Showing posts with label support. Show all posts
Showing posts with label support. Show all posts

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Microsoft HMC 4.5 Deployment Walkthrough - Does it Work





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Microsoft's HMC 4.5 Deployment Walkthrough is an excellent document and I could say that it does work.


I found some minor little errors in the doc but none that were significant enough for a person with a good level of experience with the various Microsoft products to be able to recognize and get past.
There are doubters of course as to whether or not the deployment walkthrough actually will guide someone through installing their hosted Exchange 2007 environment. I did not build hosted communications or hosted sharepoint, only hosted Exchange.

My deployment did not match the deployment walkthrough exactly. And this fact is a testament to how well Microsoft has put together this iteration and release of the hosted messaging and collaboration. I build the infrastructure with the following servers, and believe me more will be added, but at this moment after just completing the install and applying my real SAN cert (not the SSL certs I generated on my own internal root certificate CA server).


Particularly in the domain controller department, I sped through the deployment by using only one domain controller. I'll be adding another this week and preparing for our first customers. I have 9 servers in total with a build out expected in the near future to include more servers to expand and increase performance and redundancy. Very soon and firstly, within a day or so I will have reached 10 servers for this HMC 4.5 deployment by simply adding another domain controller which is an absolute must and critical that it's deployed as soon as possible. Running with one DC is a recipe for a disaster (as we all know). When that server is added to the environment, the number of servers will be a consolidated 10 (ten) servers for this hosted Exchange HMC 4.5 solution deployment.


This is a consolidated hosted messaging and collaboration HMC 4.5. It was an accident that I created it as such and did start my work building the HMC 4.5 deployment from the consolidated HMC 4.0 deployment guide (an unofficial guide). I have for servers the following (names and roles to be added later):


There have been some grunting and groaning about Microsoft's deployment walkthrough document but I have to say it worked. The deployment walkthrough and in a consolodated design worked. This is my first install of the messaging and collaboration solution of any version. My HMC 4.5 deployment works with a minimum of servers (that will be scaled out to accommodate real production use). Overall, except for some minor issues the document does what's expected; provide a guide and example of a hosted solution installation and deployment. They cannot in a single document explain SQL, Exchange inner workings, or even the provisioning system in detail. This also make handy use of weeding out those who should not yet be deploying. A very experienced person with Microsoft products will find many of the steps easy to accomplish but a not so seasoned person will find the document and steps to accomplish the tasks not so helpful because every step of let's say, making changes or additions in active directory, are not explained or spelled out.


I saw that as I was working through the doc. I could see points that would make people give up because they can take a left turn during the walkthrough deployment and it will cost them dearly. I had one of those nearly deathly turns with the deployment of SQL report server. This is an area that I am familiar with but don't work with this particular product everyday and it showed as I worked through the deployment steps I had to verify to myself several times before taking action that it was the right thing to execute or do. My report server component of SQL installed without the databases it needed. Who knows why? Before this deployment I had another going that I scrapped for other reasons but the report server databases installed. In this round, they did not. I kept the abandoned deployment and used the datebase from that installation by exporting it and importing it. Although I believed I did the same thing as the first install and I was reading and working from the same Microsoft walkthrough deployment guide document, the install was different. I managed to get myself through the problem but several days were certainly lost.


Perhaps in another post I can mention my experience with the SAN (Subject Alternate Name) Unified Communications cert.





This deployment is not for everyone and everyone should not be deploying it. The document for the walkthrough deployment from Microsoft is excellent. Sure, there could have been more detail but the document is not meant to provide every step along the way. Microsoft has to assume and expect there will be some level of expertise and knowledge induced into the installation by the installer, Microsoft can't and should not put it into one single document. I wish I had noted the minor errors I found in the doc so I could send them to Microsoft for document correction. Again, without enough or the right amount of knowledge, those little errors could be devastating. For the smokey room conspirator theory folks who may be reading this post, who think Microsoft is evil, here's something to think about; perhaps Microsoft put those little errors in the document by design, ...hmmm... , purposefully weed out companies from the hosted game ... a selective or survival of the fittest process.

Microsoft did a great job with the HMC 4.5 document. Using it I was able to deploy a hosted Exchange 2007 server environment. I absolutely do not claim to be an expert in the multi-tenant Exchange environment but I surely have more than a foot in the door of learning and experiencing much more about it.


I just recently finished testing Outlook Anywhere functionality with the 4.5 HMC Exchange environment using a fictitious organization but a real domain using real DNS servers. The functionality works pretty darn good. Once again, Microsoft did an excellent job with the document and deployment guide walkthrough. The clients find the autodiscover redirect site then get sent to the autodiscover site within the hosted solution. Once there, they get their configuration data, logon, and up come the mailbox. It's fantastic the way Microsoft has put this together.

If during the testing phase of the deployment you have issued certificates to the autodiscover web site and internally to your Exchange servers using a root CA authority you built and is not a public root CA. A tip I could give to people who might be at this part of their deployment walkthrough and testing their Outlook Anywhere capabilities is to be sure to import the root CA certificate into the trusted root store for the user at the remote computer looking to connect with Outlook Anywhere. The symptoms are that Outlook finds the autodiscover web site, the user logs on, all seems well but the mailbox for the user does not load. A message similar to the following. "the profile is not configured" or " be sure you can connect to your exchange mailbox" .

The deployment guide actually states that Outlook Anywhere will not work without certs installed and applied to the web sites involved, and this I proved but a temp work around that will only be good for testing is to import the root certificate of the certificate authority server into the users root certificate store. It does not have to be the computer certificate store. This will allow the mail box to load into Outlook for the remote test user but until the real certificate is used (a public SAN UC SSL certificate), the user will be constantly prompted for a password. So Microsoft is right, without certificates the solution will not work for a real deployment of Hosted Exchange HMC 4.5.



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Link to this site and/or post please if you've found it at all useful. Use the following URLs, thank you.

http://remotesupportpc.blogspot.com/

http://remotesupportpc.blogspot.com/2008/12/microsoft-hmc-45-deployment-walkthrough.html












Saturday, February 16, 2008

Computer & Networking News and Reviews: Remote Support Software Solution

Computer & Networking News and Reviews: Remote Support Software Solution


Microsoft LiveMeeting

I had the luck to see not only a demo of Microsoft's newley updated online application for collaboration, conferencing, and support but it was used for real in a support session whilst wowrking with a client to resollve some applciation issues on one of their server.

The application was a document imaging and database application purchased in an effort to help the office go paperless and their were some issues that were being logged and tracked. After some time had elapst, the support group for the application wanted to login to the server remotely to take a look and to apply some fixes to help resolve the problem the customer was having with their desktop software.

The issue was feezing and without the use of the applciation is full force roll-out yet, this was considerably odd behavior. The computer support company logged in using Livemeeting from Microsoft and we gave them access tot he server for remote support. the software worked grweat and very quick, the support group was able to access all aspects of the server and we still maintained control of the server's desktop keyboard and mouse movements too.



Sign-up for a demo:

LiveMeeting Demo

Read White Paper:

Conferencing and Collaboration White Paper

Conferencing, Collaboration and Support

Monday, February 12, 2007

Send As and Send on Behalf of Using Outlook and Exchange 2003

Configure Exchange 2003 / 2000 to allow Send As User or Send on Behalf of
To give a user rights to Send As perform the following steps:

This is a common scenario. There's a manager or other employee like a top sales rep that needs to have others send email on their behalf or for them. Rather than having the person who is going to send the email go to their desktop and compose the email to send, they could send email for the other user right from their own desktop.
The surprise here is that although you may have configured full mailbox access in Exchange settings and the user can open the other users mailbox in Outlook on their desktop, the email sent still bounce back with the message stating the user is not allowed to send.That's because it there is another checkbox that needs to be checked to send for another user in the user security tab.


  1. Open Active Directory Users. This doesn't have to be from your Exchange server

  2. Enable viewing of Advanced Features in AD users and computers by licking View --> Advanced Features

  3. Find the user that you would like to have other users have rights to allow someone to send email as them (boss / manager)


  4. Double-click on the user name or id and select the Security Tab which is Typically top right box

  5. Add user that needs to "Send As" and grant them "Send As" permission. Permission change can take up to 15 minutes to go into effect.

    The user may now select "Sent From" in Outlook and the recipient will not be able to tell the email was not really sent on behalf of someone.

    exchange-send-as-send-on-behalf

Remote Support



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Friday, January 19, 2007

Load balancing with Sonicwall TZ170













I've worked with a bunch of different types of firewalls and routers and although Sonicwall is not one of my most favorite products for some applications it does do something right at a fairly reasonable cost. The load balance option on the TZ170 works pretty good and it's easy to configure.

The unit can be configured to load balance in active/active mode, active/passive and active/active (this is my favorite). In active active, you can set the amount of data that passes though each ISP connection using percentage based or even load based. So with these configuration options one can split off data by preference or by bandwidth availability for each connection.

Remote Support

Friday, June 16, 2006

Reliable Technical Support


I came across this site and started quickly reading/scanning the pages contained within and saw there were a number of links, good articles, and useful information. I noticed that one of the items listed was a online remote support software solution that I have signed up for. So I figured why not throw in a post.

The software for remote support is pretty good as an online solution for remotely supporting computers through the web and as an alternative to the more pricey brand names of remote support. The service is reliable for remote controlling computers over the web for support. Yes, it's an affordable remote support solution. Solutions for remote desktop support consist of products and online services that range from a little application to full blown, require dedicated server type solution that's costs thousands upon thousands of dollars per user or seat. This solution for remote online remote support is pretty inexpensive. One of the newly added features consists of allowing their users to send a remote support email link right from their site - while your logged in of course.

The feature list isn't tremendous compared to the more pricey well known solution but if it's remote control over the web you need, that's what you get.

Remote Desktop Support Software


Too many packages and solutions for remote control support that are available offer their service or product with maintenance fees and hidden charges. At one time I even remember seeing a site that charged per usage and another that charged by the minute. That's easy grey area for contention as there are ways that the information provided could be misleading or incorrect.

PC Remote Support



This site has a single flat rate and no charges for changing support computers or networks. The appliance based remote support solutions are nice too as they offer the fact that you own your solution for supporting computers. This is nice but you will pay forever the maintenance fees for the appliance and if you don't, you get no updates or support if there's a problem - you may own it but you'll never stop paying for it.

More...

Web based PC Remote Support

Saturday, March 04, 2006

5 Desktop Systems Still in Boxes to Deploy

I have 5 dell systems in boxes still left to be setup and deployed. Of the 32 original, these are going to be the worst since the desktops they are replacing each had some special software on them. I have a MacAfee problem to resolve. The mcafee EPO (ePolicy Orchestrator) agent comes up with some error and doesn't install on the new system. It might have something to do with the new systems having been shipped with a macafee security package pre-installed. I uninstalled the other version before installing the corporate version but there is still a problem. I also found out the server side isn't running. either. This will be an all day project to fix both of these problems. I may be able to resolve the problem remotely on the web using some on-demand remote support software. For this office, remote support is always a first option to try and resolve computer issues. Since they are located in the city it's a long haul just to get there.

Tuesday, January 17, 2006

Online pc remote support software - Linktivity


Screen-sharing

Try this site out if your looking for pc remote control software that allows you to connect to a remote computer over the internet to provide desktop tech support on demand to. The end-user that's on the computer your looking to control remotely just clicks start and downloads a small executable program that connect the desktop to yours for screen-sharing.

Enter a support and connect

 Enter a support and connect. All this is done right from the homepage with a browser.  They then click connect and the software downloads to their system with a configuration to connect back to yours. This concept is done I think by a lot of companies but they make you have the same configuration for your network. If it changes it's going to cost more money to get it changed by them. This online computer remote control for support site allows you to make changes on the fly. If your configuration changes you could change your settings through an account profile page. I opened an account an trying it out. Another product which I've seen in action which is pretty good for collaboration software is made by Linktivity. This software package has a lot of bells and whistles. The same package does remote support too. You have to but a server for this software.

Saturday, January 07, 2006

Interesting old article on support.

 Good technical customer service

This is an old article that's dated back to '97 (whew that's eons in the tech world) It shows however how the industry was growing at that time. Now it's just have become huge. I'll have more to say on that. Here's the article. I've got to give credit - I didn't write it. It's from https://www.helpdesksolutions.com/Publications/remote.htm Reach-out and Touch That PC via Phone, LAN Or Internet Printer August 1997 Computer News Good technical customer service is finding the right solution in the shortest amount of time. Both of these factors aim at the getting the customer, whether it is a co-worker or an external customer, back to work with the least disruption. Two factors have made this more difficult as the desktop has replaced the glass house environment of the mainframe. The first component is the flexibility of the graphical user interface (GUI), which allows each person to customize his or her desktop while still using the same application as everyone else. The second is a more mobile work force. Customer service staff have been dealing with the GUI problem for several years, but supporting a mobile work force is just now becoming a reality as more members of the staff use computers away from the office. To cope with the GUI, the help desk has found that some problems cannot be diagnosed over the phone. These problems must be solved by a visit to the caller's office, or the caller’s PC must be shipped in for problem diagnosis and repair. 

Diagnosis and repair

As the number of mobile users increases, a visit to the caller’s office is impossible and shipping the PC to solve the problems just does not make sense. At the same time that these problems are becoming more critical, businesses are continuing to look for ways to reduce the cost of desktop support. (The Gartner group estimates $3000 - $4,800 per PC per year.) Happily, some new tools are entering the market place and some old tools getting a second look to help with these problems. All of these tools provide remote-control access to the customer’s PC. A remote-control application allows a support person to view the customer’s screen, take over the customer’s desktop, or modify files on the customer’s PC. I can already see the security folks shaking their heads and saying, "Too big a risk." There is some truth to what they are saying, the customer can control that risk by limiting the access to his or her PC by a help desk analyst. The remote control packages can require both log-on names and passwords. Some other options include limits to sessions and the retiring of log-on names and passwords after a specified amount of time. Remote-control applications can quickly improve the productivity of both the help desk analyst and the customer. When the help desk analyst can view the customer’s desktop, communication improves.

Better communication between the two parties

 Better communication between the two parties with the same goal and the same vision results in a shorter resolution time. This often eliminates visits by technical staff to the customer’s office to troubleshoot a problem. When the help desk analyst can take control of the customer’s desktop, then the analyst can demonstrate exactly how to execute a function within an application. If a picture is worth a 1000 words, then a demonstration must be worth 10,000. With remote-control, the idea of just-in-time training has real meaning. Just-in-time training will improve the customer’s productivity and possibly eliminate future calls to the help desk, which, in turn, will help increase the productivity of the help desk. If the help desk analyst is allowed to modify files on the customer's desktop, then many problems that presently require visits to customer’s office can be eliminated. This saves time for both the customer and the help desk analyst, increasing the productivity for both. Several PC vendors, including Compaq, IBM, NEC, and Dell, are including remote-control client software with their hardware products. (I'll comment on some of this stuff since since then alot has changed) These remote-control applications perform by using either the LAN, a modem, or by Internet. Several of the remote-control packages that work under Windows 95 are Microcom’s Carbon Copy for Windows, Artisoft's InSync CoSession Remote, Traveling Software's LapLink for Windows 95, Danware Data A/S's NetOp for Windows, Symantec's Norton pcAnywhere32, Stac's ReachOut, and Avalan's Remotely Possible/32. Three of these--pcAnywhere32, LapLink, and Remotely Possible/32 for Windows 95--have 32-bit architectures. Since all of these products support TCP/IP, remote-control via the Internet is now a viable possibility. Help desk analysts can access their customer’s desktop from anywhere in the world, saving on long distance charges. Remote control over the Internet does have its stumbling blocks. For example, in order to connect to another PC over the Internet, you must know it's TCP/IP address. Unfortunately, if the customer’s PC normally accesses the Internet via an on-line service or a modem connection to an Internet service provider, the PC may be allocated a different TCP/IP address with each session. Remote-control is another tool that the customer service industry has begun to implement to reduce the cost of providing support for each desktop within the company.

Chat Software on web sites

https://www.helpdesksolutions.com/publications.html I have to add this now and more later. Since that time when that article was written a whole new category of software has become most prevalent and at the tip of all support type peoples lips, and that is remote support software. Also commonly referred to as 4RemoteSupport online PC remote support software . This type of software often combines remote access and remote desktop control. There are other software tools and utilities that fall under the category of support software as well. One of the most common and well known is Chat Software on web sites. 
Now the term online pc remote support software is not a new idea or concept but it's a category that says this software or service is design to support computers remotely not just for the sake of remote controlling even though at the core of all such packages or services is a remote controlling feature (software). A nice package name for the old remote access tool. Remote support software has another twist in that the different packages out there have one things in common or at least a common motivation. Since LAN remote control is now-days to most of us a no brainer or a piece of cake to implement, 4RemoteSupport remote support software aim or goal is to work over the internet. In a previous post I started to explain some of the differences among the techniques used. Yes, I know - I didn't finish but I will.