I am trying to connect remotely to an SBS 2003 server using RWW, I have the firewall forwarding port 4125 to the server and I get to the login page, login, and when I try to connect to the server desktop, I get this error:
VBScript Remote Desktop Disconnected
Connecting to the server this way...
I am trying to setup a users mac from home to connect to their office so they can work. I can get the PPTP vpn working, although when they use it they kick another user at home off the vpn at the office. My real question is how do I connect the mac to file shares over the PPTP vpn to the user...
I will be setting up PPTP on a server soon and do not want to run into a problem I have heard and seen happen on Windows 2003 servers with PPTP installed. The problem is, once installed, pinging the server responds with two IP's, one that belongs to the server and one bound to the PPTP adapter...
I've got an older Compaq ML350 server that was upgraded to windows 2003 server standard by somone else; on the system drive is a page file I am unable to delete. I have set the memory settings to no page file on the system partition, rebooted, however its still there and I cannot delete it in...
Ok but why exactly is SBS entirely different? I have heard this reccomendation not to put exchange on a DC, but if you can have only one server and require terminal services and exchange, what choice do you have? SBS is out of the question due to the fact they removed terminal services in favour...
I have two sites, right now I have just replaced the main server at site 1, site 2 has no DC at the moment. PC's running XP Pro at site 2 are pointed to the DC at site 1 for DNS and are using a software program called VDHCP to get IP's locally. The two sites are connected via a T1, site one uses...
To move to exchange 2003 from 5.5 I believe you have to migrate to exchange 2000 first. What you could do is if you are able to recover the priv and pub.edb, perhaps use exmerge or some other tool to extract the mailboxes and then import them on your exchange 2003 box, that way you would not...
Actually its not all good, the problem came back and I ran out of time, so I trashed both machines and rebuilt from the ground up. A pity, I would have liked to know what the problem was.
AM
I know that, but I don't have much of a choice. There will be no TS access from outside the network, only internal. I thought MS removed TS from SBS and replaced it with RWW, I didn't know it was for security reasons.
AM
No physical space for two boxes, I want them to be using terminal services on the server in which their custom app runs. Those are the main two reasons, but I had given it a great deal of consideration.
Thanks
AM
So if that is the case, why, when I disable the original server from being a GC, does exchange, on my new server begin to complain, and outlook does not work on client pc's? The only way to fix it is to reenable the original server as GC.
AM
Spirit, yes the old server was a GC, and yes its still online with exchange running.
Ben, thanks I ran the command which returned both servers with exactly the same info, what does this mean?
AM
I am migrating exchange 2003 from a windows 2003 Ent server to a windows 2003R2 Ent server. I have done the migration and can send and receive mail to and from the new server, however I am having AD GC problems. The old server is still online and all the exchange services are stopped, however...
Thanks Pat, I've actually done a swing before using the kit, however in this case the client requires terminal services which is why going to SBS 2003 is not an option. Thanks for your thoughts, and I'll let you guys know how it goes.
AM
No of course not, once the SBS 2000 server is shut down, thats it, its unplugged from the network and could be brought back up offline, but certainly not connected to the network. I'll have to try it and see, and let you know.
AM
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