Exchange Server 2010 incorporates a number of high-availability features that system admins will find useful, including a new database availability groups (DAG) feature. Mailbox databases and the data ...
There could be many reasons why you need to restore a database. Let’s look at some common reasons. The server has been re-installed, after failure. The database gets corrupted or is not mounting.
A regular backup can help restore the mailbox database and mailbox connectivity after a malicious attack, database corruption, or server crash, with minimum and acceptable downtime depending on the ...
Many seasoned Exchange Server administrators these days are frustrated that the most popular on-premises e-mail system has played second fiddle to the cloud-based Office 365 service. The frustration ...
With the release of Exchange 2007 and then 2010, Microsoft moved admins to a role-based model for deployment, with changes both to roles and services that admins should understand. Exchange 2013 takes ...
Microsoft has invested millions of dollars into Azure and Office 365, and their competitors are following suit with bona fide public cloud offerings of their own. But public cloud solutions are not ...
In my last blog post I covered the migration process from Exchange 2003 to Exchange 2010. In this post, I’m going to outline the sequence and provide tips, tricks, and best practices to look forward ...
One of the more challenging tasks involved in migrating from Exchange 5.5 to Exchange 2000 is moving users' mailboxes. If you don’t want to spend hours explaining to users where their e-mail ...
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