Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 Administrators Pocket Consultant Second Edition

Overview

As a Microsoft Exchange administrator, you need to know how to configure and maintain Exchange clients. With Microsoft Exchange Server 2007, you can use any mail client that supports standard mail protocols. For ease of administration, however, you'll want to choose a specific client for on-site users as a standard and supplement it with a specific client for off-site or mobile users. The on-site and off-site clients can be the same. I recommend focusing on Microsoft Windows Mail, Microsoft Office Outlook 2007, and Outlook Web Access. Each client supports a slightly different set of features and messaging protocols, and each client has its advantages and disadvantages, including the following:

Outlook 2007 is the most common Exchange client for corporate and workgroup environments. With the Outlook Anywhere feature of Exchange, which eliminates the need for a virtual private network (VPN) to securely access Exchange Server over the Internet by using a remote procedure call (RPC) over Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) connection, Outlook 2007 might also be your client of choice for off-site and mobile users. The catch with Outlook Anywhere is that the feature is not enabled by default, requires additional components, and is supported only when Exchange Server 2007 is running on Microsoft Windows Server 2003 or later releases of Windows Server.

Windows Mail and Outlook Web Access, on the other hand, aren't designed for corporate users and are really meant for off-site or mobile users. Both clients are easy to configure and require relatively little back-end configuration. In fact, you can quickly and easily configure Exchange Server to work with these clients.

This chapter shows you how to manage Outlook 2007 and Windows Mail. Chapter 4, "Managing Mobile Messaging Users," describes using Outlook 2007, Outlook Web Access, and Outlook Anywhere.

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