Harry brelsford here, author of Windows Small Business Server
2003 Best PRactices and just posting up more of my book for you,
the reader. My goal is to have the entire book posted by the time
SBS 2008 ships!
harrybbbb
Harry Brelsford, ceo at smb nation | www.smbnation.com
Standard
Management
Consider this both the “noun” and the
“verb” of the Server Management console. The objects
listed here are “things” you do such as faxing.
What’s important to understand here is that you are not
exposed to the application name at this time (e.g., Exchange).
Microsoft has, in its wisdom that I respect here, elected to be
task-oriented, such as Backup (i.e., Backup is something that we
“do”). The components of Standard Management are
described below.
•  
; &nbs
p; To Do List. This is covered in extensive detail in the
next section but cuts to the heart of the SBS 2003 deployment
methodology. Read on whilst I write on.
•  
; &nbs
p; Information Center. This is your SBS portal for seeking
help or more information. You can click over to Microsoft update
site, view internal documentation, click over to the SBS public
product Web site at Microsoft and commence an online technical
support request.
•  
; &nbs
p; Internal Web Site. This allows you to manage your
Windows SharePoint Services internal Web site. I’ll feature
many of the links on this page in Chapter 7.
•  
; &nbs
p; Fax (Local). This obviously relates to the SBS 2003
faxing function which is awesome. I cover this area in Chapter 9.
•  
; &nbs
p; Monitoring and Reporting. Covered in more detail in
Chapter 12, this relates to configuring the Server Status Report
and the Health Monitor tool in SBS 2003.
•  
; &nbs
p; Internet and E-mail. This is the page for all matters
related to Internet connectivity and e-mail. We’ll spend
some time here in Chapters 6 and 10.
•  
; &nbs
p; Shares (Local). Not surprisingly, this page displays the
folders that are shared on the SBS server including
administrative (hidden) shares that end with the dollar sign ($)
in the share name. I’ll mention it in Chapter 11 again, but
be advised that the View Connected Users on this page is the
easiest way to discover who is currently logged on the network.
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additional SMB and SBS book, newsletter and conference resources.
•  
; &nbs
p; Backup. WOW! Much improved in SBS 2003, this is where
the backup and data protection experience commences. Lots of
discussion on this in Chapter 11.
•  
; &nbs
p; Licensing. A few changes here that I think you’ll
like. No longer is client access licensing information hidden on
an “About...” dialog box (as it was in SBS 2000). No
sir! It’s now presented front and center on the Manage
Client Access Licenses from the Licensing link.
BEST PRACTICE: Client Access Licenses (CALs) have really
changed in SBS 2003. First, there are two types of CALs: devices
and users. Long-time SBSers are familiar with device-based
management, where a certain number of client computers are
allowed on the network (say 55 PCs based on the number of CALs
you have purchased for the SBS 2003 network).
User-based licensing is new to us SBSers and might be
implemented under a scenario where device-based licensing
doesn’t make sense. For example, imagine a small software
development company with ten employees using SBS 2003. Each
employee has four PCs for development and testing purposes (for a
total of 40 devices). Here the customer is better off by using
the user-based licensing and purchasing ten CALs.
So
you want more licensing chatter? You can mix and match device and
user-based licensing to optimize the amount of bucks you drop on
CALs, pardner! And remember that the licensing model is EXACTLY
THE SAME as Windows Server 2003 which helped me when I had to
learn about SBS 2003 licensing and then proceed to go out and
give speeches on it. So in addition to the licensing discussion
found at the main SBS 2003 Web page (from the Information Center
link above), you are highly encouraged to view the traditional
Windows Server 2003 CAL licensing discussion at
www.microsoft.com/windowsserver2003/howtobuy/licensing/
caloverview.mspx.
Visit www.microsoft.com/technet for the
latest updates for any Microsoft product.
Other licensing tidbits include the
online purchase of CALs and the elimination of the CAL licensing
diskette (thank you). You purchase CALs by the five pack (as was
the case in the SBS 2000 time frame).
Note in my advanced SBS 2003 book, due mid-2004,
I’ll delve deep into the depths of SBS licensing, but for
the purposes of this book and SPRINGERS, this is far enough for
now! Also be advised that I won’t have you add more CALs to
the SPRINGERS network as part of this step-by-step book (even
though you add ten users later in the chapter). That’s
because I never have you log on more than one user at a time as
we work through this SBS tome.
•  
; &nbs
p; Users. This link displays the Manage Users page where
much of the support and configuration for users can occur.
•  
; &nbs
p; Client Computers. This link displays the Manage Client
Computers page.
BEST PRACTICE: Aside from your performing client
computer management duties here, this is the one place that you
can start the Setup Computer Wizard (SCW) natively without having
to rerun the Add User Wizard (to which the SCW is chained). Huh?
Say that again and don’t use ten dollar words?!?! Okay -
what I meant to say is that if you have a user, let’s call
her “Sally,” and she purchases a new HP laptop, you
really only want to run the SCW to add existing user
Sally’s new HP laptop. You don’t need to run Add User
Wizard to get to the SCW to configure Sally’s new HP
laptop. If this still doesn’t make sense, it will later in
the life of SBS when users start to replace client computers.
Trust me.
BEST
PRACTICE: Each release of SBS has a “paradigm”
combined with a “raison d’etre” (which
I’ll call a “paradigm d’etre”). In the
first releases, SBS was the BackOffice bundle at a competitive
price. The SBS 2000 time frame had “server-side
stability” as its reason for being. SBS 2003 has a couple
of paradigm shifts and I’ll share one here: client computer
setup. Here’s what I mean. In the SBS 2000
time
frame, there was such an emphasis on the server-side that the
client computers were much ignored. The damn Define Computer
Applications link from the SBS 2000 To Do List basically
didn’t work. And the SBS 2000 To Do List and consoles
didn’t natively take advantage of Group Policy Objects
(GPOs). That’s all changed in SBS 2003 where client
computer setup, configuration, and management received much
attention! The results show.
I’ll share another SBS 2003 paradigm d’etre
in just a moment.
•
Server
Computers. This is the interface for the management of server
computers.
BEST
PRACTICE: There is nothing like timing in business. As I was
writing this chapter, I was working with my client, a cardiology
clinic, who wanted to move to SBS 2003. In the planning phase,
the managing doctor (that’s Dr. Paul to you) held the
belief that SBS can be the only server on the network. Such is
not the case, as you have member servers and even other domain
controllers on the network (as I discussed earlier in Chapter 1).
However, you can have only one SBS 2003 server machine on the
network.
So,
assuming you might have additional server computers on an SBS
2003 network, how might you manage them? From the Server
Computers link we’re discussing right here, right now!
•  
; &nbs
p; Printers. Printers are printers (what can I say?). Once
the primary reason we even had networks in small businesses
(to share printers), printers are managed here. This is also
where you manage the fax device that we treat like a printer.
•  
; &nbs
p; Distribution Groups. You use distribution groups to send
e-mail to a specific set of people. By default, everyone you add
to the SBS network will appear in the default distribution
group named after the information you provided in the
Organization field in Figure 3-4
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latest updates for any Microsoft product.
earlier in this book (when you were in
the GUI-based phase of the Windows Server 2003 setup). In the
case of SPRINGERS, the default distribution group would be called
Springer Spaniels Limited.
•
Security
Groups. This relates to grouping users together for the
purpose of granting permissions. For example, the folks in
the bookkeeping department might belong to a security group
called Accounting that has specific permissions related to the
Timberline accounting folder. Please click over and view all the
security groups created by default in SBS 2003. (Hint: There
should be 22 security groups by default which would make a great
exam question.)
BEST PRACTICE: You might not have known that security
groups are actually e-mail enabled by default in SBS 2003. You
would care about this because, for instance, the Accounting
security group example I mention above might be the same group of
people whom you want to receive an important e-mail about a
Timberline accounting upgrade, etc., and you wouldn’t need
to plop all these folks in a new distribution group to accomplish
this. Rather, you could simply e-mail the security group (which
should be security@springersltd.com by default once you create
such a security group).
•
User
Templates. User templates are really nothing more than a disabled
user account that has certain settings you want to easily apply
to new user accounts you are creating. Each of the templates is
self-explanatory by reading the Description field on the
Manage Templates page that appears. However, what is interesting
is the addition of the Mobile User Template to provide remote
access support for worthy users.
BEST PRACTICE: Time for another
paradigm d’etre! So another big deal in SBS 2003 is the
support for mobile worker bees. The Mobile User Template is only
the start of how this paradigm d’etre plays out, and I
continue the mobility discussion in Chapter 8.
BEST
PRACTICE: Around when SBS 2003 was being released in October
2003, I was teaching a hands-on lab in Orange County, California,
when a student, totally enthusiastic about SBS 2003, asked if he
could fine-tune a user template on his SBS 2003 network and then
deploy it in its exact form at his customer SBS network sites.
That is, suppose he sold a customer relationship management (CRM)
application that required specific settings, could it be created
once and cloned over to his customer base? The answer is yes.
You’d create a user template on the master network and use
the Export Templates link (to launch the Export Templates Wizard)
and get the configuration out to a floppy disk (the export
function assumes Drive
A:
by default) or a USB hard disk key (my favorite approach to
transfer information in the 21st century!).
To
import the user template at the customer site, just reverse the
process - click the Import Templates link and complete the Import
Templates Wizard.