| MCSA/MCSE Self-Paced Training Kit (Exam 70-284): Implementing and Managing Microsoft Exchange Server 2003
Publisher: Microsoft Press |
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| ISBN: 0735618992 List Price: $59.99 Amazon Price: $37.79 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: great certification tool!!! great certification tool!!! but u will need also transcenders for exam preparation. contact me on my gmail account (certstuff). i will send u a list of transcenders i can sell u, 10$ each one. thnks Summary: Nice I've just bought the book from amazon, and first of all what I can say about it is that it's very cheap comparing if I bought it here in portugal. the price here is around 83 dollars, so I could almost buy 3 books with that money. really, buying from abroad is much more pleasant than buying in portugal... As for the book... well, better wait for it! :D Summary: Not so bad I got this book with a little over 1.5 years of exchange experience and I know quite a bit but thought i could learn alot more and certify in it. Well this book did help me the 2nd time through reading it. The biggest help really was the practice exams. I took the study exams and learned more that way then with reading. I would recommend this book only to those that actually understand Windows 2003, 2000 and NT both directory structure and network structure. There is alot of networking involved such as firewalls and opening ports. Overall it is a good book. Summary: |
| Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 Administrator's Pocket Consultant
Publisher: Microsoft Press |
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| ISBN: 0735619786 List Price: $29.99 Amazon Price: $18.89 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Excellent! I spend most of my time working with SQL Server, but recently I had to take over and rebuild our Exchange. As I've had good success with Stanek's other books, I picked this one up the week before to help me get up to speed on Exchange, and it did an excellent job. I successfully upgraded, had all our servers up and running by Monday morning and we have an extensive multiple server configuraiton with OWA, wireless, and X.400 MTAs. Exchange Administrator Pocket Consultant is by far the one Exchange book I can't recommend highly enough. Get it, you'll be glad to have it on hand. I refer to this book constantly. Summary: MS Exchange Server 2003 pocket consultant This book has been very helpful with building a new server, migrating from MS Exchange 2000. Summary: Ugly book Buy it only if you haven't installed Exchange server help yet. If you have than read the help first and save money. (Bought it in Russian and checked in English to make sure that translation is correct. Well it's a copy of English book, unfortunately) Summary: |
| Advanced SharePoint Services Solutions (Books for Professionals by Professionals)
Publisher: Apress |
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| ISBN: 1590594568 List Price: $59.99 Amazon Price: $37.79 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Best Sharepoint Developer Author Scot Hillier is the best SharePoint author - period. For example: developers need to write web parts. Web parts are custom controls. Can't view a custom control at design/development time, right? Need to install it into SharePoint, run it, test. Right? Wrong! Scott shows you how to design, develop, and debug at design-time. This little tidbit alone is worth the price of the book. All of his books will help you become the best SharePoint developer out there. Summary: Finally the answers Sharepoint is so confusing when you get into the backend and this book answered almost all of my questions. Best book I've found. You can tell the author spent a lot of time digging around in the guts of SP and was probably as frustrated as most of us are trying to figure out how to do the simplest of things. Small book, high price. WORTH IT. Summary: Sharepoint Solutions for Advanced developers "Advanced Sharepoint Services Solutions" is the second book by Scott Hiller, on Sharepoint Technologies. The first one was about building basic web parts. This book is for developers who have good knowledge of Sharepoint technologies. It is also assumed that you have already built some web parts and also have good understanding of .NET development. If you are looking for basic Sharepoint stuff, refer to his other book "Microsoft Sharepoint Building Office 2003 Solutions". The Advanced book is not a complete reference on Sharepoint technologies. Instead it contains 8 chapters, which covers widely different areas. There are few chapters which are not covered by other Sharepoint books. This book is good source for CAML, Information Bridge Framework, Business Scorecard Accelerator, Sharepoint and BizTalk Integration, and for Sharepoint and Content Management Server Integration. Since these topics are usually not covered in regular Sharepoint books, it becomes good source for these topics. The book has good amount of source code (in C#) along with the text and provides some great ideas for system integrations. But as I said before it is not a complete reference book, just some great solutions for customizing and integrating Sharepoint technologies. Summary: |
| Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 24seven
Publisher: Sybex |
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| ISBN: 0782142508 List Price: $49.99 Amazon Price: $31.49 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Excellent Learning and Reference Book! This is a great book for learning the guts of Exchange 2003. Too many of the books of today are designed to help you pass a test and learn items related to the test. Well, this is not that book, fortunately. However, the knowledge in the book will help significantly when it comes test time. Exchange Server 2003 24seven does provide coverage of Exchange 2003 at both a high level, but really drills down to an in-depth level that really helps the reader understand what Exchange is doing and how it is supposed to function. One of my favorites was in the Categorizer section (trivia - the DLL for the Categorizer is phatcat.dll). This book is a great resource for really learning Exchange 2003. As an aside, I have loaned my book to a few friends over time. The end result is that they won't give me my book back until they have ordered their own copy. Summary: Too general to be as helpful as could be possible I agree with another reviewer that there is not enough of how to do the tasks in question. There is a great deal of 'skimming' subjects without explanation leaving the reader to find out from other sources. For example, in Chapter 1, there are numererous mentions of HTTP/DAV and DAVEx (referring to the davex (DLL that handles communications between the Exchange back-end server and IIS) but there is no explanation as to what it does or how it works. The index (which I consider a must have in any technical book) is small and incidentally does not even mention the aforementioned davex. I found the lack of depth too light and somewhat frustrating. YMMV Summary: Perfect Book for those with a Brain I recently started in the world of system administration with a background in QA on Unix. After I successfully migrated a network to Active Directory and Exchange 2003, I ran into a lot of little snafus, and did an exhaustive search for a book that would simply help me get the job done on a day to day scenario, and I just found fluff. Fortuantely, I came across this book, and oh boy, I am oh so amazed. What this book will do for you is provide real world solutions to common day Exchange problems. It does do some concept material, but really this is not a general concept book. If you do not or refuse to understand essential networking, mail SMTP concepts, and/or Active Directory (LDAP and Kerberos), then well, there's not much this book or any other book can do to help you. Noting some reviewers' grief: (1) You can back up a mailstore by backing up the database files. The database files are clearly documented throughout the book. Also, you might want to try out the ntbackup utility. In the dicussion of backup, the author does list solutions of third parties for brick-by-brick backup solutions. (2) For initial deployment scenarios, this book doesn't cover explicitly or extensively. A quick search on Microsoft had some wonderful material including using ADC (Active Director Connector) for Exchange 5.5 integration and migration. I feel saddened by users suffering with Exchange, for gone are the days when things were simple. If those users had URLs or e-mail addresses, I would have tried to contact them to offer free assistance... Re-cap: Yes this book works for noobs, if they are resourceful, like everything else in the life of a system administrator. The book focuses more on real world usage, and less on initial deployment or migration from older Exchange 5.5. Summary: |
| The Rational Guide to Building SharePoint Web Parts (Rational Guides)
Publisher: Rational Press |
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| ISBN: 0972688862 List Price: $14.99 Amazon Price: $9.74 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 2 Reviews: Summary: very Simple The book covers the fundamentals of web part architecture very well. This book is essentially a "guide", does not elaborate on programming techniques in tricky scenarios that a developer may encounter. Summary: Avoid this book. I could ingest 5 pounds of paper and excrete a better book. The author, at a MINIMUM, should have put some "You code should now look similar to this" areas in the book. He just blurts out snippets of code and its just a miss-mosh piss poor attempt at teaching people the craptastic technology known as SharePoint. Get an Unleashed book or something from Murach if he has it. Summary: Great intro to Sharepoint Webparts Being new to Sharepoint and webparts, I found this book to be concise and to-the-point. Guides you through basic webpart development in C# (when you register the book you can get code in VB if you desire). The book also discusses in straightforward terms debugging, deployment of webparts, code access security, targeting audiences and personalizing content. Plus it is only 175 pages, so it won't collapse your bookshelf. Summary: |
| Mastering Microsoft Exchange Server 2003
Publisher: Sybex |
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| ISBN: 0782142044 List Price: $49.99 Amazon Price: $31.49 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 3 Reviews: Summary: Good Explanations but not Practical This book has generally good easily digestible explanations for Exchange 2003. I really appreciate the informal down-to-Earth style and discussion of a lot of pieces. I was especially happy to see some good coverage of LDAP, IMAP, and POP configuration, which is seldom adequately covered in other Exchange books. Despite the excellent overview in many areas, I wish the book was more practical in real world situations. It is great to know about key technologies, which makes the book a worthy of perusal, but still we need to implement and deploy this stuff, which unfortunately involves bizarre tweaks and configurations combined with third party tools and maybe even scripting. I just don't get this practical real-world oriented sense from this book. One area that irked me quite a bit was coverage of security. There is some coverage of securing open insecure technologies like POP and IMAP, but only on the client. In the security chapter, there's a few paragraphs stating that security is a client issue and should not be covered in the scope of the book. I think it is important both to setup the security on the client and the server, so that the clients can use it, and so that potential hackers don't get passwords for domain accounts. The author does attempt to give a short blurb on how to setup SSL, but I found that the instructions did not work. I was probably missing some other pieces, Certificate Authority? In conclusion, overall decent coverage of Exchange 2003 with good explanations, but one needs more material, perhaps other books in order to put all the pieces together and get the job done. Summary: Overall, not too bad I would hardly consider this book "Mastering Exchange" but the author does take the time to step you through all the property pages and settings so you at least get a basic idea of what it all means. You will have a solid basic understanding when you are done but you certainly won't be a master by any stretch of the imagination. I found several errors throughout the book specifically related to Windows and networking. The author should stick to Exchange because when the topic shifts to something else, I had my doubts about what I was reading. For instance, I believe the author stated that in an NT 4.0 Domain, if a PDC goes down, the other DC's elect a new one. WHAT!!!! Maybe a browser, but not a PDC. Its been a while since I read the book but I am pretty sure I read that in a side bar. As I said, overall, not bad if you what a basic intro to Exchange 2003. The title should be changed to Exchange 2003 basics. Summary: Poor writing style Maybe the content of this book is ok, but the writer has constant urge to put useless text lines and useless personal opinions between the technical explenations. This shouldn't be a story book ... Things get worse when on page 142 he still needs to explain the difference between FAT and NTFS. quote: "Setup displays a little gauge showing formatting progress. Formatting takes quite a in this case, burning a book is ok ;) Summary: |
| Essential Mac OS X Panther Server Administration
Publisher: O'Reilly Media |
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| ISBN: 0596006357 List Price: $49.95 Amazon Price: $31.47 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: No other OS X server book comes close Even with 10.4 out this is still the number one book on Mac OS X server there is. Period. Bartosh goes deep in to all areas of OS X server and provides excellent examples for you to follow. This book has saved my hide on a number of occasions and I can't wait to see what he comes up with next. If you only buy one OS X server book this is it. Summary: This is a "must-have" book for all level users related to Apple systems administration. This book is organized into seven parts and one appendix: from new system installation to remote management and different kind of clients supported. Inside the first part, there is a chapter about planning system deployment reviewing different scenarios as first task to take care of. The author exposes some basic ideas about system administration as well as strategies and tools to resolve a large number of common problems. One of the key points of this book is its better organization centered around system deployment phases than Apple documentation. Continuous explanations and small tricks to monitor and tune the system are made across the entire book sections. There is exhaustive information about installation with graphical tools, command line and network setup. The most appreciated resource can be screenshots: it allows to follow all the explanations without any problem to new Apple system administrator. Authors, as advanced users, describe in an easy but deeply enough way all management tools of all system services either graphical or command line versions. Some other Open Source or even propietary tools are described when they are good alternatives to Apple ones. All the chapters contain "best practices" sections and background knowledge to really understand their functions. This is a "must-have" book for all level users related to Apple systems administration. I'm really impatient waiting for Tiger revision. Summary: Best MacOS X Server book For those who are familiar with MacOS X and would like to learn the server-side of the equation, this book is it. Apple's documentation has been sparse and this book covers that deficiency with great aplomb. This is the best Mac OS X Server book on the market right now. Too bad O'Reilly just cancelled the Tiger version because I would have first in line for the next edition. http://www.afp548.com/article.php?story=20051221121321676 I hope they change their minds because it will certainly leave a big void in future MacOS X Server documentation. Summary: |
| Exchange Server Cookbook
Publisher: O'Reilly Media |
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| ISBN: 0596007175 List Price: $44.95 Amazon Price: $28.32 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Fast answers to common questions I find this a great resource when you need to administer Exchange, especially for 5.5 to 2003 admins. Everything is well written, with examples given using the GUI, command prompt and scripting. As a recent 5.5 to 2003 admin, it's very handy for those situations where you know 2003 can do it, but haven't memorized how. Overall, a very good cookbook for your server kitchen. Summary: SIMULTANEOUS COVERAGE FOR BOTH 2000 AND 2003 EDITIONS It is not easy to judiciously cover successive editions of any given software in a single book, but I must say that the efforts of the authors of this book are commendable. Any system administrator who shares his time working with both Exchange 2000 Server and Exchange Server 2003 would find this book indispensable. Its contents prove that getting to understand new versions of mission-critical technologies do not always mean starting from scratch. Whether it entails a fresh installation or an upgrading path, this book shed comprehensive light on each topic. All the important issues regarding Routing and SMTP controlling, as well as Outlook, Outlook Web Access, POP3, and IMAP4 management and security were nicely explored. In fact, nowhere have I seen the concepts of Mail Transport and System Monitoring better summarized than in this book. The same could be said of Managing and Controlling folders, Backing-up, Replication, as well as Restoration of data (on the same or on different servers). This book's coverage of Active Directory Integration, along with its associated controls and monitoring is without blemish. It is simply emphatic. Each chapter presented a set of solutions, which were complemented by a series of well-grounded analyses. They are extensively cross-referenced too. However, the downside of this kind of book is that the authors' efforts to covered two successive editions (of the Exchange Server) compelled them to concentrate more on only the features that are common to both editions. Still, it remains a valuable desk manual for any e-mail-oriented system administrator. Summary: Handy set of recipes for Exchange administrators The cookbook style really works for a topic like Exchange server maintenance. The style defines a set of recipes where each recipe covers a single question; e.g. Rehoming Public Folders. Then it discusses the problem, gives a solution, and then discusses how the solution actually works. It gives you insight into the workings of Exchange within a practical framework. The writing is good. It's a little stiff, but you would expect that from this type of format. Summary: |
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