Address List Segregation or the “Hoster Edition” of Exchange Server 2010 SP1 – don’t even think about it!

Posted by Jaap Wesselius in Exchange, Exchange 2007, Exchange 2010, Exchange Shell, IT Professional, PowerShell, SysAdmin, Windows PowerShell on 20-09-2010

Tags: , , , , , ,

All users in your Exchange organization are automatically listed in the Global Address List. When you have multiple departments, or maybe multiple companies (sometime also referred to as organizations, but this has nothing to do with the Exchange organization) in your Exchange organization you may want to organize or split up the Address List.

Exchange 2010 Compression

Posted by Elizabeth Ayer in Exchange, Exchange 2010, IT Professional, SysAdmin, email on 06-07-2010

Tags: , , , , , ,

There’s a mystery about early Exchange 2010 deployments:  despite the much-publicized removal of single instance storage, sizes of Exchange 2010 databases have not increased. The same message has trickling back from all quarters, as businesses go live:  after moving mailboxes, database sizes in Exchange 2010 are roughly the same as they were in Exchange 2007.

Testing with Exchange Server – Tips and Tricks – Part 2 – Creating Mailboxes

Posted by Reka Burmeister in Exchange, Exchange 2007, Exchange 2010, Exchange Testing, IT Professional, Outlook, PST Importer, Software Testing, SysAdmin, email on 30-06-2010

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

In a previous article I mentioned how to create users and computers in active directory, the first stage of testing the PST Importer (and ESA). The next step is to go to Exchange and create mailboxes to the users that we just created and for further comfortable management, add access permissions to them where needed.

Exchange 2010 Mystery – Calling all SysAdmins – Help Requested. Please.

Posted by Elizabeth Ayer in Exchange, Exchange 2007, Exchange 2010, IT Professional, Outlook, SysAdmin on 19-05-2010

Tags: , , , , , ,

There’s a mystery about early Exchange 2010 deployments: despite the much-publicized removal of single instance storage, sizes of Exchange 2010 databases have not increased. The same message has trickling back from all quarters, as businesses go live: after moving mailboxes, database sizes in Exchange 2010 are roughly the same as they were in Exchange 2007.