Donwload PDF Windows Server™ 2003 Bible R2 and SP1 Edition by Jeffrey R. Shapiro and Jim Boyce



Sinopsis

Windows Server 2003, R2, is an intermediate release between Windows Server 2003 and the next major version of the flagship operating system from Microsoft, due in the latter part of this decade. This release builds on the solid foundation of an already released and widely used operating system to provide critical security, authentication, and networking enhancements. It also provides features that make the extension of the enterprise network to branch offices and remote locations far easier and more secure. R2 takes you closer to the goal of a server and network consolidation, no matter how diverse or remote the various parts of your network.
 
If you are still supporting Windows 2000 (or, Heaven forbid, Windows NT), Windows Server 2003 offers many new and improved features that present you with both exciting and daunting challenges. This book is the culmination of thousands of hours spent testing, evaluating, and experimenting with just about everything that Windows Server 2003 can throw at you.
 
Gone are the days when the Windows server operating systems could be covered in a single book or a week’s crash course at a training center. If we told you that this is the only book that you need about Windows Server 2003, we would be lying. Many of the features that we cove warrant advanced treatment under separate cover. We have attempted to build as complete a hands-on reference as possible, while still providing a broad scope of coverage of the most important aspects and implications of the Windows Server 2003 platform for all editions.
 
There is no excuse to be still using Windows 2000 (which was released to manufacturing in the sunset of 1999) or Windows NT (which was released before the dawn of the Internet as we know it today)—those giddy years for technology in the mid-1990s. Windows Server 2003 presents some compelling reasons to convert sooner rather than later. Windows 2003 offers expanded hardware support and support for plug-and-play. Windows Server 2003 incorporates numerous new technologies and improves on several existing ones, particularly for Windows Server 2003 Enterprise Edition, the focus of this book.
 
One of the most pervasive changes in Windows 2000 was the Active Directory, and Windows Server 2003 expands on and improves implementation of the Active Directory. In R2, Active Directory comes with the so-called Active Directory Federation Services (ADFS), built-in technology that makes it easier than ever, and with much more reliability, to extend AD to remote locations and branch offices.
 
AD affects most aspects of Windows Server 2003, including the areas of security and user and group administration, network and domain topology, replication, DHCP and DNS, and more. Other important changes include changes to the Distributed File System (DFS), which enables you to build a homogenous file-system structure from shares located on various servers across the network. The concept of presenting shared folders to users as a grouping called a namespace has been further extended and enhanced. In R2, the enhanced DFS Namespaces (DFS-N) provides for easier management of file system roots within a DFS network infrastructure. DFS-N gives you far greater flexibility in deploying DFS; you now have a much more sophisticated tool to create multiple DFS roots and manage them.
 
In a similar fashion, volume mountpoints, a feature of NTFS 5.0 (introduced in Windows 2000), enable you to mount a volume into an empty NTFS folder, making the volume appear as part of the structure of the volume in which the NTFS folder resides. Mounted volumes do much the same for a local file structure that DFS provides for a network file structure. Changes in DNS and DHCP enable DHCP clients to dynamically request updates of their host records hosted by Windows Server 2003 DNS servers, enabling you to maintain up-to-date host records for all systems in the enterprise, even when they are assigned an IP address dynamically, or their host or domain names change.
 
If you have been creating and managing Windows 2000 networks, you should find many features in Windows Server 2003 welcome improvements. A good example is Group Policy. You know from Windows 2000 that you cannot implement a Windows 2000 network without Group Policy, but Group Policy is difficult to master without supporting tools. Windows Server 2003 greatly improves Group Policy technology with increased functionality, such as resultant set of policy (RSoP) and the capability to more easily report on Group Policy application. These changes are just a few of the many new features and modifications offered by the Windows Server 2003 operating platform



Content

  1.  Windows Server 2003 Architecture
  2. Introducing Windows Server 2003
  3. Windows Server 2003 and Active Directory
  4. Windows Server 2003 Security
  5. .NET Framework Services
  6. Planning, Installation, and Configuration
  7. Planning for Windows Server 2003
  8. Installing Windows Server 2003
  9.  Configuring Windows Server 2003
  10. Active Directory Services
  11. Planning for Active Directory
  12. Organizing a Logical Domain Structure
  13. Active Directory Physical Architecture
  14. Active Directory Installation and Deployment
  15. Active Directory Management
  16. Managing Users and Groups
  17. Change Control, Group Policy, and Workspace Management
  18. Networking and Communication Services
  19. Windows Server 2003 Networking
  20. DHCP
  21. DNS and WINS
  22. Routing and Remote Access
  23. Availability Management
  24. Storage Management
  25. Backup and Restore
  26. Disaster Recovery
  27. The Registry
  28. Auditing Windows Server 2003
  29. Service Level
  30. Windows Server 2003 High Availability Services
  31. File, Print, Web, and Application Services
  32. Windows Server 2003 File Systems
  33. Sharing and Securing Files and Folders
  34. Print Services
  35. Web, FTP, and Intranet Service
  36. Terminal Services


Download PDF Javaserver Pages Your Visual Blueprint to Designing Dynamic Content With Jsp 2001

Download PDF Microsoft® Office Project Server 2007: The Complete Reference by Dave Gochberg and Rob Stewart


Sinopsis


When we embarked on this endeavor, we knew that the tools that made up Microsoft’s Enterprise Project Management (EPM) solution were large and complex. Writing a book on the topic was going to require a significant amount of work and focus. We are grateful to have been selected to add this book to the McGraw-Hill Complete Reference series. Writing a technical book where the title includes the word “complete” is a somewhat daunting task, however, especially for people who have never written anything so large. Actually, the really complete version would probably require thousands of pages. We did what we thought was best to cover the spectrum of topics. In some cases, we made judgment calls about features and how likely they were to provide value. Although we skipped lower-value features in some areas, we delved deeper in others. We chose to spend a good portion of effort on configuration and data flow of the systems. Note that throughout the book, we make recommendations and discuss “best practices.” We stand behind each of them based on our experiences, our discussions with other consultants, information we learned at seminars and trade shows, and so on. Keep in mind, however, that not every one of our recommendations will be the right solution for you and your organization. To succeed, make sure you identify stakeholders, analyze (with the stakeholders) your organization’s needs, and make the decisions that best suit those needs. The flow of the book follows the general process of what it takes to actually succeed with an implementation of Project Server 2007, starting with value of planning. It was written for a blended audience, from the EPM novice on one end of the spectrum, to the experienced EPM professional. Finally, we hope this can truly be a “reference” in that after your system is up and running, you may go back to a single chapter for specific and useful (through possibly obscure) information.



Content

  1. Consider This before You Commit to Project Server 2007
  2. What Your CFO Needs to Know about Project Server
  3. The New Architecture of the Microsoft EPM Environment
  4. New Features and Some That Have Been Retired
  5. Plan for Your Project Server 2007 Implementation
  6. Building Blocks for Implementation Success
  7. Requirements, Prioritization, and Project Planning for Project Server
  8. Details on the Installation and Confi guration of Project Server 2007
  9. Installation of Project Server 2007 and Prerequisite Software
  10. SharePoint Central Administration in a Project Server Environment
  11. Configuring Security in your EPM Environment
  12. Configuring Enterprise Data Settings
  13. Confi guring Time and Task Management
  14. Configuring Look and Feel Settings
  15. Configure the Remaining Server Settings
  16. Roll Out the Desktop
  17. Project Server 2007 Maintenance
  18. Performance of Your EPM System
  19. Application/Database Migration from Previous Versions
  20. Techniques and Solutions for New Project Requests
  21. Integrating Project Server 2007 with External Systems
  22. Project Server in Action
  23. Time Tracking and Task Updates
  24. Reporting and Views
  25. Resource Management
  26. How the Project Manager Interacts with Project Server
  27. How the Team Member Interacts with Project Server
  28. How the Resource Manager Interacts with Project Server
  29. The Executive and Miscellaneous Roles
  30. Project Server 2007––Doing More for Collaboration and Communications




Download PDF Delivering Business Intelligence with Microsoft SQL Server 2005 by Brian Larson


Sinopsis

Business Intelligence The first step in effective decision making is to set specific, measurable goals. Once these goals have been set, the objective is to get accurate, useful information to the appropriate decision makers to serve as a foundation for the decision and as feedback on the effectiveness of that decision. Having the foundation and feedback information available at the appropriate time is extremely important. The question becomes, How does an organization go about obtaining and distributing this information? As the title of this book suggests, the answer is, Through the use of business intelligence. In fact, this objective serves as our definition of business intelligence.
Definition Business intelligence is the delivery of accurate, useful information to the appropriate decision
makers within the necessary timeframe to support effective decision making.

Business intelligence is not simply facts and figures on a printed report or a computer screen. Rows upon rows of numbers showing detailed sales figures or production numbers may be extremely accurate, but they are not business intelligence until they are put in a format that can be easily understood by a decision maker who needs to use them. Concise summaries of customer satisfaction or assembly-line efficiency may be easily understood, but they are not business intelligence until they can be delivered in time to meaningfully affect daily decision making. We also discovered earlier in this chapter that effective decision making is important at all organizational levels. Timely foundation and feedback information is needed as part of that effective decision making. Therefore, we need to make business intelligence available throughout our organizations.



Content

  1. Part I - Business Intelligence
  2. Chapter 1 - Equipping the Organization for Effective Decision Making
  3. Chapter 2 - Making the Most of What You've Got—Using Business Intelligence
  4. Chapter 3 - Searching for the Source—The Source of Business Intelligence
  5. Chapter 4 - One-Stop Shopping—The Unified Dimensional Model
  6. Chapter 5 - First Steps—Beginning the Development of Business Intelligence
  7. Part II - Defining Business Intelligence Structures
  8. Chapter 6 - Building Foundations—Creating and Populating Data Marts
  9. Chapter 7 - Fill'er Up—Using Integration Services for Populating Data Marts
  10. Part III - Analyzing Cube Content
  11. Chapter 8 - Cubism—Measures and Dimensions
  12. Chapter 9 - Bells and Whistles—Special Features of OLAP Cubes
  13. Chapter 10 - Writing a New Script—MDX Scripting
  14. Chapter 11 - Pulling It Out and Building It Up—MDX Queries
  15. Part IV - Mining
  16. Chapter 12 - Panning for Gold—Introduction to Data Mining
  17. Chapter 13 - Building the Mine—Working with the Data Mining Model
  18. Chapter 14 - Spelunking—Exploration Using Data Mining
  19. Part V - Delivering
  20. Chapter 15 - On Report—Delivering Business Intelligence with Reporting Services
  21. Chapter 16 - Let's Get Together—Integrating Olap with Your Applications
  22. Chapter 17 - Another Point of View—Excel Pivot Tables and Pivot Charts




Download Build Your Own Server Go High Tech At Low Cost by Tony C. Caputo

Download PDF Professional Microsoft SQL Server 2014 Integration Services by Brian Knight


Sinopsis

The most important business intelligence tool╇ in the Microsoft Swiss Army knife of tools is SQL Server Integration Services (SSIS). This is because the other tools would be nothing without the cleansing and movement of data into a presentable format. The product can extract, transform, and load (ETL) data astonishingly fast. A 2010 benchmark showed movement of more than a terabyte an hour with SSIS! If you’re new to SSIS, you’ve picked a fantastic field to become involved in. The one consistent skill needed in today’s technical job market is ETL. If a company wants to establish a partnership with another company, it’ll need to communicate data back and forth between the two companies. If your company wants to launch new products, it’ll need a way to integrate those products into its website and catalog. All of these types of tasks are going to require the skill set you are developing and will learn in this book.

Companies that had never used SQL Server before are now allowing it in their environment because SSIS is such an easy-to-use and cost-effective way to move data. SSIS competes with the largest ETL tools on the market like Informatica, DataStage, and Ab Initio at a tiny fraction of the price. SQL Server 2014 now offers more components that you use to make your life even easier and the performance scales to a level never seen on the SQL Server platform.

The best thing about SSIS is its price tag: free with your SQL Server purchase. Many ETL vendors charge hundreds of thousands of dollars, if not millions, for what you will see in this book. SSIS is also a great platform for you to expand and integrate into, which many ETL vendors do not offer. Once you get past the initial learning curve, you’ll be amazed with the power of the tool, and it can take weeks off your time to market. This author team has trained hundreds of people over the years, and you’ll find that the learning curve of SSIS is shallow relative to competing platforms. In SQL Server 2012, the product matured to its third major envisioning. In that release the focus was on scalability, management, and more advanced data cleansing. In SQL Server 2014 an incremental change has happened so new content focuses on patterns in SSIS.

Content

  1. Welcome to SQL Server Integration Services
  2. The SSIS Tools
  3. SSIS Tasks
  4. The Data Flow
  5. Using Variables, Parameters, and Expressions
  6. Containers
  7. Joining Data
  8. Creating an End-to-End Package
  9. Scripting in SSIS
  10. Advanced Data Cleansing in SSIS 
  11. Incremental Loads in SSIS 
  12. Loading a Data Warehouse
  13. Using the Relational Engine
  14. Accessing Heterogeneous Data
  15. Reliability and Scalability
  16. Understanding and Tuning the Data Flow Engine
  17. SSIS Software Development Life Cycle
  18. Error and Event Handling
  19. Programming and Extending SSIS
  20. Adding a User Interface to Your Component
  21. External Management and WMI Task Implementation
  22. Administering SSIS



Free Download PDF SQL Server 2012 Integration Services Design Patterns By Andy Leonard Dkk.


Sinopsis

The first Integration Services design pattern we will cover is metadata collection. What do we mean by “metadata collection”? Good question. This chapter could also be called “Using SSIS to Save Time and Become an Awesome DBA.” Many DBAs spend a large portion of time on monitoring activities such as verifying backups, alerting on scheduled job failures, creating schema snapshots (“just in case”), examining space utilization, and logging database growth over time, to name just a very few. Most RDBMS systems provide metadata to help DBAs monitor their systems. If you’ve been a DBA for a few years, you may even have a “tool bag” of scripts that you use to interrogate metadata. Running these scripts manually is easy when you have just one or two servers; however, this can quickly become unwieldly and consume a large portion of your time as your enterprise grows and as the number of database servers increases. This chapter examines how to use Integration Services and the metadata that exists within SQL Server to automate some of these routine tasks.

Introducing SQL Server Data Tools

One of the major features of SQL Server 2012 is the introduction of SQL Server Data Tools (SSDT). SSDT replaces Business Intelligence Development Studio (BIDS) and leverages the maturity of the Visual Studio product to provide a unified development platform for SQL Server, Business Intelligence (BI), and .NET applications. This book is written using SSDT, although the appearance of the Integration Services designer interface is largely the same as BIDS 2008. SSDT provides backward compatibility for Integration Services 2008 packages via the SSIS Package Upgrade Wizard.