Top 10 new features in Exchange 2010
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December 14, 2009
Top 10 new features in Exchange 2010
By Brien Posey
Microsoft recently released Exchange Server 2010, and it's chockfull
of new features. This article will introduce you to a few of my personal
favorites.
1: Legal hold Over the last several years, it has become increasingly
more common for an organization's email messages to be subpoenaed as part of
the litigation process. The problem is that email is dynamic in nature.
Messages are constantly being sent, received, and deleted. Likewise, messages
in the archives are often set to expire after a specific length of time. All of
these factors have made it difficult to comply with litigation-related message
retention requirements. Exchange 2010 offers a new legal hold feature. This
feature allows you to preserve the contents of an Exchange mailbox. Users can
still use their mailbox in the usual manner, but copies of all items are
retained, even if they delete them or if archived content would otherwise have
expired.
2: Multi mailbox search A
complementary feature to legal hold is the new multi mailbox search feature.
This feature makes it a lot easier for organizations to perform E-discovery. As
the name implies, multi mailbox search allows a designated person to perform
organization-level searches across users' mailboxes. The search interface is
designed to allow administrators to search for multiple keywords or phrases
simultaneously.
3: Exchange Control Panel The Exchange Control Panel is a new
management tool built into Exchange 2010. While the Exchange Control Panel
isn't designed to take the place of the Exchange Management Console or the
Exchange Management Shell, it is definitely a welcome addition. The Exchange
Control Panel is integrated into OWA. It allows users to perform a few basic
self-service tasks, such as changing their contact information. For
administrators, the Exchange Control Panel provides a way of performing some of
the more common management tasks remotely using a Web interface.
4: Database availability groups
Exchange 2007 provided several high availability features, such as Cluster
Continuous Replication. Exchange 2010 takes things a step further with database
availability groups. Database availability groups allow you to designate
multiple servers to host copies of individual databases. In the event of a
failure, Exchange can automatically recover. Databases are no longer server
specific, so you are free to mix and match the database replicas that are
hosted on each mailbox server.
5: Database-level failover In previous Exchange Server cluster
implementations, a failure required an entire cluster node to fail over. This
meant that if a server was hosting multiple databases, and the disks associated
with a single database were to fail, the entire server would have to fail over
-- which would be disruptive to users whose mailboxes weren't even stored on the
failed disks. In contrast, Exchange 2010 supports database-level fail over.
That way, if a failure affects only a single database, that database can fail
over without disrupting the other databases on the server.
6: Voice mail transcription In Exchange 2007, the unified messaging
feature caused voice mail messages to be saved as email message attachments.
While that seemed to work out fine most of the time, it did sometimes make life
difficult for road warriors who didn't always have the ability to play the
message. Exchange 2010 uses a speech recognition engine to automatically
transcribe voice mail messages. Users still receive the voice message as an
email attachment, but the email message also contains a written transcript of
the voice message. Users can check their voice messages even when they don't
have access to a sound card. More important, the transcription feature allows
the contents of voice messages to be indexed along with traditional email
messages.
7: Call answering rules In Exchange 2007, the auto attendant provides
voice prompt menus for the organization's primary phone number. For example, an
auto attendant might be used to ask callers to press 1 for English or 2 for
Spanish and then route calls accordingly. In Exchange 2007, the auto attendant
is an organization level feature. In Exchange 2010, though, each user has his
or her own personal auto attendant, which Microsoft refers to as the Call
Answering Rules feature. Call answering rules allows users to create their own
call routing options. So, for instance, an important call might be forwarded to
a user's cell phone, while a less important call might go straight to voice
mail.
8: Personal archive In Exchange 2010, each user can now have two
mailboxes -- a primary mailbox and an archive mailbox. By using an archive
mailbox, users can keep their primary mailboxes uncluttered. They're free to
browse their archive mailbox at will, and items can be automatically moved from
their primary mailbox to their archive mailbox using retention policies.
9: Retention policies Retention policies allow messages to be tagged
in a way that reflects their useful lifespan and what should happen when they
expire. For example, you could specify that items in one folder should be
deleted after 30 days, while items in another folder should be moved to the
archives after five years. Users can also apply retention policies to
individual messages that are separate from folder-level policies.
10: Role-based access control Exchange 2010 uses a new access control
model called role-based access control. Now, administrators can perform
delegation based on the role that the delegate will be performing. This means
that rather than guessing which permissions the delegate will need, the
administrator can simply tell Exchange which tasks the delegate will be
performing.
Top 10 new features in Exchange 2010
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