WHITE PAPER:
This Quest Software white paper discusses seven important questions you should ask before migrating to Microsoft Exchange - and how these questions can help you determine which solution will help to make your migration project exceptional.
WHITE PAPER:
Dell's approach to Exchange 2010 offers many potential benefits for organizations running enterprise class messaging systems. Microsoft introduced new features in Exchange 2010 that can enhance productivity as well as take advantage of Dell's innovative hardware portfolio to provide a more cost-effective infrastructure for enterprise messaging.
WHITE PAPER:
This white paper addresses the key issues that decision makers should consider as they plan their Exchange 2010 migration. It discusses the results of an in-depth primary research survey conducted by Osterman Research that explores how decision makers are planning their migration to Exchange 2010.
WHITE PAPER:
Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 has been designed to meet the tough challenges for a corporate communication solution and provides a rich feature set that users can access through a variety of different interfaces and devices.
WHITE PAPER:
Exchange Disaster Recovery (DR) and high availability (HA) plans must go beyond just clustering, mirroring and CDP. Learn what makes up an effective DR and HA plan and get a comparison of two of the most popular and cost-effective solutions.
WHITE PAPER:
Upon completion of reading this paper, the reader should be well positioned to describe available data protection solutions for Microsoft Exchange as provided by NetBackup, the NetBackup for Exchange Server agent, and the NetBackup Snapshot Client.
WHITE PAPER:
In this case study, explore how a university with a large, diverse student and staff population updated their ageing, legacy email system with a cloud messaging solution.
WHITE PAPER:
This paper shows you how selecting an integrated messaging security solution reduces wasted IT effort, allows centralized management and permits a single support resource without the finger-pointing that can happen in a multi-vendor environ...