I'm wondering what
the easiest way of doing this is...
We've got an
internal network, with a multihomed exchange 2000 server at the
edge.
An organisation we
work with have their address book in an exchange 5.5 server. This address book
can be used by anyone sitting on their network (which we have a line into) using
Outlook.
We don't trust the
other organisation's network, so it is kept as a physically seperate network,
and any computers that need to use resources on that network are multi-homed
onto that network.
Now, our CEO wants
to be able to get to the other organisation's address book from his laptop when
he's plugged into our internal network.
I see myself as
having a couple of options, and I'm wondering what the cleanest, easiest way of
doing this is:
A. Getting our
exchange server to hold a copy of the remote address book.
B. Getting our
exchange server to 'proxy' the remote address book.
C. Installing a
linux router with NAT between the two networks, and giving the CEO's laptop
access to the exchange server on the remote network.
I'm wondering if
someone can tell me, which of these options is possible, and what you'd have to
do to achieve the goal?
Thanks.
Will
Lotto.
List Charter and FAQ at:http://www.sunbelt-software.com/exchange_list_charter.htm