Microsoft first introduced the Active Directory Migration Tool (ADMT) as a way to migrate from Windows NT to Window 2000. Since shipping Windows Server 2003, Microsoft has made some changes to the ...
Last week, I waxed nostalgically about the companies that provided the tools many of us used to migrate from Windows NT servers to Windows 2000 servers. Evidently a little wax got into the printing ...
If your domain is running fine and you don't have any unsupported charters in any names I would just upgrade the domain. I used the migration tool in a lab and it worked fine for users. I did not get ...
The votes are in, and it’s clear that deploying Microsoft’s Active Directory is a task like none other ever attempted by seasoned Windows NT administrators. The complexity of the directory — from ...
How do people typically do an Exchange Server 2007 cross-forest migration using the basic set of tools provided by Microsoft? Well, to summarize the process, most people tend to perform Active ...
Does anyone have any reference material that tells what ports/protocols are required to migrate users from an NT 4.0 domain to a 2003 Active Directory forest? I have to migrate around 3500 people into ...
Windows Server 2000 support ended in mid-July, leaving more than a few Active Directory domains running on unsupported servers. In a situation that mirrors the scenario affecting many organizations, I ...
Windows Server 2000 support ended in mid-July, leaving more than a few Active Directory domains running on unsupported servers. I recently worked with a school system with 65 domains (one for each ...
Windows Server 2000 support ended in mid-July, leaving more than a few Active Directory domains running on unsupported servers. In a situation that mirrors the scenario affecting many state and local ...
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