’s server software?

Posted February 2, 2018 | Mac


Apple may have embraced the pro market on the Mac hardware side with the recent release of the iMac Pro and forthcoming Mac Pro, but the software side, well, that’s a slightly different story.

A quiet post on Apple’s support site last month revealed that the company is significantly dialing back the capabilities of its macOS Server package, the $20 add-on software that turns your Mac into a full-featured piece of server hardware. Gone are features like web and mail hosting, VPNs, and more. Instead, Apple says it is re-focusing macOS Server on “management of computers, devices, and storage on your network.” Or, in other words, on managing all your other Apple devices.

Still, that’s a shame for a number of reasons, not least of which that macOS has long been a powerful (if somewhat under-the-radar) network server option. As someone who’s dabbled in running servers in the past, I’ll be sad to see macOS Server go—but I’m not exactly surprised.

macOS Server: A little history

The modern version of Server actually pre-dates Mac OS X itself—Mac OS X Server 1.0 came out back in 1999, two years before OS X’s consumer release.

For a long time thereafter, Mac OS X Server was an entirely separate product that you had to purchase separately—at a hefty price. The Leopard version of Server, back in 2007, ran for $999. At that price, very few customers who weren’t IT professionals were actually ponying up for the product.

After that point, though, the price tag dropped precipitously—by half for the Snow Leopard version. With Lion, the price dropped to just $50, and instead of being an entirely separate installation it was a package of tools that one added on to a standard OS install. As of Mountain Lion, that price dropped to just $20, and the product had by then transmuted into the Server app, available through the Mac App Store.

At those prices, it was more than reasonable for even a dilettante hobbyist like myself to invest in the app, even if only to take limited advantage of the functions therein. But that experimentation led me into a couple areas where Mac OS Server was actually a phenomenal tool for casual users.

Apple

macOS Server Profile Manager

macOS Server: My personal history

I came relatively late to macOS Server. Earlier on in life, when I was still a web developer, I spent time setting up test environments on my personal machine. There were packages to easily install tools like the mySQL database in addition to the existing personal web hosting services that Apple originally included in OS X.



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