Thanks for confirming that for me!

- Sean

On Thu, Jun 24, 2010 at 11:07 AM, Simon Butler <si...@sembee.co.uk> wrote:

>  If you have a FE/BE then that is all you need to do – presuming you have
> an SSL certificate in place.
>
> The GUI does everything for you.
>
>
>
> Simon.
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> Simon Butler
> MVP: Exchange, MCSE
> Sembee Ltd.
>
> e: si...@sembee.co.uk
> w: http://www.sembee.co.uk/
> w: http://www.amset.info/
>
> w: http://blog.sembee.co.uk/
>
> Need cheap certificates for Exchange, compatible with Windows Mobile 5.0?
> http://CertificatesForExchange.com/ <http://certificatesforexchange.com/>for 
> certificates from just $23.99.
> Need a domain for your certificate? 
> http://DomainsForExchange.net/<http://domainsforexchange.net/>
>
>
>
> Exchange Resources: http://exbpa.com/
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> *From:* Sean Martin [mailto:seanmarti...@gmail.com]
> *Sent:* 24 June 2010 17:31
> *To:* MS-Exchange Admin Issues
> *Subject:* Exchange 2003 SP2 - RPC/HTTPs
>
>
>
> Good morning folks,
>
>
>
> I was just made aware that I may need to provide RPC/HTTPs services in a
> very short amount of time....
>
>
>
> Exchange 2003 SP2, 1 FE, 2 BE
>
>
>
> I already have a cert installed for activesync so I'm just looking for
> feedback to ensure I understand the process...
>
>
>
> 1) Install RPC Proxy on Front-end
>
> 2) Conifigure RPC on Front-end via ESM
>
> 3) Configure RPC on back-end via ESM
>
> 4) Configure RPC virtual directory
>
> 5) Setup client and test
>
>
>
> Is that pretty much it?
>
>
>
> - Sean
>

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