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Windows IT Pro Magazine
[Feature] "OEM Software": Good Deal or Theft? How do those "OEM software" guys sell software so cheaply? — Mark Minasi “Shipping Is a Feature…” Argh. Mark laments the fact that Microsoft considers shipdate to be an important feature of its Windows Hypervisor product. — Mark Minasi 5 Ways to Trim Your IT Budget Standardizing IT equipment is the first step toward making reduced IT budgets stretch further. — Mark Smith A Healthy Dose of Windows Server 2008 Wariness Microsoft will probably release Windows 2008 to manufacturing by October or November of this year, at the latest. And, you see, that's why I'm worried. — Mark Minasi Am I Who I Say I Am? David Chernicoff explains the advantages of authenticating email as a way to combat spam. — David Chernicoff Attention Windows 7.0: Please Don’t Interrupt Me! Mark yearns for a more polite Windows. — Mark Minasi BitLocker and AD, Together at Last Here's what you need to know about BitLocker/AD integration. — Mark Minasi Can Slow-and-Steady Win the Wireless Race? Mark proposes a new, more user-friendly wireless standard. — Mark Minasi Cell Phone–and-PDA Combo Devices Mark Smith checks out some of the current cell phone–and-PDA combinations. Find out what product he finally chose and why. — Mark Smith Certifications: Pass or Fail? A discussion of the pros and cons of vendor-sponsored certifications. — Mark Minasi Connect Microsoft Email Clients to Gmail Gmail is a powerful email server that supports millions of mailboxes. Use IMAP to connect Outlook or other email clients to Gmail to create the best of two worldswell-developed email UIs in popular clients with a good (and free) email server. — Tony Redmond Countdown to XP SP2: Dealing with ICF Mark continues his evaluation of one of XP SP2's biggest features: enabling ICF by default. — Mark Minasi Countdown to XP SP2: Forced Protection Windows XP Service Pack 2 (SP2) is nearly here. In the next four installments of his VIP column, Mark considers the pros and cons of some of the changes that SP2 will bring. — Mark Minasi Countdown to XP SP2: More than a Firewall After an in-depth discussion of Windows XP Service Pack 2's (SP2's) Windows Firewall, Mark examines some of the service pack's other interesting features. — Mark Minasi Countdown to XP SP2: Planning Ahead Mark continues his look at the forthcoming Windows XP Service Pack 2 (SP2) Windows Firewall feature. — Mark Minasi Disaster Recovery in the Wake of Katrina Mark's thoughts turn to disaster recovery in the wake of a devastating tragedy. — Mark Minasi Disks, Spin No More What's interesting about PQI's announcement of its new hard disk? It's a solid state disk. — Mark Minasi Do Betas Make Sense Anymore? Mark suggests that betas don't make sense as testing tools anymore. — Mark Minasi Dual-Core Turions: A Nice, Cool Surprise Here's a quick look at how AMD and Intel are taking advantage of something called "nonlinear heating rates." — Mark Minasi Exchange 2007 SP1's Standby Continuous Replication You can add site resilience to your Exchange organization by implementing SCR with Exchange 2007 SP1. Find out the steps for setting up SCR and what you need to do to recover in the event of a failure. — Tony Redmond Exchange Management with EMS: Getting Exchange Objects You can use EMS to retrieve any type of Exchange object and its properties, then use the pipelining feature to pass results to another command. Be sure your scope is correct. — Paul Robichaux Exploring CAS Technology Learn the core concepts of the .NET Framework's Code Access Security (CAS) feature and how to administer it. — Jan De Clercq Feeling Sorta Blue, Ray It’s the great next-generation DVD format war: Blu-ray or HD DVD, which will win? After the past couple of weeks, I think we all know which will be victorious, and it worries me a trifle. — Mark Minasi Function Creates Multidimensional Arrays from Delimited Text Files You don’t have to write a separate routine for text-based processes to arrange data into a usable form—use this VBScript script to create a multidimensional array of the data to reference it by rows and columns like a database. — Jim Turner Future Computing in the Past Mark makes a few suggestions for fun holiday reading, IT style. — Mark Minasi Getting Started: Remote Administration Learn how to install and run Microsoft terminal services tools. — Kathy Ivens Group Policy Made Great The Group Policy Management Console will greatly improve Group Policy but doesn't go far enough. Mark Minasi offers suggestions for improvements. — Mark Minasi Has Outlook Become Inlook? Mark turns cynical when answering the question, Why is Outlook regressing? — Mark Minasi Hawking Certification Like Light Beer Mark disusses his appalled reaction to a prurient advertisement for an MCSE boot camp. — Mark Minasi How About a Rational Vista License? How does Microsoft get away with its software licensing, given US copyright law? — Mark Minasi How to Easily View the Extended Properties of Files Windows Server 2008 and Windows Vista have seven times more file properties than their predecessors. Here's how you can easily select and view the properties you're interested in seeing, no matter whether you're using the newest or an older OS. — Jim Turner IIS 6.0 Improvements Learn how Windows .NET Server 2003 improves the quality of IIS 6.0. — Michael Otey In Praise of Canon Printers Recently, I’ve experienced what you might call a paradigm shift. I’ve abandoned Epson and HP printers in favor of Canon printers. I didn’t make this decision lightly. In fact, you might say I didn’t make the decision at all: Epson and HP made it for me. — Mark Minasi Introduction to ADO Learn about the primary ADO objects--Connection, Command, Parameter, Recordset, and Field--and follow example scripts that demonstrate how to use ADO within VBScript. — Robert Sheldon Making PowerShell's Out-Printer Cmdlet Easier to Use The names that Out-Printer uses to identify printers aren’t obvious and aren't directly available to you in PowerShell. Here are several ways you can obtain and make printer names available to your code with no copying and pasting and minimal typing. — Alex K. Angelopoulos Microsoft CRM for the .NET Environment Microsoft enters the customer relationship management (CRM) market with a product that leverages the Microsoft .NET platform. — John D. Ruley Microsoft Lowers Its Standard, To Enterprise’s Gain Is Microsoft quietly raising the price of the Windows Server OS? In fact, is the company, in effect, quadrupling the price? — Mark Minasi Microsoft's Antispyware Gambit Mark thinks Windows AntiSpyware might fail if Microsoft doesn't keep in mind three considerations: assurance of no surprise fees in the future, ease of deployment, and Group Policy integration. — Mark Minasi Moving to Windows 2003? Be Prepared to Dig Deep Mark Minasi tells you what you need to know about Windows Server 2003 and licensing. — Mark Minasi Nowhere Left to Grow No more COMDEX; Microsoft giving away cash ... what's going on? — Mark Minasi Palmed Off Mark laments Palm's decline in usability. — Mark Minasi PowerShell One-Liners for Accessing WMI Windows PowerShell can help you efficiently manage WMI objects. You can get started by learning just a few basic commands. — Robert Sheldon PowerShell One-Liners for Managing Events Quick commands let you easily work with the event logs on a local or remote system. — Robert Sheldon PowerShell One-Liners for Managing the File System Windows PowerShell offers all the commands you need to manipulate files and folders on your file system. Here are some of the common functions you might need to perform. — Robert Sheldon Reading Delimited Files Using ADO Find out how to set up ADO and Microsoft's Jet OLE DB text driver so that you can use them to read delimited files. — Bill Stewart Reflections on the PC's 25th Birthday Sure, the PC has been successful, but has it lived up to its potential? — Mark Minasi Requiem for WinFS Learn about three enticing—but dropped—features that WinFS would have brought to the Longhorn feature list. — Mark Minasi Rest in Peace, ACS What's the hang-up with ACS? As far as Mark can see, it's an indispensable tool. Unfortunately, Microsoft has changed its release plans. — Mark Minasi Running the Small Mobile Office…Almost Keeping in sync with your small office isn't as easy as it sounds. — Mark Minasi Saving the Internet If the Internet really was a highway, maybe traveling it would be safer ... — Mark Minasi Security and the "Booga-Booga" Factor Are security professionals providing a service or just securing their own jobs when they claim that no company can be sure its data is secure? — Mark Minasi Security-Obsessed Vista Makes Your Computer Top Secret Even the most casual observer of Windows Vista walks away with the impression that Microsoft is really attempting to secure this OS. — Mark Minasi Sometimes, Convergence Works — Mark Minasi Stomp Out Dragware? Sick of hidden autostart programs? — Mark Minasi Strategies for Migrating Public Folders to SharePoint Your public folder migration to SharePoint requires a strategy, careful planning, and the right tools. And that's just the beginning. The process for getting rid of public folders is straightforward, but it pays to work through the steps carefully. — Paul Robichaux The (Timely) Fall of Static IP — Mark Minasi The Business Process Engine How can IT keep up with all the revolutions in computing? There are two developments in software that will meet the challenge: SOA and BMP. — Barry Briggs The Day the Cell Phones Stood Still Could this year's Cabir worm be a sign of things to come? — Mark Minasi The Great Question of Vista SP1’s Ship Date Let's not pressure Microsoft into releasing Vista SP1 as quickly as possible. Haven't we learned our lesson? — Mark Minasi The Group Policy Management Console Run—don't walk—to the Microsoft site to download the GPMC. Its many neat features include a folder-free view of GPOs and a GPO backup and restore capability. — Mark Minasi The Importance of Expert Systems When Buying Systems Mark laments the impossibility of buying a system that's expertly configured to his needs. — Mark Minasi The Magnificent Six Take a few minutes to get these 6 Microsoft downloads. — Mark Minasi The Microsoft Remedy Mark Smith plays judge for a day and proposes remedies that would have increased competition and fairness while protecting Microsoft’s right to innovate. — Mark Smith The Soul of Windows, Revisited Readers and Microsoft executives alike had plenty to say about Mark Smith's recent article regarding Microsoft's abandonment of Windows administrators. — Mark Smith The Year of the Database Worm? Don't be afraid of running a database server, even if it's MSDE. Just stay on top of the patches and be aware of where your servers are. — Mark Minasi Time for a Fourth Type of Event Log Entry Mark finds it troubling that a small AD environment's DCs are prone to worrisome and time-consuming--and ultimately innocuous--error messages. — Mark Minasi Time for a New Year’s Upgrade! Mark's New Year’s resolution is to fend off an old adversary: disk space. — Mark Minasi Troubleshooting Exchange ActiveSync Solve mobile device synchronization problems in Exchange Server 2003 with these tips and a free Microsoft tool that you can use for problems related to Exchange ActiveSync (EAS), Always Up to Date (AUTD), and mobile messaging in general. — Brien Posey Unify UPNs! — Mark Minasi UNIX Migration Trends A recent ChangeWave Research survey reports that more and more IT managers are migrating their systems from UNIX to Windows. — Mark Smith UPHClean Provides Faster Logoffs For All Microsoft has quietly released the User Profile Hive Cleanup service. — Mark Minasi Vista RC1 Pleasantly Surprises Mark has a change of heart regarding Vista, thanks to the latest build. — Mark Minasi Vote with Computers? I’d Sooner Let Them Do My Driving — Mark Minasi We’re Not High-Tech, We’re High-Connect Mark wonders, “Why does everyone still think that computers are ‘high tech,’ particularly given how little really new stuff arrives?” — Mark Minasi What's So Great About Longhorn? In case you haven't been following the Longhorn buzz, here's what three of its most promising features will do. — Mark Minasi What’s So Great About R2? FRS! Kind of ... Mark rethinks his criticism of R2 and the value of FRS. — Mark Minasi What’s So Hard About a Service Pack? Mark laments Microsoft's refusal to release Win2K Service Pack 5 (SP5). — Mark Minasi Where's the Response to "Get a Mac"? Mark is starting to get fed up with those Mac vs. PC commercials. Why has Microsoft been so slow to respond? — Mark Minasi Who Is R2’s Audience? — Mark Minasi Why Don't All Developers Sign Their Apps? Mark Minasi muses on why so many software vendors don't use digital certificates on their applications. — Mark Minasi Widescreen Wishes Widescreen displays are full of potential. Here's an idea that would make them much more attractive to networkers. Are you listening, Microsoft? — Mark Minasi Windows 2003 Gems Should you bother upgrading to Windows Server 2003? Mark points to stub zones and conditional forwarding as two reasons why you should. — Mark Minasi Windows Administrators’ Top Three Wishes Microsoft addresses long-standing requests from Windows administrators with each release of its server product--but Mark Minasi claims the company still has work to do. — Mark Minasi [Editorial] Software Assurance Isn't Reassuring Although SA is marketed as a two-way street, its benefits are heavily weighted in Microsoft's favor. — Michael Otey WinFS’s Intelligent File System Makes Sense Mark looks at the change-the-world part of WinFS: non-file items. — Mark Minasi [Feature] 10 Tips for a Painless Exchange 2000 Migration Migrating from Exchange 5.5 to Exchange 2000 doesn’t have to be a painful process. Just follow these 10 tips. — Jim McBee 10 Tips for Taking Exchange on the Road If you work remotely, you can configure server-based folders for offline use, and then either work remotely or synchronize your offline folders with the folders on the server. Here's how to work offline most effectively. — Tony Redmond 5 Things They Never Told You About the ADC Learn how to work around the Active Directory Connector's quirks as you use the ADC to synchronize the Exchange Server 5.5 Directory with Active Directory. — Kieran McCorry 5 Things You Should Know About Exchange 2007 These five points will help you design and deploy your Exchange 2007 architecture. — Paul Robichaux 6 Common Backup and Restore Mistakes Avoid these common errors to keep on top of your Exchange backup and restore operations. — Paul Robichaux 6 Reasons to Try Exchange 2000 Now Exchange 2000 Server is different from its predecessors. Here's why you need to start working with it right away. — Tony Redmond 6 Steps to Prepare Win2K for Exchange 2000 Exchange 2000 is closely integrated with Windows 2000. What do you need to do to make the integration proceed smoothly? — Dung Hoang Khac 7 Daily Checks to Keep Exchange 2000 Running Smoothly Monitor your Exchange 2000 system daily so that your workdays don’t deteriorate into an endless cycle of reacting to problems. — Joseph Neubauer 7 Things You Need to Know About SharePoint Services Are you the go-to person for all things SharePoint? If so, you would do well to heed these seven essential nuggets of SharePoint wisdom. — Randy Franklin Smith 8 Tips for the Solo Exchange Administrator Are you the sole Exchange administrator in your company? These eight tips will help you cut to the heart of the matter and maintain an effective system. — Paul Robichaux 8 Ways to Improve Your Exchange Cluster, Part 1 This is the first of two articles that describe the steps to a better Exchange cluster. — Daragh Morrissey 8 Ways to Improve Your Exchange Cluster, Part 2 In the second of two articles, learn four more areas--configuration, security, failovers, and service packs--that can influence the effectiveness of your Exchange cluster. — Daragh Morrissey A Closer Look at Exchange Best Practices Analyzer Exchange Best Practices Analyzer (ExBPA) performs its seemingly magical analysis of an Exchange organization by using a detailed, Microsoft-supplied configuration file. Learn more about this file and the latest version of ExBPA. — Kieran McCorry A Novel Approach to Synchronizing Exchange Organizations When you need only to establish mail flow and exchange address lists between Exchange Server 5.5 servers with different organization names, you can leverage Exchange Server's functionality to act like a Microsoft Mail post office. — Frank Plawetzki A Public Folder Checklist Streamline your public folder deployment with these tips for setting up the hierarchy, granting top-level permissions, assigning user permissions, and sharing folder content. — Drew McDermott A Tricky Migration to Exchange Server Migrating users from a foreign email system to Exchange requires keeping track of user information and understanding the relationship between domain SIDs, machine accounts and names, and the information in the Exchange Directory Store. — Drew McDermott A Viral Survival Checklist Email computer viruses are proliferating. Here are 13 actions you can take to protect your organization. — Evan Morris Accountable Email Add accountability and tracking to your company's email system. — Joseph Neubauer Active Directory Connector Redux Take a close look at a few ill-documented or barely publicized aspects of the ADC that nevertheless have significant importance for Exchange administrators. — Kieran McCorry ADC Filtering and Object-Matching Learn two techniques for selective directory synchronization with the ADC. — Kieran McCorry Address Rewriting in Exchange Server 2003 New address-rewriting functionality in Exchange 2003 lets you easily map your users' addresses to other addresses. — Donald Livengood Administering Exchange Server in a Cross-Platform Environment Learn basic strategies for administering cross-platform mail systems with as little trouble as possible. — Brien Posey An Exchange 2000 Disaster Recovery Learn from the author's experience as he troubleshoots a corrupt mailbox store caused by a hardware failure, then restores the database. — Daragh Morrissey An Exchange 2003 Journaling Primer If storing all your users email indefinitely is the bane of your existence, especially in these days of heavy regulatory compliance, read this article to find out more about Exchange 2003 message journaling. — Kieran McCorry Are You Listening, Lotus? Tony Redmond believes that Lotus has misinterpreted some of his comments about Exchange. Tony sets the facts straight. — Tony Redmond Automatically Create User Accounts and Mailboxes in Exchange 5.5 You can use ADSI, WSH, and the AcctMgmt class to automate the process of creating Exchange 5.5 mailboxes and user accounts in either an AD or NT domain. — Ethan Wilansky Automatically Delete User Accounts and Mailboxes in Exchange 5.5 Use ADSI and VBScript to automate the process of deleting Exchange 5.5 mailboxes and user accounts in either an AD or NT domain. — Ethan Wilansky Automatically Generate Mail Profiles As Benjamin Franklin said, "Time is money." Here's a solution that saves money by automating the time-intensive task of configuring Outlook 2003 mail profiles to reference users' mailboxes. — Joseph Neubauer Background Maintenance for Exchange Servers Exchange Server performs multiple maintenance tasks, typically at night, to keep the mail server performing well with limited downtime. — Tony Redmond Backing Up an Exchange Server Learn how a backup works, review several backup methods, and think about a strategy, and look at some helpful Exchange utilities. — Mark Ott Beef Up Security for Your Mobile-Device Fleet Now you can lock down your fleet of mobile computing devices and perform remote wipes. Get the lowdown on installing Exchange Server 2003 SP2 and configuring MSFP for Windows Mobile 5.0, and ensure better security for your mobile devices. — Randy Franklin Smith Better OWA Attachment Security OWA is a handy tool for remote users, but its attachment handling leaves networks vulnerable to malicious code and intruders. Here are some tips to reduce the risks. — Paul Robichaux BlackBerry 4.0 Tips and Tricks Dig into some tips and tricks that you can use to get a handle on your BlackBerry-related tasks. — Joseph Neubauer BlackBerry Enterprise Server 4.0 Should you upgrade to the new version of BES? The short answer is yes. — Joseph Neubauer BlackBerry Enterprise Server Day to Day If you have users who rely on BlackBerry devices, you should understand how these handheld devices work and how to monitor them and troubleshoot their problems. — Joseph Neubauer BlackBerry Enterprise Server's New Features, Part 1 New features in BES 3.6 and BES 3.5, including policies that let you secure BlackBerry devices, make upgrading to these software versions worthwhile. — Joseph Neubauer BlackBerry Enterprise Server's New Features, Part 2 BES 3.6 and BES 3.5 offer enhancements that your BlackBerry users have probably been asking for: the ability to read attachments, look up names in the GAL, synchronize more easily, surf the Web, and access corporate data. — Joseph Neubauer Blocking Client Access to Exchange Servers Discover how you can prevent your users from accessing an Exchange server while the system is running. — Tony Redmond Build an Email-Discovery Plan More than likely, your company will have to produce saved email messages in a court case or compliance investigation. Use these ideas to develop your own email-discovery plan and learn about tools that can facilitate e-discovery for Exchange admins. — David Sengupta Build an Exchange 2003 Cluster: Install Exchange on the Cluster Have you wanted to run Exchange on a cluster but haven't had the nerve to try? Here's help: Use these easy-to-understand instructions as your guide in installing Exchange Server 2003 on a Windows Server 2003 cluster. — Daragh Morrissey Build an Offline Exchange 2000 Server in 9 Steps An offline copy of your production Exchange server can be invaluable. Find out how you can use it and how to build one. — Joseph Neubauer Build Quality into an Exchange 2000 Environment By using provisioning tools and services, you can repeatedly produce the same result—properly built and configured servers and applications—throughout an Exchange 2000 environment. — Evan Morris Bulk Object-Manipulation in Exchange 2000 With Exchange 2000’s switch from the DS to AD, you need a new method for manipulating user objects in bulk. A few Win2K tools provide the answer. — Barb McDonald Calendaring: Understanding the Client Side Do you wonder why you can't always share calendar information within your group? Find out how Outlook handles appointments and what you can do to improve calendaring performance. — Siegfried Jagott Canning Spam You need to know how the new federal antispam law affects your messaging operations. To help you stay on the right side of the feds, we present the law's finer points and explain some provisions that your users should understand. — Paul Robichaux Cleaning Up Public Folders Microsoft plans to replace public folders with another repository in a future release of Exchange. Using PFDAVAdmin now will help you prepare for the transition. — Tony Redmond Closing Out Exchange Mailboxes These nine configurations and options can help you deal effectively with former employees' mailboxes. — Joseph Neubauer Command-Line Mailbox Creation Learn how you can use a script to create mailboxes in Exchange Server 5.5. — Paul Niser Comparing Windows Mobile 2003's IMAP with ActiveSync With Windows Mobile 2003, you can use IMAP or ActiveSync to access Exchange over a wireless connection. Here are some factors to consider when you’re deciding which protocol to use. — Joseph Neubauer Configuring Outlook Express Outlook Express's support of POP3 and IMAP4 gives the email client some advantages over other Exchange 2000 Server email clients. This article describes how to configure Outlook Express to work with these protocols. — Ronald Stewart Connect Exchange Servers Over a VPN A virtual private network provides a secure, inexpensive way to connect LANs via the Internet. — Frank Plawetzki Connecting Mobile Users to Exchange You can broadly classify the wireless devices that offer email access by the type of interface they provide. Here’s a look at those classifications. — John Rhoton Control Client Network Traffic To control client-generated messaging traffic, you need to estimate your bandwidth needs, connect clients efficiently, and modify some bad user habits. — Tony Redmond Control Mailbox Size with Mailbox Manager Exchange Server 5.5 SP3 includes a new mail-management utility. Find out how you can use Mailbox Manager to control ever-growing mailboxes. — Tony Redmond Coping with Unsolicited Email Learn how you can ensure that outsiders don't mistake your Exchange installation for a UCE mailer and how you can configure Exchange to follow current Internet standards for preventing UCE. — Mark Howard Create a URL for Outlook Web Access Simplify your users access to email through a Web browser by creating a simple URL they can use to get to OWA. — Barb McDonald Creating a Group Policy for Outlook 2002 Learn how to use Group Policy to disable menu and toolbar commands. — Sue Mosher Creating Exchange 2000 Mailboxes The interaction between AD and Exchange and the need to populate multiple attributes have made mailbox creation more complex in Exchange 2000 than it is in Exchange 5.5. Learn the process so that you can find, then resolve problems. — Tony Redmond Customize Exchange Details Templates Use Exchange Server details templates to display information about recipients that is typically available only at the server. — Mark Ott Customize Your Exchange Display Templates Customizing Exchange templates makes them even more valuable for displaying directory information such as attributes about users, contacts, distribution groups, and public folder objects. — Tony Redmond Customizing OWA 2000 Here's how to take advantage of Outlook Web Access's URL addressability to customize the user's OWA experience and reuse OWA components in your applications. — Kevin Laahs Customizing OWA 2000 Access Segmentation is a handy tool for administrators who want to prevent users from accessing certain OWA 2000 features but don’t want to spend a lot of time learning how the WSS forms engine works. — Paul Robichaux Customizing Your Exchange 2000 Server Installation Although Exchange 2000 doesn’t include Performance Optimizer, you can use ADSI Edit and modify the registry to move Exchange components where you want them. — Daragh Morrissey Dealing with Databases Do you dread having to manage your Exchange databases? Follow these recommendations and leave the worry behind. — Kieran McCorry Deleting User Accounts and Exchange 2000 Mailboxes This useful script performs email-enabled user-account deletion tasks. — Ethan Wilansky Demystifying Exchange 2003 Custom Recipients, DLs, and Profiles Learn how to deal with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Messaging API (MAPI) profiles and how Exchange 2003 handles custom recipients and DLs during cross-administrative group mailbox moves. — Kieran McCorry Demystifying Exchange 2003 Mailbox Moves The Exchange 2003 SP1 Move Mailbox Wizard takes the pain out of cross-administrative group mailbox migrations. — Kieran McCorry Deploying Exchange Intelligent Message Filter IMF on an Internet-facing bridgehead server is a valuable adjunct to other spam-reduction measures. — Paul Robichaux Develop an Exchange Compliance Strategy Exchange provides key compliance features such as journaling and messaging security—but you'll likely have to add capabilities such as archiving and PST management via third-party products. — Devin L. Ganger Diagnosing Exchange Server 2003 Problems Discover the tools and techniques that will help you troubleshoot Exchange stability and performance problems. — Daragh Morrissey Distribution Lists in Exchange 2000 As a subset of the Exchange directory, Exchange 2000 DLs are also part of AD. Here’s what this change means for your migration to Exchange 2000. — Jason Seim Do-It-Yourself Test RBLs Create an inhouse RBL to test Exchange 2003's block list–integration feature. — Donald Livengood Documenting Your Exchange Server 5.5 Systems Proper documentation is invaluable during disaster recovery. — Drew Nicholson Does Single-Instance Storage Matter Anymore? Single-instance storage was an important feature in early versions of Exchange. Have new systems and Exchange 2000 changed its value? — Tony Redmond Eliminate Unnecessary System Messages When your network connection is slow or unreliable, system messages can impede message delivery. You can reduce the volume of system messages without affecting the messaging function. — Richard Riley Emulating UNIX Aliases' Functionality in Exchange If an Exchange server is your primary Internet mail hub in your organization, use this technique to relay mail for non-Exchange users to the appropriate mail server. — John Frandsen Enabling Message Journaling on Exchange Server If government or corporate policies require you to save all messages, message journaling is the tool you need. Find out how message journaling works, how to plan for and configure it, and what it can't do. — Mark Ott , et al. Entourage 2004 for Mac Entourage 2004 for Mac is well integrated with the rest of the Office 2004 suite, is stable, and provides Mac users the most-often-requested Exchange features. — Paul Robichaux Exchange Server 2003 OWA Overview Take a look at the new OWA functionality that Exchange 2003 brings to the mobile user. — Kevin Laahs Exchange 2000 and Exchange Server 5.5 Public-Folder Interoperability Mixed environments present special challenges for public folders. Learn how to smooth your transition. — Kieran McCorry Exchange 2000 Backup and Restore Exchange 2000 has enhanced backup and restore functionality. Get to the know the basics. — Tony Redmond Exchange 2000 for Developers and Users The Web Store, server-based events, CDO 3.0, and item- and column-level security in Exchange 2000 will help developers and users do their job better. But what's missing? — Sue Mosher Exchange 2000 Hosting: The ASP Model, Part 1 Use the same infrastructure ASPs use to host Exchange for multiple customers, and learn how to set up customized user logon names in AD. — Evan Morris Exchange 2000 Hosting: The ASP Model, Part 2 Configure different address lists and addresses with different suffixes for different groups in the same AD forest. — Evan Morris Exchange 2000 Instant Messaging Tony Redmond answers some Exchange Instant Messaging FAQ to smooth your way in adopting this new subsystem. — Tony Redmond Exchange 2000 Interforest Synchronization In this age of company mergers, how do you synchronize two or more Exchange 2000 servers? Microsoft Metadirectory Services might be the tool you need. — Greg Dodge Exchange 2000 SMTP Logging and Archiving Exchange 2000's SMTP logging and archival tools help you diagnose communication problems with other systems. — Joseph Neubauer Exchange 2000 SP2 CDOEXM Updates Learn about a small but extremely useful CDOEXM enhancement in Exchange 2000 SP2 that will help you manage mailbox security. — Alain Lissoir Exchange 2000 SP2 WMI Updates Microsoft has added two new WMI providers to manage the Message Tracking Logs and the DSAccess components. Here's how to use these providers in WSH 5.6. — Alain Lissoir Exchange 2000's Mailbox Manager The popular Mailbox Manager utility is back in SP1. Find out how it works and how to use it to clean up your users' mailboxes. — Henrik Damslund Exchange 2003 Advanced Journaling Exchange 2003's envelope journaling is a sophisticated journaling method for organizations that are serious about journaling. Learn how to enable it and how to make it work in a multiserver environment. — Kieran McCorry Exchange 2003 and the Windows Storage Server Feature Pack Learn about Windows Storage Server, how it works with Exchange 2003, and when using it as an Exchange storage mechanism does (and doesn't) make sense. — Paul Robichaux Exchange 2003 ArchiveSink You can use the free ArchiveSink tool to get some granular control over message archiving. — Kieran McCorry Exchange 2003 Clusters: Rolling Upgrades Take a look at some of the changes in implementing rolling upgrades to an Exchange 2003 cluster — Daragh Morrissey Exchange 2003 Deployment Fundamentals Exchange 2003 deployment doesn't differ much from Exchange 2000 deployment, but little changes add up to big improvements. — Kieran McCorry Exchange 2003 SP1 RPC over HTTP Exchange 2003 SP1's new managed RPC over HTTP topology provides enhances deployment and administration of RPC over HTTP access. — Kieran McCorry Exchange 2003 SP2 On the Road Check out the new Exchange 2003 SP2 mobility features and think about how you can best use them in your environment. — Paul Robichaux Exchange 2003 SP2's Direct Push Technology Learn about Direct Push, an Exchange 2003 SP2 feature that pushes email to a mobile device from an Exchange server while conserving bandwidth and minimizing mobile-service charges. — Nathan Winters Exchange 2003 SP2: Migrate or Wait? Deciding whether to move to Exchange Server 2003 SP2? Paul Robichaux, helps you examine your options. — Paul Robichaux Exchange 2003’s Recovery Storage Group Here's a strategy for using the RSG, a specially tailored version of a regular storage group to which you can restore a backup copy of a mailbox store. — Tony Redmond Exchange Disaster Recovery Tips Incorporate these ideas in your Exchange-specific disaster recovery plan. — Menko den Ouden Exchange Ideas Get tips, news, and community resources for messaging admins. — Lisa Pere Exchange Ideas A compilation of tips, news, and community resources for messaging administrators. — Various Authors Exchange Ideas Get tips, news, and community resources for messaging admins. — Lisa Pere Exchange Ideas A compilation of tips, news, and community resources for messaging administrators. — Various Authors | |||||||||||