That definitely gives me something to zero in on. Now to find this caching 
mechanism. At one time I thought (maybe Exchange 5.5) the magic number was 
somewhere around 50ms.

Thanks!



Brent Eads
Employee Technology Solutions, Inc.

Office: (312) 762-9224
Fax:     (312) 762-9275


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"Michael B. Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
Sent by: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
12/12/2006 12:31 PM
Please respond to
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Subject
RE: [ActiveDir] Remote Exchange Access and Timing






I tell my customers 200 ms or better. In cached mode, Outlook 2003 and 
Outlook 2007 work just fine with that latency (depending, of course, on 
how much data you are moving, but “in general”).
 
If you are “live” and no cached, you really want 80 ms or better, but I 
don’t recommend it.
 
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, December 12, 2006 12:27 PM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: [ActiveDir] Remote Exchange Access and Timing
 

All; 

This may be slightly off topic. 

Does anyone remember how fast Exchange needs the line speed to be for 
remote access? I am working with a client that is having time out issues 
with a 248ms (average) packet time. With some static routing I might be 
able to get this number down to say 125ms but my fear is that will 
likewise be too slow. From a networking (routing) side of things I can see 
some peering loss in Europe so there is no really easy answer save 
building special static routes or PPP connections, etc. 

Thanks! 



Brent Eads
Employee Technology Solutions, Inc.

Office: (312) 762-9224
Fax:     (312) 762-9275


The contents contain privileged and/or confidential information intended 
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Solutions, Inc.) does not warrant that the contents of any electronically 
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reproduction, disclosure or distribution of the information contained in 
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warranty is made that this material is free from computer virus or any 
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