You have an Exchange organization named nwtraders.com. All servers in the organization
have Exchange Server 2010 Service Pack 1 (SP1) installed.
Your company acquires another company named Contoso, Ltd.
You plan to create new mailboxes for each user from Contoso.
You need to ensure that each new mailbox can receive e-mail messages sent to
contoso.com.
Which two objects should you create? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution.
Choose two.)
A.
an accepted domain
B.
a Receive connector
C.
an organizational relationship
D.
an e-mail address policy
E.
a Remote domain
Explanation:
An accepted domain is any SMTP namespace for which a Microsoft Exchange organization
sends or receives e-mail. Accepted domains include those domains for which the Exchange
organization is authoritative. An Exchange organization is authoritative when it handles mail
delivery for recipients in the accepted domain.
Accepted domains also include domains for which the Exchange organization receives mail
and then relays it to an e-mail server that’s outside the Active Directory forest for delivery to
the recipient.You must configure an accepted domain before that SMTP address space can be used in an
e-mail address policy. When you create an accepted domain, you can use a wildcard
character (*) in the address space to indicate that all subdomains of the SMTP address
space are also accepted by the Exchange organization. For example, to configure
Contoso.com and all its subdomains as accepted domains, enter *.Contoso.com as the
SMTP address space. The accepted domain entries are automatically available for use in an
e-mail address policy.
If you delete an accepted domain that’s used in an e-mail address policy, the policy is no
longer valid, and recipients with e-mail addresses in that SMTP domain will be unable to
send or receive e-mail.
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb124423