Windows Server Hacks

The tools, or hacks in this book reveal techniques that go well beyond basic management tasks found in most handbooks. Hacks range from those that deal with general administration to more esoteric hacks in the areas of network deployment, patch management, performance, security, and backup and recovery. No matter which Windows Server you use–NT, IIS, 2000, or 2003–Windows Server Hacks will put the knowledge and expertise of veteran system administrators to work for you.
For some time now, Microsoft Windows (in all its incarnations) has been the dominant desktop operating system for businesses small and large. But in recent years, the platform has also made significant inroads into the server side of the equation. In the late 1990s, for example, the now-legacy Windows NT 4.0 Server platform became popular for running web servers using IIS and largely displaced Novell NetWare in the file/print server arena. Other server applications that ran on top of NT, such as Microsoft Exchange and Microsoft SQL Server, also made Windows a top platform for messaging/collaboration and database servers.
Windows 2000 Server built upon the success of NT by adding increased stability, reliability, and a new feature called Active Directory that quickly overtook Novell Directory Services (NDS) as the dominant enterprise-level directory service product. And Windows Server 2003, the latest incarnation of server-side Windows, is likely to further cement Microsoft's dominant position in the enterprise, despite the serious challenges arising from Linux and other open source software.
Why has Microsoft made such rapid gains in the server market? The answer is found in the simplicity of administering the platforms. An easy-to-use GUI, a consistent set of tools, wizards that walk you through performing complex tasks—such features make it possible to learn how to install, configure, and maintain Windows servers in weeks, without any knowledge of a programming or scripting language or learning a lot of complicated command-line syntax. In fact, you can probably accomplish about 90% of all Windows administration without ever opening a command prompt or running a script.
But it's that other 10% that can really matter sometimes, and that's what this book is mainly about.
TABLE OF CONTENT:
Chapter 01 - General Administration
Chapter 02 - Active Directory
Chapter 03 - User Management
Chapter 04 - Networking Services
Chapter 05 - File and Print
Chapter 06 - IIS
Chapter 07 - Deployment
Chapter 08 - Security
Chapter 09 - Patch Management
Chapter 10 - Backup and Recovery
Password:ganelon
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June 5th, 2007 18:42
The password ganelon didnt work out for me. Kindly give another password. Thanks
June 9th, 2007 00:28
I am sure that given password is correct. You see, all my recent uploads have that (same) password, and before I upload each and every single file, I test them, just to make sure that I did not type them incorrectly. So, please, try to type it manually. Other posibility is that you've got CRC error which have nothing with password. In that case, please re-download the file.