Why you need Active Directory for Exchange Server 2007

The larger the organization the less it seems that the Exchange Administrators talk to or work with the Active Directory Administrators. This is usually a two-way street. This lack of understanding can severely impact your Exchange environment. The purpose of this blog post is to educate YOU the Exchange Administrator on what you need to understand about Active Directory (AD), a few AD basics, and a few tips. Hopefully this knowledge will allow you to proactively talk to your AD Administrator(s). It would be great if you read this before you implemented Exchange Server 2007, but we can’t have it all, can we? Finally, I hope by the end you will understand why we need Active Directory (we already know they need us – everyone needs email right?).

Full Article – http://msexchangeteam.com/archive/2009/01/05/450355.aspx

Remote Server Administration Tools for Windows 7

Remote Server Administration Tools for Windows 7 enables IT administrators to manage roles and features that are installed on remote computers that are running Windows Server 2008 R2 (and, for some roles and features, Windows Server 2008 or Windows Server 2003) from a remote computer that is running Windows 7. It includes support for remote management of computers that are running either the Server Core or full installation options of Windows Server 2008 R2, and for some roles and features, Windows Server 2008. Some roles and features on Windows Server 2003 can be managed remotely by using Remote Server Administration Tools for Windows 7, although the Server Core installation option is not available with the Windows Server 2003 operating system.
This feature is comparable in functionality to the Windows Server 2003 Administrative Tools Pack and Remote Server Administration Tools for Windows Vista with Service Pack 1 (SP1).
Download it here.

How-to: Getting started with .VHD files in Windows 7

Some of you seem confused about how Windows 7 goes about supporting .VHD files as used by Virtual PC, Windows Server 2008 R2 and Hyper-V. Here’s a quick how-to work with .VHD files in Windows 7.

OK, let’s begin with a Windows 7 beta 1 install. Fire up a Command Prompt and type the following:

diskpart

Full Article – http://blogs.zdnet.com/hardware/?p=3324

Windows 7 Beta Download

You can now download the public beta of Windows 7.

http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/evalcenter/dd353205.aspx

Six new annoyances introduced in Windows 7

As a flip-side to Ed Bott’s “Six Vista annoyances fixed in Windows 7” I thought I’d play Devil’s Advocate and offer up what I think are a selection of potentially new annoyances that Windows 7 introduces.

#1 – Revamped Taskbar and Start Menu are far from perfect

My take on the Taskbar and Start Menu is that it’s going to be one of those things that people either love or hate. Like any major change in the user interface it is bound to attract automatic criticism, but given that it is undoubtedly flawed.

 

Full Article – http://blogs.zdnet.com/hardware/?p=3261

Announcing Windows Server 2008 R2 Beta!

For homo sapiens, getting older is painful. Take me for example. Nine hours on a plane never bothered me when I was in my 20s with a rubber backbone. But a couple of weeks out from birthday # 43 and one cross-country airplane ride translates into a sudden spinal meltdown that has me lying in bed, rigid as a vampire, popping painkillers like Christmas chocolates.

Fortunately, it’s not the same thing for software. In the life of Windows Server, today marks general availability of public beta for the new Windows Server 2008 R2-and, for me personally, I’ve never had my geeky mitts on a better version. The new release incorporates a host of new features and capabilities that I hope you’ll check out; the code is as stable a beta as I’ve ever seen and combined with the beta of Windows 7 you’ll be able to evaluate not just a bevy of new server-side capabilities, but a new level of synergy between server and client operating systems, too.

Full Article – http://blogs.technet.com/windowsserver/archive/2009/01/07/announcing-windows-server-2008-r2-beta.aspx

Windows 7 Beta Compatibility

In the two weeks or so since I received the Windows 7 Beta, I’ve been trying to come up with something meaningful to say about the software and hardware compatibility of this new system, since that will be a major concern facing potential upgraders. The problem, however, is that Windows 7 Beta compatibility is hard to describe in a pithy manner, despite the fact that I’ve completely migrated virtually all of my PCs to this OS. It’s all over the map, mostly good, but with some odd lapses.

Full Article – http://www.winsupersite.com/win7/win7_beta_compat.asp

Report: PC makers to provide free Vista-to Win-7 upgrades starting July 1

In yet another indicator as to the progress of Windows 7, the Tech ARP site reported that Microsoft plans to allow PC makers to offer customers who buy Windows Vista machines as of July 1 free upgrades to Windows 7 once it ships.

It looks as if Tech ARP may have obtained internal Microsoft information on its Windows 7 Technical Guarantee program. The Web site says that Microsoft provided PC partners with a first pass draft of its Tech Guarantee documentation on December 10.

Full Article – http://blogs.zdnet.com/microsoft/?p=1791

Public betas of Windows 7 client and server could hit this week

It’s not much of a secret at this point, but CEO Steve Ballmer is expected to announce official availability of the closed Windows 7 Beta 1 release during his Consumer Electronics Show keynote address on January 7. The official (non-Torrented) Beta 1 bits should be available to pre-approved Windows 7 Beta 1 testers later Wednesday night or early on January 8.

Ditto with Windows 7 Server, a k a Windows Server 2008 R2. The private Beta 1 release of that product is scheduled for late January 7/early January 8, I’m hearing.

Full Article – http://blogs.zdnet.com/microsoft/?p=1792

A Look Back at 2008 and a Look Ahead to 2009

With 2008 drawing to close, Microsoft is at a crossroads between its past and the cloud computing future. But that doesn’t mean that the software giant’s most traditional products won’t continue to impact us in the year ahead. Today, I’d like to take a short side trip and look both back at 2008 and ahead to the year that’s coming.

First, let’s reflect a bit on the year that’s now coming to a close. I primarily cover Microsoft, of course, so I will focus on what I consider to be the top 10 most important Microsoft product releases of the year. Here they are, in alphabetical order.

Full Article – http://www.winsupersite.com/server/retro_2008.asp

Windows 7 Beta: Notes and Observations

I’ve been putting Windows 7 Beta candidate builds through their paces for over a month now, and with build 7000 finally making its way into the hands of testers around the world, I thought it might be time to highlight a few of the more interesting changes that have appeared or evolved since Microsoft issued its M3 (“milestone 3”) release back in October. In no particular order…

Full Article – http://www.winsupersite.com/win7/win7_beta_notes.asp

Citrix Project Apollo: Aero, DirectX, and OpenGL via ICA

It’s been over a year since Citrix first demoed “Project Apollo,” their solution for remoting Vista Aero glass to clients. Displaying Vista Aero glass over a remote display protocol like ICA or RDP is complex, because Aero requires a GPU to render the complex graphics. (It’s not as simple as just enabling the “themes” service like when you wanted to add the Windows XP Luna experience to a Windows 2003 Terminal Server.) This is essentially impossible in a multi-user Terminal Server enviroment, since each session would require its own GPU. (Sure, maybe you could pop a graphics card into your server, but best case that’d just give you Aero in a single session–and that’s assuming that you had a remote display protocol that could support it.) Microsoft is rumored to be working on an Aero remoting solution for Terminal Services based on the Calista technology they acquired earlier this year, but so far nothing official has been announced.

Full Article – http://www.brianmadden.com/blogs/brianmadden/archive/2008/12/29/citrix-project-apollo-aero-directx-and-opengl-via-ica.aspx

Windows 7 Beta Review

How does one review a supposedly new version of a product that they have, in reality, already been using for months? It’s not easy, believe it or not: The Beta version of Windows 7 (build 7000) that Microsoft will later deliver to tech beta testers and then, in January, to the public, is nothing more than a very finely tweaked version of the various post-M3 (Milestone 3, or build 6801–see my lengthy overview of that build) builds I’ve been using since October. In fact, there is almost no difference at all between this version of Windows 7 and M3, assuming you’ve enabled all the hidden M3 features using Rafael Rivera’s “Blue Badge” tool.

Full Article – http://www.winsupersite.com/win7/win7_beta.asp

Microsoft warns of critical bug in SQL Server

Microsoft on Monday warned customers that attack code has been released targeting a critical vulnerability in older versions of its widely used SQL Server database software, and urged users to apply a temporary workaround.

The bug was first reported to Microsoft last April by an Austrian security consulting company, SEC Consult. But the firm apparently grew tired of waiting for Microsoft to decide when or whether it would release a patch, disclosed the flaw two weeks ago and published proof-of-concept exploit code.

Full Article – http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/12/23/Microsoft_warns_of_critical_bug_in_SQL_Server_1.html?source=rss&url=http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/12/23/Microsoft_warns_of_critical_bug_in_SQL_Server_1.html

Windows 7’s Better Backup Features

A couple of weeks ago, while lamenting Microsoft’s poorly-articulated Previous Versions story, I alluded to an earlier post in which I detailed my attempts to reproduce Mac OS X’s “Time Machine” feature under Windows Vista.

At the time (mid-late October 2007) I found myself stymied by a lack of configurability in Vista’s File Backup utility. Specifically, there was no way to directly specify which files or folders to backup – only highly generalized categories like “Documents” or “Music.” Worse still, Vista File Backup made a habit of skipping files it considered to be part of the operating system, including the myriad .aspx files I had created as part of my web development projects.

Full Article – http://www.pcworld.com/article/155959/windows7_backup.html?tk=rss_news