OWA 2007 Document Access

As discussed at our OU Admin Day event, OWA 2007 has the ability to offer read-only access to campus Windows file-servers from a web browser. This is a handy alternative to Webfolders, FTP and RAS and of course is accessible from anywhere.

This feature is only available with OWA 2007 Premium and subsequently Internet Explorer is the only supported browser. Hopefully Microsoft will remedy this with the next version of Exchange Server.

We need to enable any file-servers in an ‘allow list’ on the Exchange Client Access servers before users can access them. We can add school file-servers within reason. Please speak to your School Computing Officer and get them to contact helpline with a request.

At present the following servers are enabled:

All Tower servers
All Turret servers
crag.ncl.ac.uk
campus.ncl.ac.uk – This is a DFS name space allowing access to towers/turrets/software and high availability servers.

To access:

Log on to OWA 2007 as normal

From the left hand menu buttons, Select ‘Documents’:

Select ‘Open Location’ from the left hand menu:

A Box will appear where you can enter a path to a file server. As an example I have included the correct format for access to your home directory. Replace the ‘X’ with whichever tower and home share that your home directory resides.

Example: \\tower3.ncl.ac.uk\home17\njwd

It is important that the location you want to open is prefixed with the two forward slashes in standard UNC format and the server name is fully qualified with .ncl.ac.uk

If you have the appropriate permissions to open that location, you should be presented with the contents of that file-share in the right hand pane:

Item 1: ‘Open in Windows Explorer’ will only work whilst on campus, but will open a Windows Explorer window to the directory that you currently have selected.
Item 2: Lets you go up the directory structure, if you have permission to do so.
Item 3: Adds the current location to the ‘Favorites Menu’ as depicted in item 5.
Item 4: Is a breadcrumb style link to your current location. Click on any of the parts separated by slashes to go to that level, if you have permission to do so.
Item 5: Lists ‘favorite” places that you have added.

Double clicking on a folder will take you to the contents of that folder.

Double clicking on a file will try to open that file natively on your computer, should you have the application that can open it.

If you right click a file a context sensitive menu will appear:

Selecting ‘Open’ will try and open the file as if you have double clicked it.

If you select ‘Open as Web Page’, OWA will try and interpret the contents of that file and display it in a web-page. This is particularly handy if you are on a computer without Microsoft Office, but need to read an Office Document. The supported file types include (doc, pdf, pps, ppt, rtf and xls).

Selecting ‘Send by E-Mail’ opens a new mail message in OWA and automatically includes the file as an attachment.

‘Copy Shortcut’, copies the UNC path of the file to the computer clipboard.

IT Pro Event 14th May: Unified Communications with Eileen Brown

For the second VBUG Newcastle IT Pro event, we’re fortunate to have a great speaker. Eileen Brown is the manager of Microsoft’s TechNet UK IT Professional Evangelist Team, and writes a hugely popular blog on Management, Messaging, Mobility and Real Time Collaboration.

Here’s the overview of Eileen’s talk:

“If the PCs on our desks do much more than they did 10 years ago, why don’t our phones ?

On a Mobile phone calls are dialled from your phone book – UC allows your PC contacts to be used to place calls rather than re-keying the number into a desk, and identifies your contacts by name when they call you and routes your calls to the best phone. Unified communications is bringing together Voice, Fax, Video, Email and Instant messaging, into one system. So Voice mail which arrives in your mailbox And e-mail which can be read to you over the phone. With UC you can see if someone is around to take a call or answer a message before you contact them – and choose the best medium. And a conversation can move seamlessly from email, to instant message, to data sharing and video conference. Harnessing UC can mean less travel, less frustration and greater productivity.”

This presentation is particularly timely in the University, since this year we’ll be looking at adding some unified messaging features to our existing Exchange infrastructure. This is a great opportunity to hear about what the future might look like, from a real expert in this area.

The presentation will take place in Room 118 of Claremont Tower on Thursday 14th May, 18:30 (for a 19:00 start). If you plan to attend, please could you sign up at the VBUG site (just so we have numbers for refreshments, etc): http://www.vbug.co.uk/Events/May-2009/VBUG-Newcastle-Unified-Communications-with-Eileen-Brown.aspx

You don’t have to be a VBUG member and the event is free to attend.

If you’re on Twitter, you might like to follow Eileen.

Outlook Deleted Items Folder

Whilst recently migrating users to the new Exchange mail servers, a trend has become very apparent amongst our user community.

Background:
The mailbox move process creates a new mailbox on the new server then proceeds to copy every message individually before closing the connection and transferring which mailbox the user account points to. It’s a tedious, long-winded process, but unfortunately that is what we have to work with.

During this process the GUI/Powershell gives an indication of progress and which Outlook folder that is currently being processed. It is difficult not to notice the process trundling along and very difficult not to notice the prevalence of users with massive Deleted Items folders.

Deleted Items Move

The above example is actually pretty tame. Some users have Deleted Items folders with excess of 8000 items.

EDIT

Here is an example of 8000+:
Deleted Items Move2

My main questions are:

  • Are users aware that their Deleted Items folders are so large and takes up part of their quota?
  • Are users aware that they can easily empty it or even automate the process? 2003, 2007
  • Do users use e-mail in a way that necessitates having this massive log of deleted items; is it an urge to have an empty inbox, but refer to the deleted items frequently?

Of course, the reason for this blog post is purely selfish, as the mailbox moves take much longer and the mailbox databases grow much larger, however it does emphasise that folk may use e-mail in a plethora of differing ways.

This post is also a chance to refer to the post I made last year which talks about the inbuilt ‘Recover Deleted Items’ functionality of Exchange.

IMAP Access to Exchange

IMAPs (Secure IMAP) access to the Exchange 2007 servers is now available, however it will only be implemented on a per user basis on the authority of a School Computing Officer and should only be used by non-Windows users.

It’s use will remain unsupported due to the nature of not being able to control which clients access the servers and not being able to provide adequate support for unknown clients. The transfer of existing mail will also remain the responsibility of the user. Any client queries should first be directed to your School Computing Officer.

The introduction of this service is to offer non-Windows users the opportunity to use their preferred mail client against Exchange and subsequently not have the separation of Mail and Collaboration/Calendaring functionality.

Access is limited to IMAPS on port 993

If you would like to make use of IMAP access to Exchange, please ask your School Computing Officer to request access for you through the ISS helpdesk.

Further information and examples of client configuration can be found here

Monday II: Keynote

The keynote was given by Brad Anderson the General Manager of Microsoft’s Management and Services division and focused on ‘Dynamic IT.’ One of the main elements was Virtualization and its management. The video of the Keynote will be available online soon if it is not already but here are some notes that I jotted down.

Some interesting figures were mentioned.

  • Most servers across the word are running at less than 10% utilisation
  • ‘In the future’ a predicted 5% of the worlds energy consumption will be by the Datacenter
  • Microsoft’s use of Virtualization has seen energy savings of up to 90%.

We saw a demo if System Center Virtual Machine manager including the live migration feature in Windows Server 2008 R2. Application virtualization was also mentioned and we were told that this will make application compatibility issues a thing of the past. Brad Anderson also said that Microsoft had observed a trend in enterprises towards only running server services on physical machines ‘by exception’.

A demo of Microsoft System Center Operations Manager 2007 R2 Beta then followed which supports cross platform extensions and will be able to monitor Solaris, Suze, Redhat, MySQL, Oracle on top of the services it can currently manage.

The keynote then went in to detail on Windows Server 2008 R2 (M3 available for download) but I will post separately on this.

The Keynote finished with an overview of Microsoft Online services focusing on a mixed local and hosted implementation of Microsoft Exchange. The service is due for release in EMEA during spring 2009.

There were also demonstrations of features of the next version of SQL server ‘Kilimanjaro’ and some other areas which Jonathan may like to discuss.

Office Online

Office Online Logo

An area that Microsoft have massively improved upon is their documentation for the Office suite. Office Online and the online version of the help within the Office 2007 applications is very impressive these days.

Sometimes it feels like reinventing the wheel for us to produce some forms of documentation as Microsoft have already produced demos, training and how-to documents to a high standard. It is surprising that it is not first port of call for needing to know how to do something within Office, perhaps it is because the Paperclip man (Office Assistant) from old versions of Office was so annoying.

I would in particular recommend the Outlook documentation at Office Online here.

http://office.microsoft.com/en-gb/default.aspx

Publishing your Exchange Calendar to the Internet

There are a few different choices when wishing to publish your Exchange calendar to the internet. Some offer frequent and automatic updates, others require manual intervention each time you make a change. Publishing your calendar to internet can be useful when you want to share with someone who doesn’t have a University Exchange mailbox.

1. Publishing to Office Online

Office Online is Microsoft’s free service that allows Microsoft Live users to view and publish calendars to their website. The main pre-requisites are that both publisher and viewer need to have a Live account. Calendars are updated automatically every 20 minutes or so.

You can sign up for live accounts here. You have the option to create a new e-mail account that will provide you with hotmail, or have your @ncl.ac.uk e-mail address become your Live user ID. I’d probably recommend the @ncl.ac.uk route, but it depends what you are after.

The documentation on Office Online on how to publish calendars is very good and thorough, so rather than reinventing the wheel, here is the: Microsoft document.

2. Publish to a WebDAV Server

If you have access to a server that has WebDAV enabled you can publish the calendar information there without needing to have access to a Microsoft Live Account. Unfortunately, it is slightly more difficult to prohibit access. This would be acheived using file sharing permissions. Calendars are updated automatically every 20 minutes or so.

The Office Onlike document detailing publishing to a WebDAV server is here.

3. Save your Calendar as a Web-page

If you select your calendar and then select File – Save As Web Page you can generate files that you can publish on a web server. You have to manually re-save the calendar and re-publish the files every time you make a change to your calendar.

Which Mobile for Exchange Mailbox Synchronization?

Activesync icon

At present we only officially support the use of Windows Mobile devices when communicating with the Exchange servers. This decision was made on the basis of the consistent standard of Windows Mobile and having devices ourselves that we can test and check problems out on. Now, a number of the big mobile manufacturers are licensing Microsoft’s ActiveSync technology and introducing the Enterprise level functionality into their devices. We don’t prohibit their use, but can’t offer any in depth support.

I hope this post gives some information on our findings.

Windows Mobile:
All versions of Windows Mobile should be compatible with Exchange. Obviously with each new iteration of the operating system (We are now up to 6.1) new functionality is introduced. Push e-mail was introduced in Windows Mobile 5.0. Motorola, Samsung, Palm, HTC are among manufacturers that produce Windows Mobile devices. Many of the UK mobile providers (Orange, O2, T-Mobile) re-badge HTC devices as their own.

Nokia:
As James documented in an earlier post, Nokia were one of the first manufacturers to licence Activesync which they called ‘Mail for Exchange’. It seems to only be available for some of their ‘E’ and ‘N’ series devices.

Sony Ericsson:
We have only been able to take a look at one Sony Ericsson device and unfortunately their version of Activesync on that particular device doesn’t seem to be compatible with Forms Based Authentication. (The type of authentication that we use!)

Blackberry:
As Blackberry have their own version of Activesync, it doesn’t look like they will license Microsoft’s version. Unfortunately to get the Blackberry to offer push e-mail with an Exchange server, a separate server (Blackberry Enterprise Server) and client access licenses need to be purchased. As we can offer Microsoft Activesync for no extra cost, we have no plans to offering push e-mail support to Blackberries.

Apple iPhone:
Apple incorporate Microsoft’s Activesync into their software on July 11th. The software will be made available for existing iPhones, IPod Touch and the soon to be released 3G iPhone. We haven’t yet been able to test this.

Some useful resources:

Modaco : Thorough news and forums
MSMobiles : News
CoolSmartphone : News
Expansys : Online Retailer