<i>Microsoft Exchange Server 2010 Unleashed</i>is the ultimate guide to designing, deploying, managing, troubleshooting, and supporting any Exchange Server 2010 environment, no matter how large or complex. Drawing on their extensive experience with hundreds of enterprise Exchange Server environments
Microsoft Exchange Server 2010 Unleashed
β Scribed by Rand Morimoto, Michael Noel, Chris Amaris, Andrew Abbate
- Publisher
- Sams
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 1313
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
We just completed our migration to Exchange 2010 this past weekend using this book as our guide, and it's now noon on Saturday, we've successfully migrated, and we're heading home! We followed the book from start to finish, from the planning aspects covered in the architecture portion of the book, to setting up the servers, creating DAGs, load balancing our CAS servers, and then preparing for and completing our migration to Exchange 2010! We plan to add Exchange 2010 Unified Messaging voicemail, but we're going to let this migration settle and tackle switching from Cisco Unity to Exchange UM in the next couple weeks.
We are VERY happy with had this book as our guide! (I'll be writing a review shortly on our experience with Migrating from AD 2003 to AD 2008 R2 this weekend took, which we used the Sams Publishing Windows 2008 R2 Unleashed book as our guide, and that cutover went as planned as well!)
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Very, very disappointed by this book. The editing was just plain shocking, in several instances it uses the incorrect version of Exchange, eg, Exchange 2007 introduced the Unified Messaging Role and Exchange 2007 has built on that In the section on securing Exchange with ISA the author uses the wron
1 online resource (xliv, 1258 pages) :
Pearson Education, Inc., 2012. - 936 pages. ΠΠ° Π°Π½Π³Π». ΡΠ·ΡΠΊΠ΅.<div class="bb-sep"></div>Microsoft Exchange Server 2013 doesnβt just add dozens of new features: It integrates multiple technologies into a common, unified communications system that can add value in many new ways.<strong> Now, five leading