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 ...
I am pretty familiar with ADMT and Exchange migrations within the same forest and organization/site but I'm a little unsure about doing this across different forests.<BR><BR>I have a Windows 2000 ...
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 ...
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 agencies, 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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