Cover of Paul Robichaux, Missy Koslosky, Devin L. Ganger: Exchange Server Cookbook

Paul Robichaux, Missy Koslosky, Devin L. Ganger Exchange Server Cookbook

For Exchange Server 2003 and Exchange 2000 Server

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E-Book information

O'Reilly Media

2005

EPub
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464

978-0-596-55276-3

0-596-55276-9

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Ask network administrators what their most critical computer application is, and most will say "email" without a moment's hesitation. If you run a network powered by Windows 2000 or Windows Server 2003, Microsoft Exchange occupies much of your time. According to Microsoft, 110 million Exchange seats have been deployed, but 60% of you are still running Exchange 5.5. That's a problem, because the difference between version 5.5 and the more efficient Exchange 2000 and Exchange Server 2003 is profound.Don't fret. Exchange Server Cookbook offers you a comprehensive how-to guide to these newer versions of Exchange. You'll find quick solutions for the most common tasks you need to perform--everything from installation and maintenance to configuration and optimization, with proven recipes for the most useful tools and utilities. The book also has solutions to some uncommon tasks (that you may not know are possible) and advanced procedures that aren't part of day-to-day operations. These include tasks for critical situations, such as using a recovery storage group.Our reliable desktop reference even shows you how to write scripts for Exchange management and deployment tasks. That's right. While not every Exchange job can be scripted, many can, and we provide lots of working VBScript examples for accomplishing particular goals. Whatever your particular need, you'll find it quickly, because chapters in this Cookbook are laid out by recipe, with cross references to other pertinent solutions in the book. With this guide, you'll learn:The relationship between Exchange and Active DirectoryWhen to use the GUI, the command line, or scriptingHow to prepare forests, domains, and serversHow to use Group Policy to control ExchangeDiagnostic logging, measure performance, and administrative privilegesRecipient management: user accounts, mailboxes, mail-enabled groupsMailbox and public folder database managementMessage routing and transport functionsSecurity, backup, restore, and recovery operationsFor every question you have about Exchange 2000 or Exchange Server 2003, our Cookbook has the answer--one that you can find and implement without a moment's hesitation.

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