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September 28 Review of Windows SBS2K3 Best Practices - Chapter 1Hello and welcome to my review of Harry Brelsford's Small Business Server 2003 Best Practices. I hope you have read my review of Eriq Neale's book. If not, go ahead and do it, I'll wait right here until you get back. The book is 14 chapters long. I intend to review every chapter except chapter 13 which covers ISA2K. Since ISA2K4 is the standard, I can't see going backwards. Without further adieu, here is chapter 1. Harry gives a list of SBS features. He then gives a history of SBS. He gives a good talk about people who do use and who should use SBS2K3. Harry then talks about the Finder, Minder and Grinder. The Finder gets the business. The minder is the manager type and the grinder is the worker bee. Harry then talks about the business of SBS and the philosophy of SBS. He then talks about 4 walls. That means SBS should be only in one location. That is, it should not be used for branch office situations. Later on though, that seems to be reversed. The chapter then covers the SBS market. The three keys are attitude, affluence and expertise. The next couple of pages goes through each of these points. He spends 2 or 3 areas talking about the various numbers of small businesses. He does admit that a majority of these businesses are overseas. The chapter next moves into the architecture of SBS. Harry has a nice picture of the architecture. He carries the topic to the single domain and having all the 5 FSMO rules. It should be the only DC, but member servers can be used. The discussion then looks at the client side and business applications. Mainly those that will run on the server using SQL. The apps are not named, but a general discussion is used. Competitors are now discussed. The first one is Windows 2003 Server. MS vs. MS! XP in a peer to peer setup. It can happen is small shops. Novell Small Business Suite is the final competitor discussed. It is based on Netware so that is that. Harry finishes by talking about the product launch and then a short summary. Chapter two covers Design and Planning. I will try to get through it quickly, but it may not happen. I am going on vacation to Colorado this Saturday for a week. I pull out at 5:00 AM and will not be back until late the following Saturday. Therefore, it may be awhile before I can get through chapter 2. Just giving you a heads up. Take care until we meet here again. Thanks for reading. September 21 Chapters 23 & 24 Review of SBS2K3 UnleashedChapter 23 Here is the last review for Eriq Neales wonderful book, SBS2K3 Unleashed. These last two chapters cover ISA. Chapter 23 is entitled "Internet Security and Acceleration Server 2004 Basics". The chapter begins by telling us ISA is a firewall. It then moves into firewall appliances and a bit about the debate between hardware and software firewalls. Hint: ISA is just as good at protecting you as the hardware guys. What runs the hardware? If you said software, give yourself 5 extra bonus points and thanks for playing. The chapter admits that ISA is tough to master. However, learning the basics and a few advanced topics should get you through most of what you need to know. Some free resources are mentioned to learn the product. The one most often mentioned in these 2 chapters is http://www.isatools.org. New features of ISA2K4 are discussed next. The ISA management MMC. the ISA Networks, Apply or Discard changes, and Administration Delegation. The ISA Management MMC is spiffed up and broken into three panes. ISA Networks no longer trusts the internal network out of the box. It now knows five networks instead of two and it trusts none of them. The LAT is gone. VPN Quarantine puts your users in a sandbox until they are checked and verified. It is a scriptable environment. Apply or Discard is two big buttons at the top of your window when you make changes. Administration Delegation allows you to setup someone else with three different monitoring roles. This way, your setup cannot be changed by these administrators. Several pages discuss this last topic at length. ISA has three different client types. They are; SecureNat, Web Proxy and the Firewall Client. The Firewall topic is covered the most with explanations for setting it up, deploying and the like. Log information comes next. ISA logs everything by default. It can be a nice picture of what happened, but it also requires a lot of space to create these logs. ISA keeps 16 GB of log files by default. Lucky we all have large hard dives these days! However, you are shown how you can cut that down to size, but not below 4 GB. ISA has a lockdown mode. If the firewall service stops, ISA automatically locks itself. It does not shut down, it just isolates and protects itself. The book tells you exactly what all that means. Client connections are limited to 160 with a new install and only 40 if you upgraded from ISA2000. ISA does cache web pages still, but it is just a small part of its functions. The default cache size is 100 MB. This chapter does not have a troubleshooting section. It closes with a Summary section and Best Practices. Chapter 24 Chapter 24 is called "Internet Security and Acceleration Server 2004 Advanced Administration". By the name, you can see we have moved past the basics and are going into the advanced side. ISA2K4 is very advanced as you will see. The chapter discusses customizing the dashboard. It is limited as to what you can do, but you can roll up things you don't care to see and unroll things that you want to see. Alerts can be acknowledged or reset. How you wish to handle it will be up to you and your client. If you use a DHCP to assign an address to your external NIC, it can be spoofed. Bottom line, go static and you'll get no static! You can setup a wireless access point for your wireless clients easily. You can and should enable intrusion detection on ISA. Several pages are devoted to showing you how and explaining the concepts in rather good detail. Turning on detection is easy and can save you a world of grief. The next topic up is configuring automatic detection for the firewall client. This feature allows laptops to connect from anywhere without reconfiguring. Application and Web filters are next. Bad dreams of the OSI model come back to you here, but not too much. You can only enable or disable these filters. The majority are enabled by default. Anatomy of a Firewall Policy is now up to bat. The components are named that make up these policies. A new feature is, these can be copied, renamed then configured to your liking. Components are listed as: Access Rules, Protocol definitions, User set, Schedule, Content filter and Domain name and URL sets. The meanings of each of these are laid out. Next, we are treated to creating new firewall policy rules in a step by step manner. You can use this to restrict websites by the time of day or by certain users. This can come in handy in controlling who sees what. You can also deny certain websites to everyone if you choose. You can also find free or buy some add-ons to help you limit porn sites, gambling, etc. Is that needed today or what? If certain websites need direct access, you can configure that so that no proxy is in the way. This is usually caused by sites that have scripts that do not use the standards. You should complain to the web master if ever you have cause to do this. Port 443 is SSL by default. Some sites may use a different port. You can download a script and easily add this into ISA. The details can be found on page 599. FTP is our next discussion point. Outbound FTP is not on by default. However, you can configure it if needed and page 601 will walk you through the procedure. You can publish a web server and pp 602-604 cover that. It also covers the question, should you host your own site. The answer mostly is no just for security alone. Find a good provider that patches consistently and has a good uptime and pay them to host your site. However, if you are determined to do it on SBS, you certainly can go right ahead and do it. Our chapter comes to a close with Troubleshooting, Summary and Best Practices summary. This not only closes out the chapter, but also the book. My overall impression of this book is, it is very ambitious in its coverage. Think of all we have covered. We started with a condensed MBA program, covered installation, networking, security, exchange, web technologies, client connectivity, administration and management which covered back up, monitoring, group policy, workstation management and patches. Finally, our two ISA chapters closed out the book. These are HUGE topics and all of it is covered in good detail throughout the 605 pages. Will this book make you an SBS genius? No. However, I think if it is read carefully 2-3 times through, it could make anyone proficient with the product. I can honestly recommend this book to anyone interested in this technology. I would like to thank Eriq and all his compadres for writing this book. It deserves a large following. Please pick one up for yourself and use it. I intend to read through this book again on my own. Now that we have finished this book, what next? I am going to do another book. That book is ...........drum roll please................... Windows Small Business Server 2003 Best Practices by some guy named Harry Brelsford! ;-> It is the third printing. This book has 14 chapters. We will go over that once I start. I truly hope you enjoyed my review. I thank you for coming by and reading and I hope you'll drop by when I start this next book. See you then! August 27 Chapters 20-22 SBS2K3 Unleashed ReviewHello again everyone. I have not had an Internet connection since Thursday night. Thanks Comcast/Time Warner. Great start! Anyway, if you read the title, you know this review will cover 3 chapters, 20-22. These chapters cover Group Policy, Managing Workstations through Group Policy and Security patches and hotfixes. I'm glad to be doing these three chapters together because they really flow well together. You may ask how security patches and hotfixes flow with group policy. That is a very good question. Please continue reading to discover that answer. Chapter 20 covers Group Policy as I said above. This chapter is 29 pages long. It is a fairly long chapter in this book. It starts with a nice overview of group policy, what it is and how it can be used by the administrator. A table on page 480 sets the stage. Group policy can help you assign scripts, redirect folders, manage applications and modify registry settings. Next, group policy is broken down into its elements. software settings, windows settings and administrative templates are contemplated. Next, group policy ordering is discussed. How is GP applied? Local settings, Site settings, Domain settings and finally, Organizational settings are applied in that order. Therefore, contradictory policies can be overwritten if a later policy contradicts an earlier policy. The exception to this is enforced policies. The next major topic is the GPMC or the Group Policy Management Console. Most of you know that Windows is full of consoles. Navigating and viewing policies kick off this section. Several screenshots show the GPMC to help you in the discussion. GP details show who created the policy, owns it, modified it as well as other information. GP settings will show you the policies that are setup on your system for easy review. GP delegation shows the permissions for various security groups. The chapter next turns to GP modeling and results. Here is where the true power of GP can be tested and viewed before you destroy your network! :-> That is, you can setup policies, determine their effects on your network before you apply them. If they do not do what you need, tweak them before deploying. You are shown how to setup the modeling report in a step by step fashion. Creating the report follows. Again, a step by step method is used for your benefit. The next section covers 8 pages. It is Default SBS Group Policy Objects. It is all the details of GP objects. It begins with the windows firewall and gives you all the policy elements and their respective settings. This continues with the Internet Connection Firewall, client computers, remote assistance, lockout policy, domain password policy, default domain policies, auditing policies and default domain controllers policy. The preceding sections will show you just how indepth of a subject GP is. Books have been written on this subject. Therefore, this chapter will not make you a GP guru, but it will help you to master the policies you need for SBS. The next section covers creating/modifying GP Objects. It runs the gamut from planning to testing the GPO to modeling it as in another previous section. Finally, the chapter concludes with troubleshooting GP and GP disaster recovery. What is GP DR? In a word, backup. Chapter 21 Chapter 21 is called Managing Workstations Through Group Policy. Chapter 20 was concerned with GP for the SBS server. This chapter brings it down to the workstation level. This is where the work saving part comes in. Are you tired of visiting 5, 10, 25, 50 workstations to keep them up to date with applications, patches, antivirus, scripts, other applications, etc. ad nauseum? If so, GP is here to make your life easier. The chapter starts with a discussion on why manage workstations. See what I wrote in the previous paragraph to find out some of the answer. Next, we turn to folder redirection and offline files. Most of you know that redirecting documents to the server is a no brainer wizard and it works very well. This can help you to make easy backups of all your users documents. Offline files can keep a copy of the documents on a laptop. When the laptop is not connected to the server, the user can still use the documents, update them and once back in the office, the documents can be synched and updated. There are plenty of GP's that can be set for offline policy. See page 515 for all of them. Managing workstation access is our next topic. You can easily set logon restrictions for your users. Want to prohibit logons for certain hours? Easily done with a GP. Locking down users to protect your server and protect your users from themselves is up next. pp 517-520 shows what policies are enabled and disabled for just about every setting you can imagine from the Control Panel to IE and numerous other settings. There are also many other GP uses. For instance, Office has a kit that has 11 different policies that you can use to control Office behavior and control what you want your users to see and use. As always, our chapter ends with some good troubleshooting tips. Chapter 22 Our final review today is chapter 22 which covers security patches and hotfixes. Earlier I told you that this chapter flows well with the GP topic. I also said I would answer that here. Here is the answer. WSUS. You can establish WSUS on your server and then you can deploy these patches to your workstations and even your server at your convenience. Therefore, you can assure that your machines are patched in a timely and safe manner using WSUS and GP. There are some issues however. The laptop that is not connected. The workstation that is powered down will not get updated. What can you do? In a word, reschedule. You can reschedule these machines so they are patched. You can also train your users when patches are released to ensure the machine stays on for the night of the event. This chapter starts off with the story about the moth in the vacuum tube. Debugging started back in the 40's and continues to this day. Makeup of a patch and how you are notified are discussed. What kind of patch do you have? Page 529 lays it out for you. Patch testing and risk analysis is discussed and some good resources are listed to keep one up to date on this topic. The chapter has a strong thread that weaves throughout. That thread is, do not guarantee patching. That is, every patch is not tested against every possible scenario. Therefore, your client may have some third party applications or utility that breaks when a patch is applied. If you guarantee this will not happen, you will soon be in hot water. Resources for patches are up next. Again, several good resources are listed to help you. WSUS and automatic updates are given as resources to obtain your patches. Office patches can be obtained the same way from the same site so you don't have to worry about patching them from the office update site separately. The MBSA is discussed on pp. 538-539. It can show you what patches you are missing. Another tool called Shavlik HFNetChk Pro is discussed. It is not free, but it can patch many things on your server, workstations and it even includes patching for some third party applications. WSUS comes next in a large section. It covers installing WSUS, synchronizing, setting up GP on the server, and the approval process. As always, troubleshooting brings it all to a close. Five KB articles are listed to help one troubleshoot update issues. I hope you enjoyed these three reviews and learned something. Next, we move into premium technologies. The book only has two chapters left. They are 23: ISA2K4 Basics and 24: ISA2K4 Advanced Administration. These chapters are 22 and 20 pages long respectively. I will try to review them is separate posts. After I complete these two, I plan to go through and make a list of all the resource links in every chapter as a separate blog post. That should be useful for everyone of you out there. Please come back so we can finish this book. Once I complete this one, I think I may move on to one of Harry's books and review it in this space. I can't wait to get your feedback. Take care and I'll see you in a few days. August 19 Chapter 19 Review of SBS2K3 UnleashedChapter 19 covers Monitoring and Reporting. It is a fairly short chapter only 16 pages long. Since monitoring and reporting are so easy to setup, it is natural this chapter is so short. The chapter starts off with the decision to monitor. Of course you should always monitor. Report and alert types are covered. The performance and usage reports are very easy to set up and will give you a good synopsis of your server and user activities. Remember to read these daily and to followup on any errors it reports to you. If no one will do anything with these reports, why run them? The reports will run at 6 am everyday and e-mailed to whomever you choose. You can change the time if you prefer. Performance alerts will be e-mailed to you immediately. Monitoring and alerts topic is covered next. How do you setup monitoring? As with most other things SBS, here comes the wizard! Follow the wizard to setup the monitoring report. These reports can be viewed internally or externally. Next, the chapter spends several pages breaking down what is in each report. Most things are self explanatory and the book admits to that. The default reports can be changed. Sending yourself log attachments is covered here. You can even add extra logs for monitoring if you choose to do so. Getting too many alerts can overwhelm you especially if you have multiple servers to care for. These parameters can be adjusted so you only get what is truly important to you. Troubleshooting comes next. It's pretty simple. Rerun the wizard will fix the issue. Want to change the report name? Open up HKEY_Local_Machine\Software\Microsoft\SmallBusinessServer and double click RegisteredOrganization and type the name in the value field. The chapter closes with Best practices. Chapter 20 will be next. It covers group policy. Something I sorely need to learn so I am looking forward to it. That chapter is 29 pages long, so stay tuned. August 16 Chapter 18 - Back it up!Chapter 18 is all about backing up. Entire books have been written on this subject and they are needful. However, this chapter is a good primer on backing up SBS. The chapter begins with backup issues. It goes into various reasons to back up whether they be regulatory, risk avoidance, or recovery. These are all good reasons to back up and other reasons are looked at as well. Hardware and media are discussed next. Maybe you want to backup to a CD, DVD, external harddrive, local harddrive and then move the file to some other location. Perhaps you like tape drives? All of these are great tools. One point to make is, these are tools, so use the right tool for your job. NTBackup will not backup to CD or DVD automatically. The backup plan is next. What? You say you don't have a plan? Then buy the book and get a plan! Nine points are laid out for you to consider when making this plan. Site and security comes up next. Once you make your backup and put it on your media of choice, where are you going to store it? In a fireproof box? Offsite? If so, where? One block, one mile or one thousand miles away? Is your area prone to hurricanes? Tornadoes? Earthquakes? These points and more should be considered when offline storage is considered. A primer on backup types such as full, differential, incremental and copy are discussed next. If you are shaky on these concepts, read these three pages and take out the shake! What is a backup without a schedule? You want to kick off your backup each night don't you without standing in front of the machine? Then schedule that job and relax at home! Media rotation is shown in a nice table on page 448 that will help your plan what we spoke about earlier. What is the SBS mantra? Use the wizard! Is backup different? It most certainly is not. You have a backup wizard, so use it! Shadow copies are turned on here so it is a good practice to use the wizard. Two tables are laid out to show you what the backup wizard can and cannot do. Hint: the cannot do list is about three times as long as the can do list! Don't let that scare you however. It can do a good enough job for most people out of the box. Would you like to know what the wizard does? If so, the next few pages in the chapter are for you. It dives into the deep and dirty parts of what this wizard does for you in a few mouse clicks. Using NTBackup is up next. Maybe you should make your backup strategy complete several different jobs? Maybe you just back up your Exchange data in one job? Your important data in another. Various databases in another. These topics are covered well enough to get you thinking about where your head should be in this discussion. Third party tools are talked about, but not by name as to not endorse one above another. Remember, these are tools and you should use the proper tool for your job at hand. Disaster strikes! What now? Luckily, the book has this discussion. First, are you testing your restores? If not, start. If so, good for you. Pat yourself on the back. If your server is down, what kind of hardware will you restore to? Similar, dissimilar? These are all points that should be known and practiced. The chapter closes out with some decent troubleshooting tips. This chapter is like Ragu sauce. You need to backup your server? It's in there! This chapter was a good read as well as an easy one. If you are a backup guru, you may get bored. Anyone short of guru status, you will learn something or find some value in this chapter. This chapter is yet another good resaon why you should buy this book. What's next? Monitoring and reporting are next. Stay tuned so you can monitor me! August 06 Eriq Neale's SBS2K3 Chap 16-17This review covers chapter 16-17 of Eriq Neale’s SBS2K3 unleashed book. Chapter 16 is entitled Users and Computer and chapter 17 is entitled Integrating the Macintosh into a SBS2K3 Environment. Both of these chapters are chock full of information.
Chapter 16 covers users and computers in case you couldn’t have guessed! ;-> The chapter begins by showing the differences between an administrator and a power user. A nice table summarizes all the abilities each one has. Adding users via the wizard comes next. ADUC can be used to add users manually, but you can get strange results if you choose this method. The wizard sets up all the proper permissions and puts the users in the right OU for SBS2K3. User permissions can be changed by running the wizard or manually if one chooses, but why make it harder than you have to?
User templates are next discussed as well as creating and modifying templates. These templates are the key to the wizard for properly setting up users via the wizards. Disk and mail quotas are discussed in a couple of pages.
Managing computers is discussed next. Computers can be setup at the same time as you setup users or you can go back and do them separately. Another nice table is shown that shows the differences between administrators and power users access to computer management tools. Out of 12 areas, power users can only perform 4 of them. Setting up computers though ADUC is discussed. Assigning applications to computers is also looked at. The code that is created by the wizards is also shown in the book. Connect Computer wizard is briefly looked at on pp. 391-393. Finally, adding servers via the wizard is discussed and then a troubleshooting section closes this chapter.
Chapter 17 is all about the Mac. For those of us ignorant about the Macintosh, I am chief among us, this chapter covers it all! This chapter is pretty long. It is 39 pages long. It has a lot of words and pictures. This is good. If you need to setup a Mac on your SBS2K3 network, buy this book just for this chapter. The chapter starts with sharing files. Various services have to be setup on your server before it can talk to the apple and share files. Installing these file services is discussed in very good detail. Creating shares is also talked about. If a windows share is setup already, you will need to readd the share so the files can be seen by all. Microsoft UAM needs to be added to all Macs on the network.
Appletalk has to be added as the protocol for OS9 and earlier. This chapter will show you all that you need depending on the OS you have on your Mac. Directory access is in here and then connecting to the server. Numerous methods are discussed to connect to the server again, depending on the OS. Accessing Exchange is then shown using POP3 and IMAP and using various clients all the way to Entourage. RWW, VPN and RDP are then looked at and then a nice summary and best practices close this lengthy and in-depth chapter.
I will next start with chapter 18 which covers back up. Be sure to stay tuned. I hope you enjoyed this review and I hope you will come back soon. July 31 Chapter 10- Eriq Neales SBS2K3 UnleashedI just completed chapter 10 which is entitled Workstation Security. This chapter covers a lot of tools and begins with a discussion about risk. You have three choices concerning risk. They are: accept it, mitigate it or transfer it. These choices have associated costs with them and so they should be discussed with the business owner.
Service Pack 2 is a great tool for XP. It automatically has the Windows Firewall turned on. Some think it is a pain, but others have had their bacon saved by this feature. Active X can be better controlled in IE now. Group policy is weaved throughout this chapter. Many examples are given that will allow you to use gpedit to set policies to control most of these tools.
Outlook Express now understands that HTML e-mail can be bad on a workstation and network. Memory protection is now built-in. Automatic updates are not new, but they are here and help you to properly patch systems. Page 204 talks about the security center and it gives some great advice. Just remember this; netstat –ano.
If it is possible, do not let users run as an administrator on their workstations. If they have to for some applications, use Runas, but do not run full bore as Administrator all the time. Setting up a security group is discussed in order to help you establish group policies for many of these tools.
The chapter then talks about anti-virus tools. It is agnostic on which you should use, but it does discuss the “hot” ones and tells you to use it, learn it and love it. That way, you can support it. Anti-spyware tools are also discussed. These tools are sort of the same and the author makes the point that bad code is bad code and virii and spyware are two sides of the same coin. Perhaps one day, these tools will meld into one and make cleaning systems more efficient.
The managed office is looked at and Office as a tool is discussed. Many GP’s can be set for Office and they are discussed here is several tables. Definitely worth looking at. The educated user is your friend. Protecting data from external and internal forces is also discussed.
Pages 221-222 are worth their weight in gold. Do you need to put together a toolkit to use at clients sites? Here you can build CD’s or flash drives with many tools that can help you troubleshoot network and workstation issues.
This chapter was an easy read for me. I truly enjoyed it and found too many tools and nuggets to mention. Pick this book up for this chapter alone. I hope you have enjoyed this review. I will now head on to chapter 16. Please come back and tell your friends. Thanks for visiting. July 30 Going to complete the review yet! Hello again everyone! Long time, no type. Where have I been you may ask? Well, I've been studying the SBS stuff from a number of other books, I've had a 2 week driving vacation that took me 5,021.4 miles in 13 days and I have been trying to complete a migration for a client. I plan to start back at chapter 10 and then go chapters 16-24 and review them here. I'll probably do each chapter individually.
It is often hard to find all the time I need, but I do plan to get more dedicated and try to get this done for you and me! I am going to begin reading chapter 10 right after I get done here typing this up. Then as the week goes on I'll start chapter 16 and go forward. I actually read the final two chapters, 23-24 which cover ISA 2K4 back when I needed to learn it for a job. However, I will read them fresh to review them for you. After I complete this book, I hope to review some of the others I have obtained from nerdbooks. Without further adieu, I appreciate you reading this and writing me. Take care and please check back often. Thanks for understanding. May 15 SBS2K3 Review - Part 3Are you ready for another exciting review? Here we go.
I did start back at chapter 6 after going through Exchange last time. I then jumped a bit ahead again as I am trying to bone up on some information I need for a client migration this week. I hope you enjoy this review.
Chapter 6 - Covers IIS in pretty good detail. IIS is so intertwined with virtually every piece of SBS, it is imperative that it be understood by the administrator. Everything from RWW to Exchange, Companyweb and practically every other nook and cranny of SBS is reliant on this technology called IIS 6. The chapter takes you through all the settings that you need for all the above areas. It even covers backing up the entire metabase and sites too. Virtual directories are discussed and certificates are in this section as well. You can create your own certificate, but you will need to have your browser trust it or answer yes everytime you go to your site. The chapter finishes up with some good basic troubleshooting tips.
Chapter 7 - Covers RRAS, VPN and firewalls. This chapter is only 17 pages long, but it does cover the basics. The RRAS firewall is covered mainly in this chapter. There is another chapter in the back of the book that covers ISA2004 which of course is your firewall if you have it installed. That's why RRAS is covered here! All the necessary ports are covered that SBS uses to route successfully. VPN's are covered next and the raging debate over them is also discussed. Many SBS'ers do not think VPN is necessary and can even create other risks as more ports are opened. This chapter covers that risk and debate. With RWW, OWA and the like, why would you use a VPN on SBS? You can even use dialup access for SBS if you are so inclined. Does anyone do that these days? Finally, troubleshooting tips are disbursed to round things out.
Chapter 8 - Covers Terminal Services. This chapter is only 11 pages long. It is one of the shortest, I believe the shortest chapter in the entire book. The chapter starts with Remote Administration mode vs. Application Mode. SBS2K3 has 2 licenses for administration. If you want application mode, you need to setup a member server and put Terminal Services on it along with its own CAL's. Installing and configuring Terminal Services and maanging is covered next. Troubleshooting again winds this short chapter to a close.
Chapter 9 - This chapter discusses Server Security. If you have studied NT, W2K and W2K3 like I have, this chapter doesn't really cover anything new. However, if you are fairly new to this arena, this chapter can help bring you up to speed. The chapter starts with physically securing your server. Hard to do in small businesses, but think minimizing risks here. Then file security is covered. NTFS file permissions are covered in decent detail. Permission inheritance and even special permissions are covered. Can you say "Traverse folders" anyone? Having ownership and who can take it is then discussed. Encryption is touched on and then we move on to share level security. Password security and policies are talked about in depth. Since the password/pass phrase is the gateway in to your system, this topic is very important. Once again, troubleshooting closes the chapter.
At this point, I jumped ahead a bit. I read chapters 14 and 15 for this upcoming job I need to do. I'm sorry for not following the book sequentially, but this should prove the book does not need to be read in that fashion. You can read each chapter as its own stand alone primer. That way, you can gain the information you need.
Chapter 14 - Covers sharepoint and companyweb. This chapter I have to say is simply fabulous! You want to justify buying this book? Read this chapter and you have done it! It is that good. I must say I really learned a lot from this chapter. Granted, I am a newbie when it comes to this topic, but I feel I have lost a lot of that "newbieness" after reading this chapter. The chapter begins with an Overview. The perfect beginning for someone like myself. The default file locations are discussed. Think databases here. Everything from documents to photos are stored in a database. In fact, you can even add metabase data to that information and do some very fancy filtering. It is covered! To move your companyweb data can be a daunting task. This chapter covers it in 13 easy steps. The 4 default permissions are then covered. Web designer for all! Everything from applying themes to customizing lists, documents, you name it are all discussed in very vivid detail for several pages. How to customize these views are next. Web parts are then discussed and how they should have their own separate page setup. Creating subsites is easy and this chapter will show that to you. Next, the author shows us how to create new top level pages. Hint: best done in Frontpage, but not necessary. Once you create the new site, you will be going into IIS Manager to set it up. It is covered in here to make your deployment successful. Backing up and restoring sharepoint data is then viewed. The restoration part is covered in very good detail. The gist is, you create a new subsite, restore there and then you can cherry pick what you want to add back in case you are only after a certain document or picture or list, etc. Using frontpage to extend companyweb is then discussed. Working with multiple languages is covered next. Each site/subsite can only have one language. However, you could setup two subsites that are the same, but have one in English and one in Greek by applying the proper language pack. Troubleshooting and removal and reinstallation of company web closes this very good chapter.
Chapter 15 - discovers Remote Web Workplace henceforth called RWW. This chapter also starts with an overview. It then shows the administrators view as well as the clients view. The chapter dives into connecting to RWW. Once in RWW, the user can go to many places such as their desktop, companyweb, email, and even to the server if you have administrator credentials. The discussion then turns to RWW file locations and registry settings. All the configuration settings are laid out in a table format. Customizing RWW is then looked at as well as increasing the timeout and how to exclude systems. If you do not want your users connecting their local drives, you can use the 6 step outline in this section to prevent them from doing so. As always, our old friend Mr. Troubleshooter comes to the rescue.
So, what will we cover next time? However much I have read! I will return to chapter 10 and then because many of the subsequent chapters have been covered, I will go on to chapter 16-24 as I can get to them. One word of warning however. I may jump to the 2 closing chapters 23 and 24 as they cover ISA 2004 in depth and I need that knowledge. So, I may cover 23 and 24 next time then go back to chapter 10 and then finish the book with 17-22. I do hope you are getting something from this review. If I can sum it up, buy the book! You won't be sorry. Thanks for reading. I appreciate your feedback. May 08 SBS 2003 Unleashed - Part 2 Hello again. I want to continue my review of Eriq Neale's SBS2K3 Unleashed book. My first review covered chapters 1-5. I said I was going to go through these chapters sequentially. I needed to have a quick study of Exchange so I jumped ahead. Here is my review of Part V which contains chapters 11-13.
Chapter 11 covers Outlook as a client of Exchange. It covers RPC over HTTP, configuration, OWA, OMA as well as Activesync. It then has a very thorough troubleshooting section. The troubleshooting section covers each of the previous sections in order. Unless you are a complete seasoned veteran, you will learn a lot from this chapter.
Chapter 12 covers Exchange. It talks about junk mail, spam and viruses. To help control those nasties, it then goes into a discussion of the IMF. It then covers the POP3 connector as well as the SMTP connector. This chapter also discusses how to setup multiple routes. It then goes into recipient policies and the update service. The chapter finishes with some basic troubleshooting. This topic is VERY broad and deep. The book even admits that Exchange is too large to cover in 1-2 chapters and I agree. I am new to Exchange and I found these chapters good, but leaving me wanting more. My next purchase will certainly be an Exchange book.
Chapter 13 covers disaster recovery of your Exchange server. It first lays out the database and log structure that makes up the database store. It breaks these down in a very logical way and even has pictures! That was a nice learning tool for me. It then discusses the 2 backup methods, who can backup what and it then discusses various tools including EXMerge. The discussion then turns to actual recovery of your database. Five methods are then laid out before you to walk you through recovering the data. If this wasn't enough, the topic of repairing damaged databases is laid out. Warning, this stuff is very heavy and not for the faint of heart. You have been warned! As alawys. the chapter closes with some troubleshooting tips.
As a heads up, I am either going back to chapter six, where I left off or I am going to part 8 that discusses management and administration. I'm not sure which directions I will go. As I stated earlier, I intended to go sequentially, but somes things came up that are making me learn some things faster than I had intended to. The only way you will know, is to read next weeks installment. I can't wait to meet you back here then. Until that time, keep learning. April 30 Review of SBS2K3 Unleashed so farI purchased Eriq Neales book, "Small Business Server 2003 Unleashed". ISBN is 0-672-32805-4. So far, I have read the first five chapters in order. I intend to read the entire book in a sequential manner and then hopefully use it for field work. Here are my basic thoughts on those five chapters.
Chapter 1 - This first chapter is a really great place to start for those who do not know the history and intracacies of the four iterations. This chapter covers little known details and some downright bad things in the various versions. I am happy to have read this chapter and learn many things I did not know. Remember the adage, "Those who forget history are doomed to repeat it". It appears MS has certainly learned from previous versions and have really gone out of their way to improve this current version. It makes me anxious for the next SBS version.
Chapter 2 - This chapter is all about business and how to justify the cost for a business to implement this solution we call SBS2K3. This chapter uses what I call horse sense and some good tips that could help anyone who is going into any business, not just the IT business. This chapter gives a number of real business types and examples and what the justification for each is. In other words, it shows you how to sell the product to each type of business model in this space. SBS2K3 has numerous features, but not every business needs all the various features. Therefore, this chapter shows you how to use the strengths of various parts of SBS2K3 to help shore up various weaknesses in the type of business you are trying to gain a relationship. This chapter is a very good segue from the first chapter. It will help focus you on satisfying a business need and not just making an unnecessary sale. You might call this chapter an MBA lite!
Chapter 3 - Before you install the product, you must plan it first. Every war is fought one battle at a time. Therefore, to win the war (customer) you must make sure you do not misfire. This chapter tells you step by step how to keep your powder dry and win the day. You will learn about selling the proper number and types of Cal's (Answer - almost always it is user, not always however). You will plan your network, IP's, DHCP, DNS, wireless and other topics. Each chapter also has summaries and best practices to help you with tidbits of wisdom, shortcuts and the like.
Chapter 4 - Finally, we get to install the product. Here is where the rubber meets the road! This chapter assumes a fresh install on a new drive. It admittedly is not the hardcore stuff the migrators may be looking for, but it is a great guide on the install. It quickly moves over the not so detailed stuff and slows down and goes indepth where it counts, at the GUI portion. It covers the To Do List in two parts and does a fine job of showing you each step and how to perform them. Those of you with a lot of experience however, need not apply. It finishes up with some good old fashioned troubleshooting. Did your installation go nuts on you and leave you crying? Turn here to find out about the logs that can help you get through the tangled mess.
Chapter 5 - This chapter gets very serious and can help you out when it comes to DHCP and DNS specifically. It takes turns discussing what each are, how to set them up and how to use the tools to troubleshoot various issues. One nugget, many errors that seem to be AD related are actually DNS related. DNS and AD are so deeply intertwined, it is easy to troubleshoot what you think is an AD issue when in fact, DNS is the culprit! Have you met a friend named NSLookup? When you are troubleshooting DNS errors, this friend can help you out like few others can and get you thinking and looking in the right direction. Has your DHCP laughed at you and left? Learn how to wrangle that rascal and bring it back for good! This chapter was very good and worth the price of admission.
This is as far as I have gotten in the book. So far, I feel very good, warm and fuzzy inside about my purchase. Are you an SBS'er? Do you dream of being one? If so, head on out right now and buy this book.Eriq and his 9 co-writers I'm sure will appreciate your purchase. Moreover, I think they would love your personal review. I am not sure who wrote what chapter (except Chapter 2 by Anne Stanton), but I know so far, there is a LOT of talent and gifts in this book.
Next time, I'll cover from chapter 6 till wherever I get! It should be several chapters at least. I hope this helps you to decide to buy the book. I do not make anything from its sale nor do I know personally any of the writers. I just know if you want real world information on SBS2K3, this book will help get you through the real world stuff. See you next time. April 23 SBSCHello Everyone:
Sorry it has been awhile. I studied for the 70-282 test for about a month and I took it on March 27, 2006 and passed it! I was so excited. There was also a marketing online exam I had to take and I passed that the very next day. That makes me an official SBSC'er!
For those that do not know, that means Small Business Server Consultant. The Operating System is called Small Business Server 2003 or SBS2K3 for short. Next, I will be studying the 70-290 test with the same MS guys that helped me on the 70-282. I may actually get recertified yet!
Are you chasing any certifications goals and dreams? If so, let me know. How do you use your space here? Send me some links and maybe we can all get active here together!
That's all for now. Until next time, take care of yourselves. See you soon. February 19 Starting Danny's SpacesHello!
This is my first blog on my site. I just started the space. I added a nice theme and I uploaded a LOT of pictures from Colorado and Dodge City Kansas. My sister, my wife and I vacationed there last year. The year before, it was just my wife and I. We love Colorado and want to share just a few of the over 1700 pictures we took!
I'm not sure what I will do with this space, but I'll try to make it fun. Thanks for visiting and please, come by often. See you soon. |
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