Exchange Server Cookbook
Author: Paul Robichaux
Ask network administrators what their most critical computerapplication is, and most will say "email" without a moment'shesitation. If you run a network powered by Windows 2000 orWindows Server 2003, Microsoft Exchange occupies much ofyour time. According to Microsoft, 110 million Exchangeseats have been deployed, but 60% of you are still runningExchange 5.5. That's a problem, because the differencebetween version 5.5 and the more efficient Exchange 2000 andExchange Server 2003 is profound.
Don't fret. Exchange Server Cookbook offers you acomprehensive how-to guide to these newer versions ofExchange. You'll find quick solutions for the most commontasks you need to performeverything from installation andmaintenance to configuration and optimization, with provenrecipes for the most useful tools and utilities. The bookalso has solutions to some uncommon tasks (that you may notknow are possible) and advanced procedures that aren't partof day-to-day operations. These include tasks for criticalsituations, such as using a recovery storage group.
Our reliable desktop reference even shows you how to writescripts for Exchange management and deployment tasks. That'sright. While not every Exchange job can be scripted, manycan, and we provide lots of working VBScript examples foraccomplishing particular goals. Whatever your particularneed, you'll find it quickly, because chapters in thisCookbook are laid out by recipe, with cross references toother pertinent solutions in the book. With this guide,you'll learn:
The relationship between Exchange and Active Directory
When to use the GUI, the command line, or scripting
How to prepare forests, domains, and servers
How touse Group Policy to control Exchange
Diagnostic logging, measure performance, and administrativeprivileges
Recipient management: user accounts, mailboxes, mail-enabledgroups
Mailbox and public folder database management
Message routing and transport functions
Security, backup, restore, and recovery operations
For every question you have about Exchange 2000 or ExchangeServer 2003, our Cookbook has the answerone that you canfind and implement without a moment's hesitation.
Table of Contents:
1 | Getting started | 1 |
2 | Installation and infrastructure | 11 |
3 | Active directory integration | 49 |
4 | Exchange server and organization management | 75 |
5 | Recipient management | 105 |
6 | Mailbox and public folder database management | 169 |
7 | Transport, routing, and SMTP | 204 |
8 | Client connectivity | 262 |
9 | Public folder management | 317 |
10 | Exchange security | 353 |
11 | Backup, restore, and recovery | 389 |
Introduction to Computing and Programming with Java: A Multimedia Approach
Author: Mark Guzdial
New computer science students are far more motivated when they are creating programs they care about. Reflecting that insight, this complete first course in Java introduces each new concept in the context of programs that manipulate students’own sounds, pictures, web pages, and video: programs that help them communicate.
Mark Guzdial and Barbara Ericson draw on their innovative work at Georgia Tech, work that has significantly improved student success, and earned the recognition of the National Science Foundation. This book presents new techniques only after demonstrating why students need them to solve meaningful problems. Students can then run their digital media programs get immediate feedback that helps them stay on the right track.
Open-ended assignments are designed to motivate, promote creativity, and encourage collaboration and friendly competition, using the simple, intuitive, lightweight DrJava development environment. At the same time, students learn to create robust, efficient Java code for any IDE or platform.
Skills include:
- fundamentals of object development
- loops, arrays, and matrices
- drawing with Java’s Graphics and Graphics2D classes
- generating HTML databases and using basic SQL queries
- understanding and modifying algorithms
- program performance and reliability
A dual-platform CD-ROM (for Macintosh® and Windows®) includes raw media materials and programming source code for the book’s exercises andall necessary software, including Sun Microsystems’ Java 2 Platform, Standard Edition and more.
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