Have you actually got send and receive connectors set up on EX2010 to and from the internet?
Sounds like a stupid question I know, but you'd be surprised.
Store.exe will pretty much always swallow up as much memory as it can but should release back as other things need it.
Other items to look for are the transport service and IIS for ActiveSync / EWS etc.
Are you seeing any specific error messages where it is complaining it is running out of RAM?
Domain Admins should have Deny permissions set for ReceiveAs and SendAs on every mailbox. This is the default and is to stop them accessing everyone's mailboxes.
Your primary mail account that you have an ActiveSync device on should never be part of Domain Admins.
There shouldn't be any need to remove the roles you have listed.
However more importantly have you transferred the FSMO roles such as Schema Master, RID, Domain Naming etc. to your new DC?
No way of doing this that I know of.
Need to make sure meeting bookers leave sufficient margin for run-ons in their original request.
But that is an inefficient use of resources, if everyone leaves a 15 minute margin then you could be losing hours a day from meeting room availability.
Sounds like you are using an SSL VPN of some sort.
Before it will allow you to authenticate it will be doing various checks such as making sure your anti-virus is installed, working and up-to-date. You may also have had to run a virus check within X days.
We use Juniper here and have constant...
Probably a lot of white space and database overhead.
Count yourself lucky that you aren't using archiving/stubbing software since Exchange 2010 at least doesn't always convert the emptied pages to white space. Kind of negates the supposed benefit of stubbing.
Neill
You can, but you may find that you have the initial installation mailboxes such as the DiscoverySearchMailbox or arbitration mailboxes present in that database so it won't let you delete it.
Within the Exchange shell run get-mailbox -database dbName
This will show you any remaining mailboxes...
You might also have static DHCP address allocation via MAC address or your comms guys have set up some network security so that only previously authorised devices can attach to the network.
NT
One small item to note is that if you are using Forefront for Exchange you may need to disconnect that from the Information Store and/or Transport service before doing any updates if going from SP1.
https://support.microsoft.com/kb/929076
One of the Exchange rollups did change that requirement...
If you need to be SOX compliant you should really be doing e-mail journaling to something like an EMC Centera or equivalent and software like Symantec Enterprise Vault or EMC SourceOne.
However exporting to PST's may not be outwith your agreement with the support company, it could just be their...
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