A much nicer way to achieve the point I was looking for.

Guess I need more coffee in the morning.

Thanks Sean


-----Original Message-----
From: Sean Martin [mailto:seanmarti...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, March 11, 2009 11:53 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Exchange 2007 SCR -- Hardware?

I guess I would question why a novice admin would be expected to handle a 
disaster recovery scenario in that Exchange environment. 
 
I'm not trying to start an arguement, just stating that the recovery mechanisms 
built into Exchange, while less user-friendly, can be pre-architected and 
documented for each environment so that even a novice admin can go through a 
checklist of procedures to recover. 

If that's still too much for that novice admin to handle, then maybe SCR isn't 
the right solution to meet your available skillset and SLA. After all, you get 
what you pay for.
 
- Sean 
 
 

 
On Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 10:22 AM, John Bowles <john_bow...@yahoo.com> wrote:


        Yea, I can see a novice popping open PS and his documentation on his 
desk while the mail system is down and his boss hanging over his shoulder 
peppering him with questions why his mail system is down and what went 
wrong????  That's gonna go over really well.  
        
        What I'm saying is the "east of use".  E2K7 for the novice to medium 
level admin is not easy to use is all I'm saying.
        
         
        _____________
        John Bowles 


        
________________________________

        From: Sean Martin <seanmarti...@gmail.com> 

        To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues <exchangelist@lyris.sunbelt-software.com>
        
        Sent: Wednesday, March 11, 2009 2:16:45 PM 

        Subject: Re: Exchange 2007 SCR -- Hardware?
        

        Ideally, all of the powershell scripts would be created and documented 
as part of your disaster recovery plan. Any novice admin should be able to read 
your well formatted and detailed instructions for handling a specific type of 
failure and execute the appropriate script...right? ;-)
         
        Or you could spend thousands of dollars on DoubleTake for a nice 
comfortable GUI to play with.
         
        - Sean
        
        
        On Wed, Mar 11, 2009 at 10:05 AM, John Bowles <john_bow...@yahoo.com> 
wrote:
        

                Is there any reason that MS hasn't made this more of an 
automated process without going into PS and ripping through the command line 
while you're Exchange boxes are down?  I don't see the benefit in SCR when it 
comes up time unless you have some guy on staff making 6 digits that knows a 
great deal about PS.  
                
                If you take an average ExAdmin and throw E2K7 and they require 
site resiliency.. I can see an admin drowning with all the command line info 
you need to remember to move everything over.  
                
                The last time I checked the whole idea around "Windows" was to 
make everything easier for people.. it seems they're going in the opposite 
direction with their new puppy.  Just my opinion.
                
                 
                _____________
                John Bowles 


                
________________________________

                From: Michael B. Smith <mich...@theessentialexchange.com>
                To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues 
<exchangelist@lyris.sunbelt-software.com>
                Sent: Wednesday, March 11, 2009 11:30:32 AM 

                Subject: RE: Exchange 2007 SCR -- Hardware?
                


                See, I fall directly into the "database portability" camp. Who 
wants to do a /RecoverCMS when you can just do a few "set-storagegroups", 
"set-mailboxdatabases", "mount-database", and "move-mailbox -configurationonly" 
--- and I can script the entire thing ahead of time! The only downtime is DNS 
TTL across sites and you have the same issue with single-node clusters. 
(Granted, this presumes Outlook 2007 or higher in the environment.)

                 

                From: Neil Hobson [mailto:nhob...@gmail.com] 
                Sent: Wednesday, March 11, 2009 11:20 AM
                To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
                Subject: RE: Exchange 2007 SCR -- Hardware?

                 

                Yep, that's been the case with all of my SCR deployments to 
date.

                 

                The only slight difference with some designs is that the 
standby cluster is sometimes just a single node cluster (initially, anyway)

                 

                From: Michael B. Smith [mailto:mich...@theessentialexchange.com 
<mailto:mich...@theessentialexchange..com> ] 
                Sent: 11 March 2009 14:54
                To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
                Subject: RE: Exchange 2007 SCR -- Hardware?

                 

                When I recommend someone to deploy SCR, I recommend identical 
hardware.

                 

                The general goal of SCR is fault tolerance and site resilience. 
The SCR hardware can't take over if it can't handle the load...

                 

                IMHO. YMMV.

                 

                From: 8400...@gmail.com [mailto:8400...@gmail.com] On Behalf Of 
jond
                Sent: Wednesday, March 11, 2009 10:43 AM
                To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
                Subject: Exchange 2007 SCR -- Hardware?

                 

                For the people here using SCR in Exchange 2007 SP1, what kind 
of hardware are you using relative to your production exchange boxes?
                Are you finding that as long as you have enough hard drive 
space, that processor and ram don't really matter or did you simply decide to 
run identical hardware on both production and on the SCR server?
                
                
                
                Thanks in advance,
                Jon

                 

                 

                 

                 


                 



                 


         



         


 


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