Thanks for the response.

For several very particular reasons, actually.  It could be that my thinking
isn't consistent with what Exchange 2010 brings to the table (or that I'm
just flat wrong), but here they are:

1) We have a couple of mailboxes that routinely receive very large amounts
of data in the form of attachments each month.  I don't have exact numbers,
but growth of 1GB / month or more is not unheard of at times.  We are
expected to maintain all of the messages and correspondence within the
context of e-mail for long periods of time.  Up to years for some customers.
 It just goes against conventional wisdom to store all of this in live
mailboxes.  Perhaps with Exchange 2010's optimization for cheap, giant SATA
disks this is just old school thinking.  (Note: I do remember reading that
RAID is required for 2 server DAGs instead of JBOD.  This does raise the
cost a bit, but not too much.
http://www.slideshare.net/harold.wong/exchange-2010-high-availability-and-storage
slides
16 and 20)

2) Availability of historical messaging information to appropriate persons
not involved in the original conversation.  This is a pure archive function
as I see it.  E.g., a departmental manager needs to easily, and without IT
intervention, find an e-mail thread between a valued customer and a former
employee.

3) My Single Instance Ratio is very high compared to what I understand the
average to be.  I know it's not entirely accurate, but a back of the
envelope calculation might put my off-the-bat Exchange 2010 storage
requirements to >1TB without doing something to prune old messages from the
existing 2003 database.

I certainly didn't mean to imply that archive should be used for anything
other than archive.

Again, all comments, thoughts, and education are appreciated.

Thanks,
RS



On Mon, Feb 1, 2010 at 2:43 PM, Michael B. Smith <mich...@smithcons.com>wrote:

> In addition to Neil’s comments, I ask WHY you think that storage is better
> served in an archiving system than in an Exchange mailbox?
>
>
>
> *From:* Richard Stovall [mailto:rich...@gmail.com]
> *Sent:* Monday, February 01, 2010 1:49 PM
>
> *To:* MS-Exchange Admin Issues
> *Subject:* 2003 to 2010 planning
>
>
>
> Good afternoon one and all, and please forgive the long post.
>
>
>
> I’m thinking about proposing the upgrade from Exchange 2003 to Exchange
> 2010 this year.  We're currently running a single monolithic server that has
> (knock on wood) been extremely reliable for going on 5 years.  We’ve got
> ~100 mailboxes now, and I don’t see us ever growing past 200.  The
> information store is currently 110GB, and the perfmon-reported Single
> Instance Ratio is pretty large at 22.  We have ~10 remote users who use
> Outlook Anywhere, ~10 PDA users, ~10 Mac (Entourage) users, and OWA is
> available to most everyone.  AD is a single domain forest, is at 2003 Domain
> and Forest Functional Levels, and all DCs are 2003 SP2.  We have a single
> physical site, and only one site in AD.
>
>
>
> Before rolling out 2010, I intend to deploy an e-mail archiving solution of
> some sort.  My hope is that, in addition to the obvious retention and search
> benefits this will provide, it will also take some of the pressure off of
> Exchange 2010's storage requirements by allowing me to finally enforce
> mailbox size restrictions without reducing the availability of older
> messages.
>
>
>
> I've been poking around the interweb, looking for information that will
> help me determine how to design and deploy Exchange 2010 in a manner
> appropriate for our environment.  The most promising thing I've come up with
> is a simple statement on the Microsoft page that describes Exchange 2010
> Mailbox Resiliency (
> http://www.microsoft.com/exchange/2010/en/us/Mailbox-Resiliency.aspx).  It
> says, " For smaller sites, you can deploy a simple two-server configuration
> that provides full redundancy of mailbox data along with Client Access and
> Hub Transport roles. These changes put high availability within the reach of
> organizations that once considered it impractical."  That sounds like
> exactly like what I'm after - a simple-to-maintain, two server solution
> where all the inside roles are redundant.
>
>
>
> Does this configuration sound appropriate for an organization of the size
> and characteristics described above?  Does anyone have any pointers to more
> in-depth discussion of this two server configuration?  (Is there a
> particular name for this configuration?)
>
>
>
> Lastly, from what I can gather, this can be accomplished with Exchange
> Server 2010 Standard and Standard CALs.  For an organization the size of
> ours, I don't think I need the added benefits of the Enterprise CAL at this
> point.  Message hygiene is handled by the Barracuda and Sunbelt's VPE
> product, and I believe mailbox resiliency is available in the standard
> server regardless of CAL type.
>
>
>
> Any thoughts or comments are most welcome.
>
>
>
> Thanks,
> RS
>

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