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

Summary of Server 2008 Performance and Security Improvements

Mark Minasi’s latest newsletter has a very compelling list of Windows 2008 improvements.

I was lucky enough to meet Mark at Tech-Ed Barcelona this year as well as attend a number of his seminars and I think it’s safe to say that he is one of the greatest Microsoft experts in the World today. It’s well worth checking out his site here.

http://www.minasi.com/newsletters/nws0812.htm

Windows Live Wave 3 Online Services Launch

I posted about the update to SkyDrive before, but the Windows Live people haven’t just been busy there. They’ve just launched a load of updates and new online services. home.live.com ties all of your existing Windows Live services together (such as Spaces, SkyDrive, Hotmail and Events) and they’ve added Groups, Photos and Windows Live Profile.

Check out the Windows Live Team Blog for the details.

Deleting Windows Profiles

Written by James Pocock:

There have been a few problems recently with local copies of roaming profiles being incorrectly deleted. The following procedure should be followed when deleting a profile.

Removing the Local copy of the profile

A common mistake is to simply logon to the local machine as an administrator and delete the users Profile from C:\Users or C:\Documents and Settings.

However, deleting only the local folder does not remove some key registry settings. While XP is usually quite forgiving of this Windows Vista is not and a profile which has been deleted in this fashion will never function correctly on the machine until it is rebuilt.

The profile should be fully deleted from the local system by using the User Profile settings option in System Properties.

In Windows XP:

System Properties > Advanced Tab > User Profiles > Settings

In Windows Vista:

System Properties > Advanced System Settings > Advanced Tab > User Profiles > Settings

Profile 1

Highlight and delete the profile you wish to remove (you may need to reboot first).

Profile 1

Finally you can manually remove any residual folders from C:\Users or C:\Documents and Settings.

Remove the Server Copy of the Profile.

Within the CAMPUS network only the user and server administrators have permissions to remove a profile. There are two ways to go about this.

Map a drive to the folder above the users remote profile folder with the user using their user account. You can find out the path by using CAMA.

Alternatively you can request this process is performed by ISS by emailing helpline@ncl.ac.uk

Rename the folder as zap.username. This is important because The CAMPUS profile servers have run scheduled tasks which remove folders prefixed with zap. each morning at 06:30. This allows some time to retrieve files from the old profile. More importantly, If the old profiles are not deleted they will count against the users quota.

Coming soon to SkyDrive

I’m generally happy with Windows Live SkyDrive (Microsoft’s “USB stick in the cloud”), but there’s a couple of features that have held it back for me. I’m glad to say that they appear to be getting added in the next update!

  • You’re going to have the ability to download an entire folder as a single zip file (this is easily my most-wanted feature)
  • Share files without requiring people to use a Windows Live ID
  • Move and copy between folders
  • Better photo handling: improved slideshow, download photos to Windows Live Photo Gallery

And they’re increasing the storage limit from 5 to 25Gb!

Good news, and that’s not all – you can read the full list on the SkyDrive Team Blog.

Server 2008 Clustering Best Practices

I’m posting these notes largely for my benefit but it may be of some interest to anyone Clustering with Server 2008.

General Best Practices

  • Use the Failover Cluster Configuration Program (FCCP) during setup.
  • Use identical equipment where possible and run the Cluster validation tool after each configuration change.
  • Microsoft will only support validated clusters.
  • Take regular system state backups.
  • Use preferred and possible owners and choose carefuly.

Quorum Best Practices

  • Use a dedicated basic single volume disk
  • RAID 1+0 recommended.
  • No need to backup Quorum disk.
  • Avoid DFS paths when using file share witness.

Windows Vista Service Pack 2 Preview

We received some information on Vista Service Pack 2 in a session today.

As you might expect, the news is not all that thrilling. Vista SP1 is already the most stable, feature packed OS Microsoft have released to date so this is really only a Service Pack in the traditional sense.

  • Default power management policy will be 10% more efficient
  • Hyper-V support incorporated.
  • Native Blu-ray burning and new explorer icon.
  • Even greater application compatibility.
  • New feature pack for Wireless including Bluetooth 2.1 support.
  • Better wake-up for WiFi coming out of sleep mode.
  • RSS gadget side-bar improved.
  • TS licensing bugs fixed.

Wednesday: Server Core and Group Policy

I’ve been to two sessions this morning. One on Group Policy where I picked up some excellent tips on debugging and tracking GP’s and an excellent presentation on Server 2008 Core by Mark Minasi.

I will definitely be writing a lot more about Server Core and the GP information I learnt today but one of his very useful tips that applies to other systems was this command:

wmic qfe list > outputfile.txt

This outputs a list of all patches applied on the computer as well as the support URL’s, install date and other information.