The final chapter in this four-part series discusses a global manufacturing firm’s experiences in moving from NT 4.0 to Windows Server 2003, an operation with 10,000 computers worldwide.
- By Linda Briggs
- December 11, 2003
Part three of this four-part series describes a Canadian’s firm’s on-going, cautious efforts to evaluate the new platform for its truly mission-critical 24x7 environment.
- By Linda Briggs
- December 10, 2003
Forget who has access to which services? Find your way back with the LDAP Browser.
- By Bill Boswell
- December 09, 2003
Part Two of this four-part series profiles an organization with 30 television stations across the country and 2,000-plus employees.
- By Linda Briggs
- December 09, 2003
Moving to a major new operating system is always daunting, but for these four companies, the switch to Microsoft’s latest OS was well worth it. In part 1 of this four-part series, a small ISP moved for the speed improvements as well as server consolidation.
- By Linda Briggs
- December 08, 2003
These features require a little work, but are worth it.
- By Don Jones
- December 01, 2003
Your company is not keen on you honing your IT skills on its WAN for good reason. Building a lab is the next best thing. Here's how.
- By Andy Barkl
- December 01, 2003
Legal issues aside, here's one way to audit Exchange 5.5 user mailbox usage on the down-low.
- By Bill Boswell
- December 01, 2003
Encoding scripts to prevent unauthorized access.
- By Chris Brooke
- December 01, 2003
You're the ultimate authority for keeping your network up and running. You've carefully chosen tools that help you most and products you can't live without. Here are your choices for 2003's best of the best.
- By Doug Barney
- December 01, 2003
Day-to-day admin duties spelled out in detail in 285 short, narrow pages.
- By Doug Barney
- December 01, 2003
Could WinFS be the salvation?
- By Dian Schaffhauser
- December 01, 2003
Plenty to say about board certs; small tales enjoyed
- By MCP Magazine Readers
- December 01, 2003
Migrating servers, users and resources from Windows NT to Windows Server 2003 was a big challenge for our fictional hero. We review a number of third-party tools to help ease his pain.
- By Danielle Ruest and Nelson Ruest
- December 01, 2003
UrlScan is an invaluable security tool for Web sites. Although IIS 6.0 incorporates some of its functionality, it’s still useful for IIS 6.0 sites—and critical for older versions of IIS.
- By Martin C. Brown
- December 01, 2003