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Plantwiz wrote: Why not test in the discipline you currently work with? If that's W2K, you could upgrade later if necessary! (or when necessary)
princess4peace wrote: Plantwiz wrote: Why not test in the discipline you currently work with? If that's W2K, you could upgrade later if necessary! (or when necessary) Plantwiz, what you said is equally ideal, but he was given the options of win2k and/or WinXp. That was what informed my suggestion of Xp.
Drakonblayde wrote: I think it breeds lazy users. I prefer to educate my users. .
keatron wrote: No problem drakonblayde, I know you're not starting an argument 2. One of my more tech savvy clients (or at least they think they are) decided they would perform the upgrade. In addition to gross DNS mis-configurations they had committed a usually critical error. They named the new domain DOMAIN by accepting defaults. After two months of operating like this they called me in to redo everything so that the domain could be named what it was supposed to be (xxx.local in this case). No problem, it took me every bit of 10 minutes to rename the domain! This is a new feature of the 2k3 platform. I also employed this same technique when a small finance firm I support got bought out by a bigger finance firm I support. It was a cakewalk compared to before.
One of my favorite tools happens to be Group policy objects. There are several reported improvements here, but I will only post the ones I've experienced and used personally. For one, the added functions of backup, restore, import, copy, and reporting of Group Policy objects has made my job easier. These processes are fully scriptable, which allows me to automate these processes in ways I only wished for in the NT days (even in 2K in some cases)
We have quiet a few large and very spread out clients. Cross forest authentication and cross forest authorization is another biggie. These babies enable secure access to resources when the user account is in one forest and the computer account is in another forest. Users can securely access resources in other forests, using either NTLM or Kerberos. Best part is they dont have to sacrifice the single sign-on. The administrative benefit is obviously having only one user ID and password maintained in the user's home forest. I was given a set of new nike clubs by the CIO of one client for successfully implementing this and making the process a reality!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I don't know if you've deployed datacenter or not, but the clustering is totally amazing. Look for this to be a big hit where there's huge exchange enviroments. The max for clusters in 2000 was 4 nodes, that's now doubled to eight. By the way, changing cluster configs does NOT require rebooting in 2k3 All of this goes along with making more available and dependable print clusters. The drivers replicate automatically to all nodes in the cluster, so there's no need for manual configuration anymore in this scenario. On on partiuclar floor in our building (serves as basically the printing and presentation preparation area) we have literally hundreds of printers, plotters and print servers protruding from every wall. However we did learn the hard way that print clusters are not available for the web edition (nor the standard edition from what I'm told).
These are just some of the things I've witnessed and documented. I've prepared an extensive report for some of my clients and for some of the staff here. It's very rich and long, but I'll happily email it or maybe send it to Johan to add to his technotes.
Drakonblayde, I understand where you're coming from, there are several things I've read about in the past concerning 2k3 that are just simply over-rated or not true. But I guess it's part of our job to get the whole story about a product before giving reccomendations. I've worked with 2k3 since the first Beta and still learn (or stumble upon) new features all the time. Hope this helps and somewhat answers your question.
keatron wrote: It's very rich and long, but I'll happily email it or maybe send it to Johan to add to his technotes.
Back that up on a RAID5, and 2k3/XP's shadow copy becomes pretty much useless.
TeKniques wrote: Hey Drakonblayde I was just wondering if that was your website? drakonblayde.net I went to it after reading this post and I already had my firefox upgraded to 1.0.4 Was the first thing I did when got to work today Sorry to get off topic
Back that up on a RAID5, and 2k3/XP's shadow copy becomes pretty much useless. I don't want to start an argument either but do want to point out that 'shadow copies for shared folders' feature is useful regardless of the underlying storage system. (see me TechNotes here). Raid 5 does not encompass the advantages offered by shadow copy volumes, the latter is basically undelete for shares. It enables the user to 'restore' a modified, deleted, or corrupted file without any interference of an admin who has to restore it from backup media. Anyway, I think the reason this is such a great and welcomed feature is that it should have been there all along (trashcan should have worked for shared folders since 95. though shadow copy is much more). Relatively only a small subset of the improvements in 2003. 95-98-me etc, were like the previous version with some bells and whistles, but this has never been the case for Windows server products (even 3.51 to 4 was more than worth it and we all know the major differences between nt 4 and 2000, i.e. ADS, NTFS 5). In Windows 2003 Shadow copy volumes is definitely one of my favorites.
In my experience it's often the software that runs on the OS that makes companies upgrade rather than the 'need' for a new Windows version and it's features (i.e. they want the latest Exchange and want the numbers (2003) to match).
From what y'all are saying, 2k3 makes it easier on the admin
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