The guys over at HomeServerLand.com have posted about the exclusive availability of the release candidate for their cool new Add-In for Windows Home Server known as Add-In Central.
Here is what they say about it:
Add-In Central is the first and only centralized add-in manager that allows you to browse, download and update add-ins conveniently through your Windows Home Server Console. Add-In Central is fast, simple, and provides you with the information you need when determining which add-ins are right for you.
Add-In Central Features
- Notifications of new updates for Windows Home Server Add-Ins
- One Click upgrades that will provide a simple and fast way to upgrade your current Add-Ins
- Browse, find information with screenshots, and download Add-Ins directly from your Windows Home Server console
- View Add-Ins by popularity, category, or find the latest ones to hit the market
- Direct links to support forums which help improve communication and provide direct troubleshooting support
- Screenshots and descriptions help you make the right choice when downloading new Add-Ins
If you want to try out Add-In Central (I know I do) then if you are one of the first 100 people to sign-up you will get access to it. I’ve signed up and so my fingers are crossed – more information when I get access to the beta (hint hint Alexander) 🙂

This is so cool. Thanks
This is a pretty cheesy article. Copy someone else's original content verbatim. Get all the advertising revenue. Wow. How lazy can you get?
Well Im sorry you feel that way Chris – the post was pointing at Alexanders site because he was looking for testers. I am now one of those testers and will be posting another article at some point soon.
I suppose I could have completely rewritten what he was saying but what would have been the point of that? When someone posts information or a request for something, it is usual for sites such as UWHS to repost some or all of that – everyone does it, thats how it works.
And just to respond to the comment about advertising revenue – the site makes minimal, and I do mean minimal revenue from advertisers which goes to pay for the hosting of the site, the developement work on the site, software and hardware for reviews (we dont all get everything for free), costs for covering events like CES, and so on. The people who contribute to the site do so for free, and I know that myself and Tim spend considerable amounts of our free time working on the site for people like you to read and we dont get anything out of it. The site has never made a profit, so perhaps before you make comments like this in the future you might want to take that into consideration.
Andrew