Books - Terminal Services for Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Advanced Technical Design Guide - BrianMadden.com
Brian Madden Logo
Your independent source for desktop virtualization, consumerization, and enterprise mobility management.
Books -

Terminal Services for Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Advanced Technical Design Guide

  • Appendixes

    Appendix A: Third Party Server-Based Computing Product Comparison We mentioned several third party server-based computing products in this book, and we alluded to some of their advanced features. In this section, we'll look at the "add-on"...
    Published Aug 12 2007 by Terminal Services for Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Advanced Technical Design Guide , 14,545 views, 2 comments
  • The Change Log

    A change log should be created that documents all change requests, technical information about a change, and dates and times that changes were deployed to various servers. It should contain enough information about each change and how it was implemented...
    Published Aug 12 2007 by Terminal Services for Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Advanced Technical Design Guide , 6,955 views, 0 comments
  • A Change Management Policy

    In addition to creating your change log and change control process, you should create a change management policy documenting the procedures around any change that might occur in your Terminal Server environment. Implement the policy with all changes—be...
    Published Aug 12 2007 by Terminal Services for Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Advanced Technical Design Guide , 10,806 views, 0 comments
  • The Basics of Change Management

    Managing changes in your environment, from the initial build through deployment and future upgrades, does not have to be a complex task. Change management is really about testing changes, documenting changes, and having a way to back out of unsuccessful...
    Published Aug 12 2007 by Terminal Services for Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Advanced Technical Design Guide , 6,018 views, 2 comments
  • Change Management

    In this final section, we'll discuss some best practices regarding change control in your environment. A good change control policy can prevent that late night call from a panicked IT manager. This is generally the call you get after the application...
    Published Aug 12 2007 by Terminal Services for Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Advanced Technical Design Guide , 5,373 views, 0 comments
  • Terminal Server Backup Strategies

    By focusing on high availability, your environment will be able to survive the small day-to-day events that occur. However, you'll still need to have a solid backup strategy that kicks in when there is a major disaster or component failure. Focus...
    Published Aug 12 2007 by Terminal Services for Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Advanced Technical Design Guide , 8,858 views, 0 comments
  • Routine Maintenance Tasks

    In this section we'll outline several routine tasks that you will need to perform when administering your Terminal Servers. First we will look at tasks that should be done on a regular schedule, and then we'll examine those that can be performed...
    Published Aug 12 2007 by Terminal Services for Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Advanced Technical Design Guide , 9,901 views, 0 comments
  • Monitoring your Terminal Servers

    Day-to-day monitoring can be one of the most important things an administrator does in his Terminal Server environment. We're not talking about performance monitoring per se, as was covered extensively back in Chapter 13, but rather, we're referring to...
    Published Aug 12 2007 by Terminal Services for Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Advanced Technical Design Guide , 9,782 views, 0 comments
  • Server Management and Maintenance

    Once your Terminal Server environment is designed and implemented, you'll need to manage it on a day-to-day basis. In this chapter, we'll focus on the tasks involved in the management of your servers and the tools that you can leverage. This chapter...
    Published Aug 12 2007 by Terminal Services for Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Advanced Technical Design Guide , 4,163 views, 0 comments
  • Deploying Applications

    One of the primary advantages of Terminal Server is that you can significantly decrease your software deployment timeframe since you need to install applications only once on a server instead of dozens of times on client devices. However, as your Terminal...
    Published Aug 12 2007 by Terminal Services for Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Advanced Technical Design Guide , 4,599 views, 0 comments
1 2 3 4 5 Next > ... Last »