文件名称:
Exchange Server 2010 Unleashed.pdf
开发工具:
文件大小: 18mb
下载次数: 0
上传时间: 2019-08-16
详细说明: Introduction 3 the CAS role and the Hub Transport role, two updated roles to Exchange Server 2010 that are critical to the Exchange Server 2010 organizational environment. .Part VI: Exchange Server 2010 Administration and Management—In this part, five chapters focus on the administration and management of an Exchange Server 2010 env ironment. The administration and management of mailboxes, distri- bution lists, sites, and administration have been greatly enhanced in Exchange Server 2010. Although you can continue to perform many of the tasks the way you did in the past, because of significant changes in replication, background transac- tion processing, secured communications, integrated mobile communications, and changes in Windows Server 2003 Active Directory, there are better ways to work with Exchange Server 2010. These chapters drill down into specialty areas helpful to administrators of varying levels of responsibility. .Part VII: Unified Communications in an Exchange Server 2010 Environment—This section has been completely updated for Exchange Server 2010 with the revised Unified Messaging role, new mobility functionality, and tight inte- gration with SharePoint 2007/2010. As previously mentioned in this introduction, Exchange Server 2010 not only improves voice mail to Exchange Server, but also the addition of voice integration takes Exchange Server 2010 far beyond just an email and calendaring solution. This addition takes Exchange Server into an area where communication is conducted on personal computers, mobile handheld devices, and from remote kiosks and terminal systems. The chapters in this part of the book highlight all the enhanced technologies andintegration capabilities that make Exchange Server 2010 the core foundation to the future of an organization’s communications infrastructure. .Part VIII: Client Access to Exchange Server 2010—This part of the book focuses on the enhancements to the Outlook Web App client, various Outlook client capabilities, and Outlook for non-Windows systems. Outlook Web App is no longer just a simple browser client, but one that can effectively be a full primary user client to Exchange Server, including access to network file shares, an entry point to SharePoint shares, and a remote voice mail collection point. In addition, Outlook Web App now has full functionality for non-Windows users, such as users who access Exchange Outlook Web App from an Apple Mac computer. Being that Exchange Server 2010 nowincludes voice and mobile communications as a major component of the Exchange Server environment, client access as well as the distrib- ution, management, and support of the client becomes even more important. .Part IX: Data Protection and Disaster Recovery of Exchange Server 2010— As organizations implement Exchange Server 2010 and make it their central store for email, calendars, contacts, voice and fax communications, and mobile commu- nications, it is no longer an option to set up and support an environment where downtime is even a possibility. This part of the book covers the new continuous backup technologies built in to Exchange Server 2010 intended to keep Exchange Server 2010 operating in a nonstop environment. Additional chapters in this part address backing up and restoring Exchange Server data, along with the recovery of an Exchange Server 2010 environment in the event of a disaster. From the Library of Lee Bogdanoff Microsoft Exchange Server 2010 Unleashed 4 .Part X: Optimizing Exchange Server 2010 Environments—This last part of the book addresses optimization in terms of server and Exchange Server 2010 organiza- tional environment optimization, optimization of the new Database Availability Group (DAG) storage and replication system, and system optimization that goes far beyond the basics. Rather than simply tuning an Exchange server with the appropri- ate amount of RAM and disk space, Exchange Server 2010 takes on a whole new area of load balancing data storage across distributed storage subsystems in which information is managed and replicated as an integral part of Exchange Server 2010. The real-world experience we have had in working with Exchange Server 2010 and our commitment to writing this book based on years of field experience in early adopter Exchange Server 2010 environments enable us to relay to you information that we hope will be valuable in your successful planning, implementation, and migration to an Exchange Server 2010 environment. In the past 15 years, we have written a book on every version of Exchange Server since its inception built on at least two years of early adopter beta experience. This book, Microsoft Exchange Server 2010 Unleashed, is the latest of our efforts. However, because Exchange Server 2010 is effectively based on Exchange Server 2007 and could potentially be considered a major service pack update to the product, there are enough differences in the new release that it required complete rethinking of the way we wrote this book. Rather than being just an email and calendaring product, Microsoft added a handful of new server roles to Exchange Server 2007 to improve security and reliability that Microsoft further enhanced in Exchange Server 2010. In addition, Exchange Server 2010 greatly expands on Microsoft’s offering in the areas of unified messaging that it entered into the marketplace with Exchange Server 2007. Exchange Server 2010 has not enhanced the Unified Messaging server role, but Exchange Server is now clearly the backbone of an entire unified communications strategy that Microsoft has built over the past several years. Beyond just email and calendaring, ExchangeServer 2010 is now the foundation for voice and mobile communications. Just a decade and a half ago, email was just one of a number of different ways people communicated. Early implementations of Exchange Server (v4.0, v5.0) had organizations tolerant if a server was down for a day or two. Today, email has become an extremely important, if not primary, method of communication for organizations. Downtime on an Exchange server can bring an entire organization to its knees. With Exchange Server 2010 adding voice mail and mobile communications into the messaging environment, an Exchange Server 2010 server and environment can no longer tolerate failures caused by viruses and spam, nor systemdowntime caused by server crashes or database corruption. You will find that the improvements Microsoft has made to Exchange Server 2010 are not only evolutionary improvements, but highly critical if not absolutely essential to Microsoft’s responsibility to help organizations maintain a safe, secure, and reliable communications infrastructure. This book covers all the aspects of Exchange Server 2010 from introducing the technologies, to properly planning and designing Exchange Server, to the implementation, management, and support of an Exchange Server 2010 environ- ment built on tips, tricks, and best practices from more than two years of early adopter implementations in the field. This book is organized into 10 parts, each part focusing on core Exchange Server 2010 areas, with several chapters making up each part: .Part I: Microsoft Exchange Server 2010 Overview—This part provides an intro- duction to Exchange Server 2010, not only from the perspective of a general tech- nology overview, but also to note what is truly new in Exchange Server 2010 that made it compelling enough for organizations to implement the technology in beta From the Library of Lee Bogdanoff 2 Microsoft Exchange Server 2010 Unleashed in a production environment. This part also covers best practices of planning, proto- type testing, and migration techniques. .Part II: Planning and Designing an Exchange Server 2010 Environment— This part covers the design of an underlying Windows Server 2003/2008 and Active Directory environment in addition to the Exchange Server 2010 unified communi- cations environment. Because organizations of varying sizes have different needs and requirements, as appropriate, this part addresses core Exchange Server 2010 design plans and concepts appropriate for most organizations, and specific attention is given to enterprise-level design and planning considerations for some of the largest Exchange Server implementations in the world. This part also covers the integration of Exchange 2010 in a non-Windows environment as well as tips, tricks, and best practices for getting a Windows Server2003/2008 Active Directory, DNS, and domain structure properly planned and architected. .Part III: Implementing Exchange Server 2010 Services—This part covers the core implementation of Exchange Server 2010 as well as the new Edge Services role that has been added to the Exchange Server organizational structure to provide protection against viruses and spam. In addition, this section has a chapter on the Exchange Management Script based on PowerShell, the Microsoft scripting solution that is the basis of the configuration, administration, and operations of Exchange Server 2010. .Part IV: Securing an Exchange Server 2010 Environment—Security is on everyone’s mind these days, and it was absolutely critical to have several chapters that covered security. The chapters in this part of the book include client-level, server-level, and transport-level security that is at the backbone of security for a network environment. A dedicated chapter on email encryption was necessary to cover the use of certificate-based encryption technologies to enable an organization the ability to provide person-to-person encrypted message communications. In addi- tion, chapters on Microsoft ISA Server 2006 enhancing security at the edge and a chapter on enterprise policy environment addressing regulatory compliance security enhancements added to ExchangeServer 2010 round out this extensive part on security. .Part V: Migrations and Coexistence with Exchange Server 2010—This part is dedicated to migrations, client access servers (CASs), and Hub Transport servers. This part provides a chapter specifically on migrating from Windows 2003 Server to Windows Server 2008 for organizations that want to migrate to a base Windows 2008 environment during their migration to Exchange Server 2010. And, of course, this part includes a chapter on migrating from Exchange Server 2003 and Exchange Server 2007 to the new Exchange Server 2010 unified communications environ- ment. Because Microsoft does not provide migrations from Exchange Server 5.5 or Exchange Server 2000 to Exchange Server 2010, nor does it provide in-place upgradesto Exchange Server 2010, there are fewer options to choose from, which means that the method you are left with needs to be planned, tested, and executed with the utmost care to minimize, if not eliminate, any interruption to users. This part of the book includes a chapter that covers the planning and implementation of From the Library of Lee Bogdanoff
(系统自动生成,下载前可以参看下载内容)
下载文件列表
相关说明
- 本站资源为会员上传分享交流与学习,如有侵犯您的权益,请联系我们删除.
- 本站是交换下载平台,提供交流渠道,下载内容来自于网络,除下载问题外,其它问题请自行百度。
- 本站已设置防盗链,请勿用迅雷、QQ旋风等多线程下载软件下载资源,下载后用WinRAR最新版进行解压.
- 如果您发现内容无法下载,请稍后再次尝试;或者到消费记录里找到下载记录反馈给我们.
- 下载后发现下载的内容跟说明不相乎,请到消费记录里找到下载记录反馈给我们,经确认后退回积分.
- 如下载前有疑问,可以通过点击"提供者"的名字,查看对方的联系方式,联系对方咨询.
相关搜索: