Exchange 2007 SysMgmt Team blog posts roundup
I have previously listed the progress we've been making in posting ITPro focused Systems Management blog posts to the EHLO team blog in my "Continuing with SysMgmtBlog Posts" and "Exchange 2007 SysMgmt bloggers want your input" postings.
To recap - If you've not been watching the EHLO (MS Exchange Team) blog, you've missed a ton of great Exchange 2007 Systems Management related blog posts! Now that the product is finished, we're rounding out the final surge of blog posts we'd planned to do when we started last fall. Since that last post at the beginning of November, we've posted another 14 blog posts on various SysMgmt topics for a total of 31 posts since we started at the end of August!
Here's the complete list of the SysMgmt Team blog posts that have made it onto the EHLO blog at this point (it's a very large table because we've posted a lot of stuff!):
There's still a couple more SysMgmt blog posts being written for RTM, so keep watching the EHLO site for these to show up over the next few weeks!
And, again... *THANKS* to all of you folks out there who have read these blog posts, replied with your comments or feedback, linked them from your sites, etc. We hope these posts are useful to you as you begin deploying Exchange 2007 and we're looking forward to continuing more of this sort of information exchange in the future!
Comments
Anonymous
January 01, 2003
Palm Brings Microsoft's Direct Push Technology to Palm OS Based Treo Smartphones Microsoft Keeps theAnonymous
January 01, 2003
Hi Michael - unfortunately I don't have the answer you want to hear. Exchange 2003 management tools aren't supported (and can't be installed) in Windows Vista. I suppose this is primarily because Exchange 2003 came out 4 years ago and I don't know that there's any service pack in sight to provide this support. Upgrade to 2007 tools isn't really a solution in some cases, as 2007 management tools won't provide 100% coverage for things you may need to manage on your 2003 servers (X400 connectors, etc). Not sure why someone would have been suggesting this route. The better answer is probably to do one of these two:
- Use Terminal Services admin sessions to connect directly to the Exchange servers and do management there.
- Use VPC to host an XP Pro image you can run when needed (at your desktop) to do the management as "admin-only" configuration.
- Anonymous
March 06, 2007
The comment has been removed