If you want a better way to connect remote users, offices and servers securely,
consider the humble, easy-to-implement virtual private network. Here’s how to
make it work in Windows 2000.
Procrastination can affect your certification. What are you waiting for?
All is
not lost. Chart your options before you kill the Operations Master for
good.
- By Jeremy Moskowitz
- 03/01/2001
For this script geek, Win2K's AD scripting capabilities go above and
beyond the call of duty.
- By Jeffrey Honeyman
- 03/01/2001
Our readers speak — loud and clear — about how they
are (or aren't) getting along with Windows 2000.
What sticks in my mind as being a wonderful addition? Win2K's IP stack
is incredibly fast.
- By Chris Brooke
- 03/01/2001
Windows 2000's reliability will make it the obvious upgrade choice for
a Web hosting platform.
- By Tony Northrup
- 03/01/2001
After
a year of working with the software, the experts speak their minds.
Application sophistication will drive Win2K in the enterprise.
- By Harry Brelsford
- 03/01/2001
Be smart! Assess the impact of roaming profiles on your user before you
adopt them.
- By Ethan Wilansky
- 03/01/2001
Implementing Win2K on both the front and back ends concurrently can lead
to disaster.
- By Michael Chacon
- 03/01/2001
The backup
program in Windows 2000 adds some valuable functionality, but sometimes
only a little coding will get you what you really need.
- By Jennifer Zientek
- 03/01/2001
For a successful Win2K implementation, brush up on your project management
skills.
- By Bill Heldman
- 03/01/2001
Because Whistler is Microsoft's response to customer feedback on Windows
2000, here's my lists of wants.
- By Jeremy Moskowitz
- 03/01/2001
Everything pointed to Network Address Translation as the culprit, but it was up to this internetworking pro to find out why.
- By John M. Gunson II
- 02/01/2001
Knowing how AD replication works in Windows 2000 can help you tune it for optimal system performance.
- By Curt Simmons
- 02/01/2001
How do these two seemingly simple attributes help with replication? It's a sequential thing.
- By Bill Boswell
- 02/01/2001
An offline defragmentation is the only way to shrink an NTDIS.DIT file and reclaim space. Here's how to do it the right way.
- By Jeremy Moskowitz
- 02/01/2001
Peel away the hype and what you get is a powerful development suite for building Web-based applications.
- By Paul G. Brown
- 02/01/2001
When somebody in your organization blows away some part of the AD database, you can resurrect its contents using the little-understood process, Authoritative Restore. Here’s how it works.
- By Jeremy Moskowitz
- 02/01/2001