Drew Heywood's Networking Windows 2000 highlights the crucial aspects of networking - such as hardware configuration and the core Windows 2000 networking issues - so the reader can successfully and efficiently setup and administer a Windows 2000 network. This book is a reference for the networkin
Managing Windows 2000 Network Services. Network Services
β Scribed by Debra Littlejohn Shinder, MCSE, MCP+1, MCT, Thomas W. Shinder, M.D., MCSE, MCP+1, MCT, and Tony Hinkle, MCSE+1, CNE, A+ (Eds.)
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 671
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Content:
Acknowledgments, Page v
From Global Knowledge, Page vi, Duncan Anderson
Contributors, Pages vii-viii
Preface, Pages xxvii-xxxiii
Chapter 1 - What Is New in Windows 2000, Pages 1-58
Chapter 2 - Microsoft TCP/IP 2000, Pages 59-100
Chapter 3 - DHCP Server Management, Pages 101-162
Chapter 4 - Windows 2000 DNS, Pages 163-238
Chapter 5 - Developing a WINS Strategy, Pages 239-296
Chapter 6 - Secure TCP/IP Connections, Pages 297-381
Chapter 7 - External Network Connections, Pages 383-431
Chapter 8 - Connecting Small Offices and Home Offices to the Internet, Pages 433-476
Chapter 9 - Creating a Routable Network Using Windows 2000, Pages 477-523
Chapter 10 - Administration and Ease of Use, Pages 525-583
Chapter 11 - Managing Windows 2000 Network Services Fast Track, Pages 585-614
Appendix A - Secrets, Pages 615-634
Index, Pages 635-664
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This volume delivers guidelines to help you build a TCP/IP network and deploy DHCP, DNS, and WINS. It also covers wireless networking, network security features, and remote access connectivity.
This book is about problems and methods in managing communication networks. The kinds of networks under consideration include enterprise networks (i.e. those that are typically owned and managed by businesses) and service networks (i.e. those that are owned by service providers but leased to bus
<p>Most everything in our experience requires management in some form or other: our gardens, our automobiles, our minds, our bodies, our love lives, our businesses, our forests, our countries, etc. Sometimes we donβt call it βmanagementβ per se. We seldom talk about managing our minds or automobiles
This book is about problems and methods in managing communication networks. The kinds of networks under consideration include enterprise networks (i.e. those that are typically owned and managed by businesses) and service networks (i.e. those that are owned by service providers but leased to busines
This is the first book describing cable networks, services, and their management in greater detail by thirteen experts in various fields covering network architectures and services, operations, administration, maintenance, provisioning, troubleshooting (OAMPT) for residential services; network archi