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We can
make the very most of Exchange Server for you.....
Migrations Upgrades
Clustering & Data
Replication
Antispam and antivirus
Disaster Recovery
Archiving & data
compression
Mobile access & OWA
Outlook using RPC over HTTP
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Microsoft® Exchange
Server 2003 and Microsoft Office Outlook® 2003,
combined with Windows Server™ 2003, support the
use of RPC over HTTP to access Exchange servers. Using
the Microsoft Windows RPC over HTTP feature to enable
your users to connect to their Exchange mailbox eliminates
the requirement for remote office users to use a virtual
private network (VPN) to connect to their Exchange
servers. Users who are running Outlook 2003 on client
computers can connect directly to an Exchange server
in a corporate environment from the Internet.
The Windows RPC over HTTP feature enables an RPC client (such as Outlook 2003)
to establish connections across the Internet by tunneling the remote procedure
call (RPC) traffic over Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP). Because RPC is
not designed for use on the Internet and does not work well with perimeter
firewalls, RPC over HTTP makes it possible to use RPC clients with perimeter
networks and firewalls. If the RPC client can make an HTTP connection to
a remote computer that is running Internet Information Services (IIS), the
client can connect to any available server on the remote network and can
execute remote procedure calls. Moreover, the RPC client and server programs
can connect across the Internet—even if both are behind firewalls on
different networks.
So
if you need to implement Exchange, migrate to Exchange,
upgrade Exchange, fix Exchange or just ask why Exchange
might be right for you, talk to us on 0845 838 5505.
Or Email
ETL to ask what Exchange Server can do for you.
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