Microsoft Exchange Server

Businesses are increasingly relying on e-mail as their mission critical communications tool. As employee demands and expectations from their messaging system increase, IT departments are looking to deliver in a cost-effective manner while at the same time contending with security, performance, and compliance issues. IT departments need a cost-effective messaging system that addresses enterprise and employee needs, provides a high return on investment, and increases the productivity of messaging administrators. Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 seeks to address all of these needs and has been designed to help meet enterprise and employee messaging system demands, while at the same time enabling new levels of operational efficiency through capabilities that optimize hardware investments. Server consolidation and improved storage efficiency are achieved through the extended memory and larger caches of 64-bit systems delivering performance and scalability.


Case Studies

APA TRADE ASSOCIATION: With 64-bit computing APA increased performance of its mail system and can host more users with larger mailboxes

DoITT: New York City Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications sees better performance and reduced TCO


Events

Why Migrate Your Exchange Server to the World of 64-Bit Computing?

Data volumes are exploding, thanks to the unabated growth of e-mail. Administrators must be able to increase the data-handling scale of the company servers. To address these issues, Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 is designed to run on 64-bit server systems. This webcast examines the benefits that 64-bit computing brings to Microsoft Exchange, and the advantages that AMD64-based servers provide as the underlying platform for Exchange Server 2007.


 
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