Section 1 - Exchange Infrastructure
1. Introduction
1.1. History of Exchange server
1.2. Exchange 2016 or Exchange 2019?
1.3. Exchange Admin Center
1.4. PowerShell
1.5. Exchange and Active Directory
2. Installing and configuring Exchange
2.1. Designing the Exchange environment
2.2. Testing the Exchange environment
2.3. Building the Exchange environment
2.4. Exchange Edge Transport Server
2.5. Cumulative Updates
3. Exchange and Client Access
3.1. Clients
3.2. Outlook on the Web
3.3. Outlook
3.4. Autodiscover
3.5. Exchange Web Services
3.6. ActiveSync
3.7. Namespaces
3.8. Virtual Directories
3.9. Certificates
3.10. Client Access High Availability
4. Exchange Mailbox and Mailbox server
4.1. Mailbox databases
4.2. Backup and Restore
4.3. High Availability
4.4. Mailbox database High Availability
5. Managing Exchange Recipients
5.1. Managing Recipients
5.2. Mailboxes
5.3. Distribution Groups
5.4. Contacts
5.5. Public Folders
5.6. Address Lists
5.7. Global Address List
5.8. Custom Address List
5.9. Offline Address Books
5.10. Address Book Policies
6. Exchange Transport
6.1. Transport pipeline
6.2. Send and Receive Connectors 6.3. SMTP Relay
6.4. Edge Transport server
6.5. Load balancing transport
Section 2 - Upgrading Exchange server
7. Upgrading from Exchange 2010 to Exchange 2016
7.1. Preparing Active Directory
7.2. Installing the Exchange servers
7.3. Change client access
7.4. Move Mailboxes
7.5. Move Public Folders
7.6. Decommission Exchange 2010
8. Upgrading from Exchange 2013 to Exchange 2019
8.1. Preparing AD en Installing Exchange is identical to 7.1 and 7.2
8.2. Client access in 2013/2019 coexistence
8.3. Move Mailboxes and Public Folders 8.4. Decommission Exchange 2013
Section 3 - integration with Office 365
9. Exchange Hybrid
9.1. Identities and source of authority
9.2. Managing Hybrid Recipients
9.3. Federation
9.4. Federation with other organizations
9.5. Organizational relationships
9.6. Sharing policies
9.7. Di
About the Author:
Michel de Rooij is a consultant and Microsoft MVP since 2013. He lives in The Netherlands, and has been working in the IT industry for over 20 years. Michel helps customers with their journeys related to Microsoft 365, with a focus on Exchange and Identity, but also related technologies such as Microsoft Teams or e-mail in general. Michel has a developer background, but after some long-term dedicated Exchange-related work for a large multinational switched to Exchange and never looked back. Michel is also a big fan of automating processes and procedures related to infrastructure, being either supporting projects or automating administrator tasks. Michel is also active in online communities, such as Tech Community, or on social media such as Twitter (@mderooij). He runs an Exchange-related blog at eightwone.com, guest authors for several other sites, and speaks at international events.
Jaap Wesselius is an independent consultant based in The Netherlands. As a consultant, Jaap has been working with Exchange server since Exchange 5.0 in 1997. After working for Microsoft, he became an independent consultant in 2006. For his work in the (Exchange) community, Jaap has received a Microsoft MVP award 2007, an award he still holds in 2021. The first MVP category was Exchange server, but over the years that has changed to Office Apps and Services. Besides working with Exchange, Jaap also works with Office 365, identity management, privacy, and security. Jaap is 54 years old, married, has three (almost) grown-up sons, and likes to ride his motorcycle, when possible.