Hi, Just wondering if there are many companies out there that have deployed Exchange 2007 into their production environment and whether anyone has migrated fully to the product? We are a 2,800 user installation running on a couple of Exchange 2003 boxes and approx 500GB of storage, SAN attached. For our sins we have approx 50 Blackberry users. I am very interested in the replication solutions - has anyone sucessfully deployed this in a geocluster? Does anyone take "snaps" of their databases? I am interested in any experiences or problems along the way. I realise the only way to really know is to run a R&D process but would like to know how far people have reached with their installations. Many thanks, Hutton.
Many organizations are now completely on Exchange Server 2007. Many will not consider deploying till SP1 hits the streets (or at least passes the beta landmark and a release data is available). Significant functionality will be added in SP1 (particularly if you're thinking geo-clusters, you may want to look at Standby Continuous Replication or SCR), as noted on the team blog recently. -- Bharat Suneja MVP - Exchange www.zenprise.com NEW blog location: exchangepedia.com/blog ---------------------------------------------- wrote in message news:1172746239.853875.73520@z35g2000cwz.googlegroups.com... > Hi, > > Just wondering if there are many companies out there that have > deployed Exchange 2007 into their production environment and whether > anyone has migrated fully to the product? > > We are a 2,800 user installation running on a couple of Exchange 2003 > boxes and approx 500GB of storage, SAN attached. For our sins we have > approx 50 Blackberry users. > > I am very interested in the replication solutions - has anyone > sucessfully deployed this in a geocluster? Does anyone take "snaps" > of their databases? > > I am interested in any experiences or problems along the way. I > realise the only way to really know is to run a R&D process but would > like to know how far people have reached with their installations. > > Many thanks, > Hutton. >