Selected Product: | How to Cheat at Configuring Exchange Server 2007: Including Outlook Web, Mobile, and Voice Access (How to Cheat) (How to Cheat) Paperback Author: Henrik Walther Publisher: Syngress Release Date: 2007-02-01 ISBN-10: 1597491373 ISBN-13: 9781597491372 List Price: $39.95 Average Customer Rating: | | Microsoft Exchange Server 2007: Tony Redmond's Guide to Successful Implementation (HP Technologies) ISBN-10: 1555583474 ISBN-13: 9781555583477 List Price:$69.95 Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 Unleashed ISBN-10: 0672329204 ISBN-13: 9780672329203 List Price:$59.99 Mastering Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 ISBN-10: 0470042893 ISBN-13: 9780470042892 List Price:$49.99 Microsoft® Exchange Server 2007 Administrator's Companion (Pro - Administrator's Companion) ISBN-10: 0735623503 ISBN-13: 9780735623507 List Price:$49.99 Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 Administrator's Pocket Consultant (Pro Administrator's Pocket Consultant) ISBN-10: 0735623481 ISBN-13: 9780735623484 List Price:$29.99 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for How to Cheat at Configuring Exchange Server 2007: Including Outlook Web, Mobile, and Voice Access (How to Cheat) (How to Cheat) by Henrik Walther (ISBN-10: 1597491373, ISBN-13: 9781597491372). At this time we have not yet written a review for How to Cheat at Configuring Exchange Server 2007: Including Outlook Web, Mobile, and Voice Access (How to Cheat) (How to Cheat) by Henrik Walther (ISBN-10: 1597491373, ISBN-13: 9781597491372). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com According to Microsoft, Exchange Server delivers over 75% of all corporate e-mail. The 2007 release is the fist major overhaul since 2003. It attempts to address the challenge of delivering greater performance and accessibility while increasing protection against a new generation of high risk security threats. Microsoft has added many new features that dramatically improve the scope of Exchange Server and the Outlook web client, positioning the platform as a groupware and collaboration tool that is accessible to remote and wireless users as will as those wired directly to the corporate intranet. The typical SysAdmin needs a reference that cuts through all the complexity and seldom-used features to get the product successfully deployed as efficiently as possible---exactly the job of the "How to Cheat" series. good book | Customer Rating: | | I was trying to find information online on MS Exchange replication. MS has terrible documentation. I opened this book to the relevant chapter and had my answer in under 5 minutes. This book is great. | The book to get for Exchange 2007 | Customer Rating: | Exchange 2007 is a very big change when compared to its predecessor. Personally, I was interested in getting up-to-speed on it quickly, after having ignored it's introduction to the market last year. Henrik Walther made that task easy. He comes at the subject from the perspective of an experienced administrator who wants to get right to the things you really need to get done. Exchange is a very complex, very big application, and Henrik's book makes getting into the nuts and bolts of configuring it fast and understandable. If you need to get Exchange up and into production under a tight time schedule, this is your book. Likewise if you need a quick blueprint of how best to configure it for your specific needs. | Good Book but annoying formatting. | Customer Rating: | Love you work on msexchange and use the site regularly but the formating of this book is makes it really annoying to read (not sure if this is common to all 'How to cheat...' books). I suggest the person doing the "How to cheat" layout/formating refer to some of the books below and cut back on the number of different fonts and uses smaller heading sizes.
For peoples reference I have purchased Tom Schinders ISA Books (from ISA 2000 onwards), Mark Minasi's Server books (2000 & 2003), Barry Gerbers Exchange 2000 books plus quite a few others. The books mentioned above I really enjoyed reading and still refer to them extensively.
Having current Exchange servers I was looking for a bit more detail about transition to 2000/2003 than the 28 pages of chapter 10. It really didn't provide any extra 'expert' information.
(Edit) After leaving the book for a few months I have come back and read it again and have refered to it a few times my opinion has changed regarding the content. I would rate it around 4 stars now (But I can't change the rating?). Chapter 10 was one of the only chapters that was a little 'thin'. Overall it is a good book and once I got over the formatting annoyances I have enjoyed it a lot more second time around. | Best Installation Guide | Customer Rating: | | Having worked with Exchange since 5.0 I have read many installation guides and administrator's handbooks and I would rate this one as the best. I acquired this book after teaching how to configure and install Exchange 2007 to corporate clients and I have since done away with delivering them my own notes and simply recommend that they purchase this book. It is the ultimate guide to installing and configuring Exchange from a technical perspective. Way to go! | Great technical content, poor editing | Customer Rating: | By page 4, the editing annoyed me and I picked up the unleashed book. I read all 1000 pages and returned unleashed for this book due to the deeper technical information.
If you like to "read" your technical books, this can get tiring. If you want a great reference with lots of info on the issues you will run into on a 2007 deployment, pick this up. |
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