What should you do to prepare the Exchange organization for the installation of Exchange Server 2007?
You are the messaging engineer for your company. Your company has migrated from Microsoft Exchange 5.5 Server to Microsoft Exchange Server 2003. One Exchange 5.5 Server remains on the network. Your company plans to transition to Exchange Server 2007 and expects a period of coexistence with previous versions of Exchange Server. You need to prepare the Exchange organization for the installation of Exchange Server 2007. What should you do? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution. Choose two.)
What should you recommend to minimize the number of servers deployed in your Exchange organization?
You are the messaging engineer for your company. The company has one main office and 100 branch offices. An Active Directory site exists for each office. The company has a Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 messaging system. Each office contains one Exchange server. A routing group is configured for each office. You plan to transition the companys messaging system to Exchange Server 2007. You need to design a transition plan that allows both versions of Exchange to coexist. Your plan must also minimize the number of servers deployed in your Exchange organization. What should you recommend?
What should you recommend a solution that ensures that all mail-enabled groups can be expanded from any Exchan
You are the messaging engineer for your company. The company network contains an Active Directory forest that contains three domains. Each domain contains at least one Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 server. All mail-enabled groups are configured as global distribution groups. You plan to transition from Exchange Server 2003 to Exchange Server 2007. You need to recommend a solution that ensures that all mail-enabled groups can be expanded from any Exchange Server 2003 server or any Exchange Server 2007 server. What should you recommend?
What should you recommend?
You are the messaging engineer for your company. Your company has a main office and two branch offices.
An Active Directory site exists for each office. Each site contains two Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 servers and one routing group. A routing group connector connects each routing group. Each routing group connector uses both Exchange servers as local bridgehead servers.
You plan to deploy Exchange Server 2007. Each office will have two Exchange Server 2007 Hub Transport servers. In each office, the Exchange Server 2007 servers will be on the same network segment as the Exchange Server 2003 servers. Exchange Server 2003 mailboxes will be moved to Exchange Server 2007 Mailbox servers that reside in the same office. Mailboxes will be moved during a six week period.
You need to recommend a message routing solution that:
Uses the local network to deliver e-mail messages from users in the local office even if the mailbox has been moved to Exchange Server 2007.
Does not interfere with how Exchange Server 2003 delivers e-mail to other Exchange Server 2003 servers.
What should you recommend?
What should you do to ensure that Exchange Server 2007 conference room mailboxes are configured as room resour
You are the messaging engineer for your company. Your company has a single Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 server that supports mailboxes and public folders. The Exchange Server 2003 server hosts mailboxes for each conference room in your company. Each conference room mailbox holds the schedule for that particular conference room. You install a new Exchange Server 2007 server that hosts the Mailbox server role. You plan to move the conference room mailboxes from Exchange Server 2003 to Exchange Server 2007. You need to ensure that Exchange Server 2007 conference room mailboxes are configured as room resources. What should you do?
What should you do to plan for the deployment of the Client Access servers?
You are the messaging engineer for your company. Your company has a Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 messaging system.
Your company has two Exchange Server 2003 front-end servers deployed in a Network Load Balancing cluster, as shown in the following diagram:
You plan to install Exchange Server 2007 Client Access servers on your network. Exchange Server 2007 Mailbox and Hub Transport servers will be installed simultaneously.
You need to plan for the deployment of the Client Access servers.
What should you do?
Which two actions should you perform?
You are the messaging engineer for your company.
Your company is transitioning from Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 to Exchange Server 2007. 3,000 mailboxes have been moved to the Exchange Server 2007 Mailbox servers. 3,000 mailboxes are still hosted on the Exchange Server 2003 servers.
Your company recently registered an additional domain name fourthcoffee.com. You have updated the DNS servers with the appropriate records.
You need to ensure that:
All users are configured with a fourthcoffee.com e-mail address.
The Exchange organization accepts messages for the fourthcoffee.com domain.
Which two actions should you perform? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution. Choose two.)
What should you recommend?
You are the messaging engineer for your company.
The network contains two Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 servers named Server1 and Server2. Server1 is a back-end server. Server2 is a front-end server. You purchase a new server named Server3 that has the same hardware as Server1 and Server2.
All server hardware supports both the 32-bit and 64-bit versions of Microsoft Windows Server 2003.
You need to recommend a strategy to transition from Exchange Server 2003 to Exchange Server 2007.
Your strategy must meet the following requirements:
Minimize downtime.
Configure the solution to be supported by Microsoft for production environments.
Configure one server to provide Exchange Web Services and message delivery and a different server to manage Mailbox databases.
What should you recommend?
What should you do to be notified immediately only when this event occurs?
You are the administrator for a network that runs Windows Small Business Server (SBS) 2011 Standard. Users report that a line-of-business (LOB) application is often unavailable. You determine that the LOB application is generating a critical event in the Application log file. The Server Event Logs section of the daily Summary Network Report includes a report of this event. You need to be notified immediately only when this event occurs. What should you do?
What should you do to achieve this goal while allowing other updates to continue installing?
You are the administrator for a network that runs Windows Small Business Server (SBS) 2011 Standard. Updates for all computers on the network are currently managed by the Windows SBS 2011 Standard server. The vendor of a line-of-business (LOB) application notifies you that a recently released Windows update is not supported by their LOB application. You need to prevent this update from installing. You must achieve this goal while allowing other updates to continue installing. What should you do?