Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

2010-08-22 Thread Hank .
But you forgot to mention that you get to give all of your data to someone
else.

Remember one of the most basic of about security is that you maintain
physical control of your data.

On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 12:32 PM, Stephan Barr
stephanbarr.li...@gmail.comwrote:

 Goggle Apps cost $50 per seat, per email address, per year. There are no
 other costs.  For the $50 here's a short list of what you get:

- Vanity email address / your.n...@yourdomainname.com
- SSL
- AntiSpam, AntiVirus
- Postini
- 25GB of storage per email address



 On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 3:48 AM, Dave Wade dave.w...@stockport.gov.ukwrote:

  Paul,

 I am a Radio Ham and one of the guys I chat to works in a small (about 25
 staff) organization, and has just upgraded his system to Windows/2008r2 and
  Exchange 2010. When I expressed suprise that he wasn't out sourcing to
 Google apps or some thing of that ilk he said when costed over 4 years it
 looked very expensive, especially given the uncertainty in pricing given we
 work in Sterling...

  *Dave Wade*
 *0161 474 5456***

 --
 *From:* Paul Hutchings
 *Sent:* Fri 20/08/2010 17:13

 *To:* MS-Exchange Admin Issues
 *Subject:* RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
 week.

   I've never really seen it as Google vs. Exchange tbh, I think both do
 different things and suit different needs.

 Office with half a dozen people and no real IT need or infrastructure
 and I think I'd find it hard to see past Google Apps or Hosted Exchange,
 even scaled up to a couple dozen staff and a single server I'm not sure
 Exchange would be first choice simply because if nothing else you do
 need to back it up and someone needs to ensure that happens.

 On the other hand, if you have a few dozen or a few hundred users and
 have even a modest investment in things like a SAN or vmware and decent
 connectivity and someone with IT knowledge then I'm not sure it's so
 easy a decision.

 -Original Message-
 From: Jason Gurtz [mailto:jasongu...@npumail.com]
 Sent: 20 August 2010 13:23
 To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
 Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
 week.

 Would definitely be interested in some details as far as client size,
 feature usage (shared calendars, contacts, etc...), and the technical
 level of the users.

 It seems from past things I've read, the service is better suited to
 companies with a greater proportion of more savvy users.

 Jason

  -Original Message-
  From: Stephan Barr [mailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com]
  Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2010 19:14
  To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
  Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps
 this
  week.
 
  Maybe you haven't used it recently. Groups do not count as email
  addresses and meet the need of distribution lists and shared boxes.
 
  definitely different cost model. Per each client they will save
 thousands
  per year.
 
 
  On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 5:25 PM, Duncan Turnbull
 dun...@e-simple.co.nz
  wrote:
 
 
 There is a different cost model here, and some limitations but
  various upsides
 
 One big issue I see is if you have lots of shared mailboxes e.g.
  for client projects or other reasons then you have to pay for all of
  those as a license, as always it will be horses for courses
 
 What about Microsoft Live
 
 Cheers Duncan
 
 On 20/08/2010, at 9:59 AM, Stephan Barr wrote:
 
 
 Super easy. Customers love it.
 
 




 --
 MIRA Ltd

 Watling Street, Nuneaton, Warwickshire, CV10 0TU, England.

 Registered in England and Wales No. 402570
 VAT Registration  GB 114 5409 96

 The contents of this e-mail are confidential and are solely for the use of 
 the intended recipient.
 If you receive this e-mail in error, please delete it and notify us either 
 by e-mail, telephone or fax.
 You should not copy, forward or otherwise disclose the content of the e-mail 
 as this is prohibited.








 **
 Stockport Council - providing over 600 different services to local people
 . More information on http://www.stockport.gov.uk/boost


 (free internet access is available at all Stockport libraries)

 This email, and any files transmitted with it, is confidential and

 intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they
 are addressed. As a public body, the Council may be required to disclose
 this email, or any response to it, under the Freedom of Information Act
 2000, unless the information in it is covered by one of the exemptions in
 the Act.

 If you receive this email in error please notify Stockport ICT, Business
 Services via email.qu...@stockport.gov.uk and then permanently remove it
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 Thank you.

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RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

2010-08-22 Thread Paul Hutchings
Actually Google's TC's are quite interesting, I'm surprised people are
so willing to agree to them when it comes to their company data.

 

From: Hank . [mailto:hgedr...@gmail.com] 
Sent: 22 August 2010 12:50
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.

 

But you forgot to mention that you get to give all of your data to
someone else.

Remember one of the most basic of about security is that you maintain
physical control of your data.

On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 12:32 PM, Stephan Barr
stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com wrote:

Goggle Apps cost $50 per seat, per email address, per year. There are no
other costs.  For the $50 here's a short list of what you get:

*   Vanity email address / your.n...@yourdomainname.com
*   SSL
*   AntiSpam, AntiVirus
*   Postini
*   25GB of storage per email address

 

 

On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 3:48 AM, Dave Wade dave.w...@stockport.gov.uk
wrote:

Paul,

 

I am a Radio Ham and one of the guys I chat to works in a small (about
25 staff) organization, and has just upgraded his system to
Windows/2008r2 and  Exchange 2010. When I expressed suprise that he
wasn't out sourcing to Google apps or some thing of that ilk he said
when costed over 4 years it looked very expensive, especially given the
uncertainty in pricing given we work in Sterling...

 

Dave Wade

0161 474 5456

 



From: Paul Hutchings
Sent: Fri 20/08/2010 17:13 


To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.

 

I've never really seen it as Google vs. Exchange tbh, I think both do
different things and suit different needs.
 
Office with half a dozen people and no real IT need or infrastructure
and I think I'd find it hard to see past Google Apps or Hosted Exchange,
even scaled up to a couple dozen staff and a single server I'm not sure
Exchange would be first choice simply because if nothing else you do
need to back it up and someone needs to ensure that happens.
 
On the other hand, if you have a few dozen or a few hundred users and
have even a modest investment in things like a SAN or vmware and decent
connectivity and someone with IT knowledge then I'm not sure it's so
easy a decision.
 
-Original Message-
From: Jason Gurtz [mailto:jasongu...@npumail.com] 
Sent: 20 August 2010 13:23
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.
 
Would definitely be interested in some details as far as client size,
feature usage (shared calendars, contacts, etc...), and the technical
level of the users.
 
It seems from past things I've read, the service is better suited to
companies with a greater proportion of more savvy users.
 
Jason
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Stephan Barr [mailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2010 19:14
 To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
 Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps
this
 week.
 
 Maybe you haven't used it recently. Groups do not count as email
 addresses and meet the need of distribution lists and shared boxes.
 
 definitely different cost model. Per each client they will save
thousands
 per year.
 
 
 On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 5:25 PM, Duncan Turnbull
dun...@e-simple.co.nz
 wrote:
 
 
   There is a different cost model here, and some limitations but
 various upsides
 
   One big issue I see is if you have lots of shared mailboxes e.g.
 for client projects or other reasons then you have to pay for all of
 those as a license, as always it will be horses for courses
 
   What about Microsoft Live
 
   Cheers Duncan
 
   On 20/08/2010, at 9:59 AM, Stephan Barr wrote:
 
 
  Super easy. Customers love it.
 
 
 
 
 
 
-- 
MIRA Ltd
 
Watling Street, Nuneaton, Warwickshire, CV10 0TU, England.
 
Registered in England and Wales No. 402570
VAT Registration  GB 114 5409 96
 
The contents of this e-mail are confidential and are solely for the use
of the intended recipient.
If you receive this e-mail in error, please delete it and notify us
either by e-mail, telephone or fax.
You should not copy, forward or otherwise disclose the content of the
e-mail as this is prohibited.
 
 
 
 




**
Stockport Council - providing over 600 different services to local
people . More information on http://www.stockport.gov.uk/boost 

 


(free internet access is available at all Stockport libraries)

This email, and any files transmitted with it, is confidential and


intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they

are addressed. As a public body, the Council may be required to disclose
this email, or any response to it, under the Freedom of Information Act
2000, unless the information in it is covered by one of the exemptions
in the Act. 

If you receive this email in error please notify Stockport ICT, Business

RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

2010-08-22 Thread Martin Blackstone
True to a point.

Let's face it, the cloud is here and one way or another you are going to end
up there. Either you get on board or your CFO will for you.

I will say if we were not a VAR, didn't have access to outstanding hardware,
and didn't eat our own dogfood, I would put Exchange in the cloud in a
heartbeat.

Besides how many of us are in there already? Who uses Salesforce or Netsuite
or some other such service? Online marketing, etc.

How many of us at home are backing up to the cloud?

 

 

 

 

From: Hank . [mailto:hgedr...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 4:50 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.

 

But you forgot to mention that you get to give all of your data to someone
else.

Remember one of the most basic of about security is that you maintain
physical control of your data.

On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 12:32 PM, Stephan Barr stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com
wrote:

Goggle Apps cost $50 per seat, per email address, per year. There are no
other costs.  For the $50 here's a short list of what you get:

*   Vanity email address / your.n...@yourdomainname.com
*   SSL
*   AntiSpam, AntiVirus
*   Postini
*   25GB of storage per email address

 

 

On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 3:48 AM, Dave Wade dave.w...@stockport.gov.uk
wrote:

Paul,

 

I am a Radio Ham and one of the guys I chat to works in a small (about 25
staff) organization, and has just upgraded his system to Windows/2008r2 and
Exchange 2010. When I expressed suprise that he wasn't out sourcing to
Google apps or some thing of that ilk he said when costed over 4 years it
looked very expensive, especially given the uncertainty in pricing given we
work in Sterling...

 

Dave Wade

0161 474 5456

 

  _  

From: Paul Hutchings
Sent: Fri 20/08/2010 17:13 


To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.

 

I've never really seen it as Google vs. Exchange tbh, I think both do
different things and suit different needs.
 
Office with half a dozen people and no real IT need or infrastructure
and I think I'd find it hard to see past Google Apps or Hosted Exchange,
even scaled up to a couple dozen staff and a single server I'm not sure
Exchange would be first choice simply because if nothing else you do
need to back it up and someone needs to ensure that happens.
 
On the other hand, if you have a few dozen or a few hundred users and
have even a modest investment in things like a SAN or vmware and decent
connectivity and someone with IT knowledge then I'm not sure it's so
easy a decision.
 
-Original Message-
From: Jason Gurtz [mailto:jasongu...@npumail.com] 
Sent: 20 August 2010 13:23
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.
 
Would definitely be interested in some details as far as client size,
feature usage (shared calendars, contacts, etc...), and the technical
level of the users.
 
It seems from past things I've read, the service is better suited to
companies with a greater proportion of more savvy users.
 
Jason
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Stephan Barr [mailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2010 19:14
 To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
 Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps
this
 week.
 
 Maybe you haven't used it recently. Groups do not count as email
 addresses and meet the need of distribution lists and shared boxes.
 
 definitely different cost model. Per each client they will save
thousands
 per year.
 
 
 On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 5:25 PM, Duncan Turnbull
dun...@e-simple.co.nz
 wrote:
 
 
   There is a different cost model here, and some limitations but
 various upsides
 
   One big issue I see is if you have lots of shared mailboxes e.g.
 for client projects or other reasons then you have to pay for all of
 those as a license, as always it will be horses for courses
 
   What about Microsoft Live
 
   Cheers Duncan
 
   On 20/08/2010, at 9:59 AM, Stephan Barr wrote:
 
 
  Super easy. Customers love it.
 
 
 
 
 
 
-- 
MIRA Ltd
 
Watling Street, Nuneaton, Warwickshire, CV10 0TU, England.
 
Registered in England and Wales No. 402570
VAT Registration  GB 114 5409 96
 
The contents of this e-mail are confidential and are solely for the use of
the intended recipient.
If you receive this e-mail in error, please delete it and notify us either
by e-mail, telephone or fax.
You should not copy, forward or otherwise disclose the content of the e-mail
as this is prohibited.
 
 
 
 




**
Stockport Council - providing over 600 different services to local people .
More information on http://www.stockport.gov.uk/boost 

 


(free internet access is available at all Stockport libraries)

This email, and any files transmitted with it, is confidential and


intended solely 

RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

2010-08-22 Thread Matt Moore
Oh yes! And not to just anyone, the biggest data miners in the world.  

 

From: Hank . [mailto:hgedr...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 4:50 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.

 

But you forgot to mention that you get to give all of your data to someone
else.

Remember one of the most basic of about security is that you maintain
physical control of your data.

On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 12:32 PM, Stephan Barr stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com
wrote:

Goggle Apps cost $50 per seat, per email address, per year. There are no
other costs.  For the $50 here's a short list of what you get:

*   Vanity email address / your.n...@yourdomainname.com
*   SSL
*   AntiSpam, AntiVirus
*   Postini
*   25GB of storage per email address

 

 

On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 3:48 AM, Dave Wade dave.w...@stockport.gov.uk
wrote:

Paul,

 

I am a Radio Ham and one of the guys I chat to works in a small (about 25
staff) organization, and has just upgraded his system to Windows/2008r2 and
Exchange 2010. When I expressed suprise that he wasn't out sourcing to
Google apps or some thing of that ilk he said when costed over 4 years it
looked very expensive, especially given the uncertainty in pricing given we
work in Sterling...

 

Dave Wade

0161 474 5456

 

  _  

From: Paul Hutchings
Sent: Fri 20/08/2010 17:13 


To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.

 

I've never really seen it as Google vs. Exchange tbh, I think both do
different things and suit different needs.
 
Office with half a dozen people and no real IT need or infrastructure
and I think I'd find it hard to see past Google Apps or Hosted Exchange,
even scaled up to a couple dozen staff and a single server I'm not sure
Exchange would be first choice simply because if nothing else you do
need to back it up and someone needs to ensure that happens.
 
On the other hand, if you have a few dozen or a few hundred users and
have even a modest investment in things like a SAN or vmware and decent
connectivity and someone with IT knowledge then I'm not sure it's so
easy a decision.
 
-Original Message-
From: Jason Gurtz [mailto:jasongu...@npumail.com] 
Sent: 20 August 2010 13:23
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.
 
Would definitely be interested in some details as far as client size,
feature usage (shared calendars, contacts, etc...), and the technical
level of the users.
 
It seems from past things I've read, the service is better suited to
companies with a greater proportion of more savvy users.
 
Jason
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Stephan Barr [mailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2010 19:14
 To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
 Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps
this
 week.
 
 Maybe you haven't used it recently. Groups do not count as email
 addresses and meet the need of distribution lists and shared boxes.
 
 definitely different cost model. Per each client they will save
thousands
 per year.
 
 
 On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 5:25 PM, Duncan Turnbull
dun...@e-simple.co.nz
 wrote:
 
 
   There is a different cost model here, and some limitations but
 various upsides
 
   One big issue I see is if you have lots of shared mailboxes e.g.
 for client projects or other reasons then you have to pay for all of
 those as a license, as always it will be horses for courses
 
   What about Microsoft Live
 
   Cheers Duncan
 
   On 20/08/2010, at 9:59 AM, Stephan Barr wrote:
 
 
  Super easy. Customers love it.
 
 
 
 
 
 
-- 
MIRA Ltd
 
Watling Street, Nuneaton, Warwickshire, CV10 0TU, England.
 
Registered in England and Wales No. 402570
VAT Registration  GB 114 5409 96
 
The contents of this e-mail are confidential and are solely for the use of
the intended recipient.
If you receive this e-mail in error, please delete it and notify us either
by e-mail, telephone or fax.
You should not copy, forward or otherwise disclose the content of the e-mail
as this is prohibited.
 
 
 
 




**
Stockport Council - providing over 600 different services to local people .
More information on http://www.stockport.gov.uk/boost 

 


(free internet access is available at all Stockport libraries)

This email, and any files transmitted with it, is confidential and


intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they

are addressed. As a public body, the Council may be required to disclose
this email, or any response to it, under the Freedom of Information Act
2000, unless the information in it is covered by one of the exemptions in
the Act. 

If you receive this email in error please notify Stockport ICT, Business
Services via email.qu...@stockport.gov.uk and then permanently remove it

Removing Public Folder attributes with ADModify?

2010-08-22 Thread Paul Hutchings
I want to strip all RFAX addresses from all objects in our AD as we no
longer use Rightfax.

 

I used ADModify to remove RFAX=* from all the users and groups, I just
wanted to be clear that to do the same for Public Folders it's the
microsoft exchange system objects folder that I need to include?

 

Looks spot on, I'd just appreciate a sanity check.

 

Thanks.

 


--
MIRA Ltd

Watling Street, Nuneaton, Warwickshire, CV10 0TU, England
Registered in England and Wales No. 402570
VAT Registration  GB 114 5409 96

The contents of this e-mail are confidential and are solely for the use of the 
intended recipient.  If you receive this e-mail in error, please delete it and 
notify us either by e-mail, telephone or fax.  You should not copy, forward or 
otherwise disclose the content of the e-mail as this is prohibited.


RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

2010-08-22 Thread John Hornbuckle
Is there some evidence to indicate that if one uses Google to host their data, 
they're agreeing to allow Google to use their data?

We use Google/Postini to archive our e-mail, and I saw nothing in our contract 
that would make the mining of our data by Google acceptable.

And while I'm reasonably confident that our network is secure, I'll readily 
admit that Google's is very likely more secure than ours. In all honesty, our 
data is likely safer within their infrastructure than within our own.



John Hornbuckle
MIS Department
Taylor County School District
www.taylor.k12.fl.ushttp://www.taylor.k12.fl.us




From: Matt Moore [mailto:mattmoore...@hotmail.com]
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 12:48 PM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

Oh yes! And not to just anyone, the biggest data miners in the world.

From: Hank . [mailto:hgedr...@gmail.com]
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 4:50 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

But you forgot to mention that you get to give all of your data to someone else.

Remember one of the most basic of about security is that you maintain physical 
control of your data.
On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 12:32 PM, Stephan Barr 
stephanbarr.li...@gmail.commailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com wrote:
Goggle Apps cost $50 per seat, per email address, per year. There are no other 
costs.  For the $50 here's a short list of what you get:

 *   Vanity email address / 
your.n...@yourdomainname.commailto:your.n...@yourdomainname.com
 *   SSL
 *   AntiSpam, AntiVirus
 *   Postini
 *   25GB of storage per email address


On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 3:48 AM, Dave Wade 
dave.w...@stockport.gov.ukmailto:dave.w...@stockport.gov.uk wrote:
Paul,

I am a Radio Ham and one of the guys I chat to works in a small (about 25 
staff) organization, and has just upgraded his system to Windows/2008r2 and  
Exchange 2010. When I expressed suprise that he wasn't out sourcing to Google 
apps or some thing of that ilk he said when costed over 4 years it looked very 
expensive, especially given the uncertainty in pricing given we work in 
Sterling...

Dave Wade
0161 474 5456


From: Paul Hutchings
Sent: Fri 20/08/2010 17:13

To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.


I've never really seen it as Google vs. Exchange tbh, I think both do

different things and suit different needs.



Office with half a dozen people and no real IT need or infrastructure

and I think I'd find it hard to see past Google Apps or Hosted Exchange,

even scaled up to a couple dozen staff and a single server I'm not sure

Exchange would be first choice simply because if nothing else you do

need to back it up and someone needs to ensure that happens.



On the other hand, if you have a few dozen or a few hundred users and

have even a modest investment in things like a SAN or vmware and decent

connectivity and someone with IT knowledge then I'm not sure it's so

easy a decision.



-Original Message-

From: Jason Gurtz [mailto:jasongu...@npumail.commailto:jasongu...@npumail.com]

Sent: 20 August 2010 13:23

To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this

week.



Would definitely be interested in some details as far as client size,

feature usage (shared calendars, contacts, etc...), and the technical

level of the users.



It seems from past things I've read, the service is better suited to

companies with a greater proportion of more savvy users.



Jason



 -Original Message-

 From: Stephan Barr 
 [mailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.commailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com]

 Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2010 19:14

 To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

 Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps

this

 week.



 Maybe you haven't used it recently. Groups do not count as email

 addresses and meet the need of distribution lists and shared boxes.



 definitely different cost model. Per each client they will save

thousands

 per year.





 On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 5:25 PM, Duncan Turnbull

dun...@e-simple.co.nzmailto:dun...@e-simple.co.nz

 wrote:





   There is a different cost model here, and some limitations but

 various upsides



   One big issue I see is if you have lots of shared mailboxes e.g.

 for client projects or other reasons then you have to pay for all of

 those as a license, as always it will be horses for courses



   What about Microsoft Live



   Cheers Duncan



   On 20/08/2010, at 9:59 AM, Stephan Barr wrote:





  Super easy. Customers love it.













--

MIRA Ltd



Watling Street, Nuneaton, Warwickshire, CV10 0TU, England.



Registered in England and Wales No. 402570

VAT Registration  GB 114 5409 96



The contents of this e-mail are confidential and are 

Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

2010-08-22 Thread Stephan Barr
+1

On Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 1:15 PM, John Hornbuckle 
john.hornbuc...@taylor.k12.fl.us wrote:

 Is there some evidence to indicate that if one uses Google to host their
 data, they’re agreeing to allow Google to use their data?



 We use Google/Postini to archive our e-mail, and I saw nothing in our
 contract that would make the mining of our data by Google acceptable.



 And while I’m reasonably confident that our network is secure, I’ll readily
 admit that Google’s is very likely more secure than ours. In all honesty,
 our data is likely safer within their infrastructure than within our own.







 John Hornbuckle

 MIS Department

 Taylor County School District

 www.taylor.k12.fl.us









 *From:* Matt Moore [mailto:mattmoore...@hotmail.com]
 *Sent:* Sunday, August 22, 2010 12:48 PM
 *To:* MS-Exchange Admin Issues
 *Subject:* RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
 week.



 Oh yes! And not to just anyone, the biggest data miners in the world.



 *From:* Hank . [mailto:hgedr...@gmail.com]
 *Sent:* Sunday, August 22, 2010 4:50 AM
 *To:* MS-Exchange Admin Issues
 *Subject:* Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
 week.



 But you forgot to mention that you get to give all of your data to someone
 else.

 Remember one of the most basic of about security is that you maintain
 physical control of your data.

 On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 12:32 PM, Stephan Barr 
 stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com wrote:

 Goggle Apps cost $50 per seat, per email address, per year. There are no
 other costs.  For the $50 here's a short list of what you get:

- Vanity email address / your.n...@yourdomainname.com
- SSL
- AntiSpam, AntiVirus
- Postini
- 25GB of storage per email address





 On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 3:48 AM, Dave Wade dave.w...@stockport.gov.uk
 wrote:

 Paul,



 I am a Radio Ham and one of the guys I chat to works in a small (about 25
 staff) organization, and has just upgraded his system to Windows/2008r2 and
  Exchange 2010. When I expressed suprise that he wasn't out sourcing to
 Google apps or some thing of that ilk he said when costed over 4 years it
 looked very expensive, especially given the uncertainty in pricing given we
 work in Sterling...



 *Dave Wade*

 *0161 474 5456*


 --

 *From:* Paul Hutchings
 *Sent:* Fri 20/08/2010 17:13


 *To:* MS-Exchange Admin Issues

 *Subject:* RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
 week.



 I've never really seen it as Google vs. Exchange tbh, I think both do

 different things and suit different needs.



 Office with half a dozen people and no real IT need or infrastructure

 and I think I'd find it hard to see past Google Apps or Hosted Exchange,

 even scaled up to a couple dozen staff and a single server I'm not sure

 Exchange would be first choice simply because if nothing else you do

 need to back it up and someone needs to ensure that happens.



 On the other hand, if you have a few dozen or a few hundred users and

 have even a modest investment in things like a SAN or vmware and decent

 connectivity and someone with IT knowledge then I'm not sure it's so

 easy a decision.

  -Original Message-

 From: Jason Gurtz [mailto:jasongu...@npumail.com]

 Sent: 20 August 2010 13:23

 To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

 Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this

 week.



 Would definitely be interested in some details as far as client size,

 feature usage (shared calendars, contacts, etc...), and the technical

 level of the users.



 It seems from past things I've read, the service is better suited to

 companies with a greater proportion of more savvy users.

  Jason



  -Original Message-

  From: Stephan Barr [mailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com]

  Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2010 19:14

  To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

  Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps

 this

  week.

 

  Maybe you haven't used it recently. Groups do not count as email

  addresses and meet the need of distribution lists and shared boxes.

 

  definitely different cost model. Per each client they will save

 thousands

  per year.

 

 

  On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 5:25 PM, Duncan Turnbull

 dun...@e-simple.co.nz

  wrote:

 

 

There is a different cost model here, and some limitations but

  various upsides

 

One big issue I see is if you have lots of shared mailboxes e.g.

  for client projects or other reasons then you have to pay for all of

  those as a license, as always it will be horses for courses

 

What about Microsoft Live

 

Cheers Duncan

 

On 20/08/2010, at 9:59 AM, Stephan Barr wrote:

 

 

   Super easy. Customers love it.

 

 









 --

 MIRA Ltd



 Watling Street, Nuneaton, Warwickshire, CV10 0TU, England.



 Registered in England and Wales No. 402570

 VAT Registration  GB 114 5409 96



 The contents of 

Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

2010-08-22 Thread Stephan Barr
My customers are (always) looking for ways to save money on IT and this
qualifies.

On Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 1:25 PM, Stephan Barr
stephanbarr.li...@gmail.comwrote:

 +1

 On Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 1:15 PM, John Hornbuckle 
 john.hornbuc...@taylor.k12.fl.us wrote:

 Is there some evidence to indicate that if one uses Google to host their
 data, they’re agreeing to allow Google to use their data?



 We use Google/Postini to archive our e-mail, and I saw nothing in our
 contract that would make the mining of our data by Google acceptable.



 And while I’m reasonably confident that our network is secure, I’ll
 readily admit that Google’s is very likely more secure than ours. In all
 honesty, our data is likely safer within their infrastructure than within
 our own.







 John Hornbuckle

 MIS Department

 Taylor County School District

 www.taylor.k12.fl.us









 *From:* Matt Moore [mailto:mattmoore...@hotmail.com]
 *Sent:* Sunday, August 22, 2010 12:48 PM
 *To:* MS-Exchange Admin Issues
 *Subject:* RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
 week.



 Oh yes! And not to just anyone, the biggest data miners in the world.



 *From:* Hank . [mailto:hgedr...@gmail.com]
 *Sent:* Sunday, August 22, 2010 4:50 AM
 *To:* MS-Exchange Admin Issues
 *Subject:* Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
 week.



 But you forgot to mention that you get to give all of your data to someone
 else.

 Remember one of the most basic of about security is that you maintain
 physical control of your data.

 On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 12:32 PM, Stephan Barr 
 stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com wrote:

 Goggle Apps cost $50 per seat, per email address, per year. There are no
 other costs.  For the $50 here's a short list of what you get:

- Vanity email address / your.n...@yourdomainname.com
- SSL
- AntiSpam, AntiVirus
- Postini
- 25GB of storage per email address





 On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 3:48 AM, Dave Wade dave.w...@stockport.gov.uk
 wrote:

 Paul,



 I am a Radio Ham and one of the guys I chat to works in a small (about 25
 staff) organization, and has just upgraded his system to Windows/2008r2 and
  Exchange 2010. When I expressed suprise that he wasn't out sourcing to
 Google apps or some thing of that ilk he said when costed over 4 years it
 looked very expensive, especially given the uncertainty in pricing given we
 work in Sterling...



 *Dave Wade*

 *0161 474 5456*


 --

 *From:* Paul Hutchings
 *Sent:* Fri 20/08/2010 17:13


 *To:* MS-Exchange Admin Issues

 *Subject:* RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
 week.



 I've never really seen it as Google vs. Exchange tbh, I think both do

 different things and suit different needs.



 Office with half a dozen people and no real IT need or infrastructure

 and I think I'd find it hard to see past Google Apps or Hosted Exchange,

 even scaled up to a couple dozen staff and a single server I'm not sure

 Exchange would be first choice simply because if nothing else you do

 need to back it up and someone needs to ensure that happens.



 On the other hand, if you have a few dozen or a few hundred users and

 have even a modest investment in things like a SAN or vmware and decent

 connectivity and someone with IT knowledge then I'm not sure it's so

 easy a decision.

  -Original Message-

 From: Jason Gurtz [mailto:jasongu...@npumail.com]

 Sent: 20 August 2010 13:23

 To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

 Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this

 week.



 Would definitely be interested in some details as far as client size,

 feature usage (shared calendars, contacts, etc...), and the technical

 level of the users.



 It seems from past things I've read, the service is better suited to

 companies with a greater proportion of more savvy users.

  Jason



  -Original Message-

  From: Stephan Barr [mailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com]

  Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2010 19:14

  To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

  Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps

 this

  week.

 

  Maybe you haven't used it recently. Groups do not count as email

  addresses and meet the need of distribution lists and shared boxes.

 

  definitely different cost model. Per each client they will save

 thousands

  per year.

 

 

  On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 5:25 PM, Duncan Turnbull

 dun...@e-simple.co.nz

  wrote:

 

 

There is a different cost model here, and some limitations but

  various upsides

 

One big issue I see is if you have lots of shared mailboxes e.g.

  for client projects or other reasons then you have to pay for all of

  those as a license, as always it will be horses for courses

 

What about Microsoft Live

 

Cheers Duncan

 

On 20/08/2010, at 9:59 AM, Stephan Barr wrote:

 

 

   Super easy. Customers love it.

 

 









 --

 MIRA 

RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

2010-08-22 Thread Matt Moore
Would you trust the fox in the hen house?

 

From: John Hornbuckle [mailto:john.hornbuc...@taylor.k12.fl.us] 
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 11:16 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.

 

Is there some evidence to indicate that if one uses Google to host their
data, they're agreeing to allow Google to use their data?

 

We use Google/Postini to archive our e-mail, and I saw nothing in our
contract that would make the mining of our data by Google acceptable.

 

And while I'm reasonably confident that our network is secure, I'll readily
admit that Google's is very likely more secure than ours. In all honesty,
our data is likely safer within their infrastructure than within our own.

 

 

 

John Hornbuckle

MIS Department

Taylor County School District

www.taylor.k12.fl.us

 

 

 

 

From: Matt Moore [mailto:mattmoore...@hotmail.com] 
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 12:48 PM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.

 

Oh yes! And not to just anyone, the biggest data miners in the world.  

 

From: Hank . [mailto:hgedr...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 4:50 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.

 

But you forgot to mention that you get to give all of your data to someone
else.

Remember one of the most basic of about security is that you maintain
physical control of your data.

On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 12:32 PM, Stephan Barr stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com
wrote:

Goggle Apps cost $50 per seat, per email address, per year. There are no
other costs.  For the $50 here's a short list of what you get:

*   Vanity email address / your.n...@yourdomainname.com
*   SSL
*   AntiSpam, AntiVirus
*   Postini
*   25GB of storage per email address

 

 

On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 3:48 AM, Dave Wade dave.w...@stockport.gov.uk
wrote:

Paul,

 

I am a Radio Ham and one of the guys I chat to works in a small (about 25
staff) organization, and has just upgraded his system to Windows/2008r2 and
Exchange 2010. When I expressed suprise that he wasn't out sourcing to
Google apps or some thing of that ilk he said when costed over 4 years it
looked very expensive, especially given the uncertainty in pricing given we
work in Sterling...

 

Dave Wade

0161 474 5456

 

  _  

From: Paul Hutchings
Sent: Fri 20/08/2010 17:13 


To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.

 

I've never really seen it as Google vs. Exchange tbh, I think both do
different things and suit different needs.
 
Office with half a dozen people and no real IT need or infrastructure
and I think I'd find it hard to see past Google Apps or Hosted Exchange,
even scaled up to a couple dozen staff and a single server I'm not sure
Exchange would be first choice simply because if nothing else you do
need to back it up and someone needs to ensure that happens.
 
On the other hand, if you have a few dozen or a few hundred users and
have even a modest investment in things like a SAN or vmware and decent
connectivity and someone with IT knowledge then I'm not sure it's so
easy a decision.
 
-Original Message-
From: Jason Gurtz [mailto:jasongu...@npumail.com] 
Sent: 20 August 2010 13:23
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.
 
Would definitely be interested in some details as far as client size,
feature usage (shared calendars, contacts, etc...), and the technical
level of the users.
 
It seems from past things I've read, the service is better suited to
companies with a greater proportion of more savvy users.
 
Jason
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Stephan Barr [mailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2010 19:14
 To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
 Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps
this
 week.
 
 Maybe you haven't used it recently. Groups do not count as email
 addresses and meet the need of distribution lists and shared boxes.
 
 definitely different cost model. Per each client they will save
thousands
 per year.
 
 
 On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 5:25 PM, Duncan Turnbull
dun...@e-simple.co.nz
 wrote:
 
 
   There is a different cost model here, and some limitations but
 various upsides
 
   One big issue I see is if you have lots of shared mailboxes e.g.
 for client projects or other reasons then you have to pay for all of
 those as a license, as always it will be horses for courses
 
   What about Microsoft Live
 
   Cheers Duncan
 
   On 20/08/2010, at 9:59 AM, Stephan Barr wrote:
 
 
  Super easy. Customers love it.
 
 
 
 
 
 
-- 
MIRA Ltd
 
Watling Street, Nuneaton, Warwickshire, CV10 0TU, England.
 
Registered in England and Wales No. 402570
VAT Registration  GB 114 5409 96
 
The contents of this e-mail 

Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

2010-08-22 Thread Stephan Barr
You are already trusting your ISP and inherently their ISP and so on. but
that's not the issue:

The issue is cloud computing is cheaper,less complicated,arguably as
secure,lighter,more portable and almost anyone can configure it.  Do the
math.

On Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 2:45 PM, Matt Moore mattmoore...@hotmail.comwrote:

  Would you trust the fox in the hen house?



 *From:* John Hornbuckle [mailto:john.hornbuc...@taylor.k12.fl.us]
 *Sent:* Sunday, August 22, 2010 11:16 AM

 *To:* MS-Exchange Admin Issues
 *Subject:* RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
 week.



 Is there some evidence to indicate that if one uses Google to host their
 data, they’re agreeing to allow Google to use their data?



 We use Google/Postini to archive our e-mail, and I saw nothing in our
 contract that would make the mining of our data by Google acceptable.



 And while I’m reasonably confident that our network is secure, I’ll readily
 admit that Google’s is very likely more secure than ours. In all honesty,
 our data is likely safer within their infrastructure than within our own.







 John Hornbuckle

 MIS Department

 Taylor County School District

 www.taylor.k12.fl.us









 *From:* Matt Moore [mailto:mattmoore...@hotmail.com]
 *Sent:* Sunday, August 22, 2010 12:48 PM
 *To:* MS-Exchange Admin Issues
 *Subject:* RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
 week.



 Oh yes! And not to just anyone, the biggest data miners in the world.



 *From:* Hank . [mailto:hgedr...@gmail.com]
 *Sent:* Sunday, August 22, 2010 4:50 AM
 *To:* MS-Exchange Admin Issues
 *Subject:* Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
 week.



 But you forgot to mention that you get to give all of your data to someone
 else.

 Remember one of the most basic of about security is that you maintain
 physical control of your data.

 On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 12:32 PM, Stephan Barr 
 stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com wrote:

 Goggle Apps cost $50 per seat, per email address, per year. There are no
 other costs.  For the $50 here's a short list of what you get:

- Vanity email address / your.n...@yourdomainname.com
- SSL
- AntiSpam, AntiVirus
- Postini
- 25GB of storage per email address





 On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 3:48 AM, Dave Wade dave.w...@stockport.gov.uk
 wrote:

 Paul,



 I am a Radio Ham and one of the guys I chat to works in a small (about 25
 staff) organization, and has just upgraded his system to Windows/2008r2 and
  Exchange 2010. When I expressed suprise that he wasn't out sourcing to
 Google apps or some thing of that ilk he said when costed over 4 years it
 looked very expensive, especially given the uncertainty in pricing given we
 work in Sterling...



 *Dave Wade*

 *0161 474 5456*


  --

 *From:* Paul Hutchings
 *Sent:* Fri 20/08/2010 17:13


 *To:* MS-Exchange Admin Issues

 *Subject:* RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
 week.



 I've never really seen it as Google vs. Exchange tbh, I think both do

 different things and suit different needs.



 Office with half a dozen people and no real IT need or infrastructure

 and I think I'd find it hard to see past Google Apps or Hosted Exchange,

 even scaled up to a couple dozen staff and a single server I'm not sure

 Exchange would be first choice simply because if nothing else you do

 need to back it up and someone needs to ensure that happens.



 On the other hand, if you have a few dozen or a few hundred users and

 have even a modest investment in things like a SAN or vmware and decent

 connectivity and someone with IT knowledge then I'm not sure it's so

 easy a decision.

  -Original Message-

 From: Jason Gurtz [mailto:jasongu...@npumail.com]

 Sent: 20 August 2010 13:23

 To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

 Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this

 week.



 Would definitely be interested in some details as far as client size,

 feature usage (shared calendars, contacts, etc...), and the technical

 level of the users.



 It seems from past things I've read, the service is better suited to

 companies with a greater proportion of more savvy users.

  Jason



  -Original Message-

  From: Stephan Barr [mailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com]

  Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2010 19:14

  To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

  Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps

 this

  week.

 

  Maybe you haven't used it recently. Groups do not count as email

  addresses and meet the need of distribution lists and shared boxes.

 

  definitely different cost model. Per each client they will save

 thousands

  per year.

 

 

  On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 5:25 PM, Duncan Turnbull

 dun...@e-simple.co.nz

  wrote:

 

 

There is a different cost model here, and some limitations but

  various upsides

 

One big issue I see is if you have lots of shared mailboxes e.g.

  

RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

2010-08-22 Thread David Lum
+1  I have clients on SBS 2003 and there aren't any of them that I spend more 
than 1-2hrs/yr on Exchange specific stuff (I doubt it comes to even that much). 
probably 90% of clients' IT costs are on the workstation side.

E-mail antispam/antivirus cost is a good point but for my clients that cost 
comes out to about $10/seat/yr. I'd estimate for a given year for my biggest 
client (55 users) Exchange-related costs (what GoogleApps would replace) comes 
to $10/seat/yr, and smaller clients are about the same.

Dave


From: Matt Moore [mattmoore...@hotmail.com]
Sent: Saturday, August 21, 2010 10:08 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

Well most of the quotes I’ve had from services providers is more in the $20 to 
$25 range for starters.  Even at that price I have dozen clients that have SBS 
on machines leased from Dell with the software on the lease too.  Once they’re 
set up, setup correctly, very little maint is needed.  I pop in remotely for a 
½ hour every three months.  If you do a plain jane setup there’s nothing to 
manage, it just runs.  Been doing it for years, no problems.

From: Paul Hutchings [mailto:paul.hutchi...@mira.co.uk]
Sent: Saturday, August 21, 2010 10:00 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

I’m not sure it’s outrageous tbh, considering with Exchange you have a CAL 
cost, an Antispam cost, an antivirus cost and (the expensive part) the costs of 
having someone take care of it – it’s the last part that I expect is the issue 
for a lot of small businesses.

From: Matt Moore [mailto:mattmoore...@hotmail.com]
Sent: 21 August 2010 17:57
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

Wow that’s pretty steep for the service they provide…….  $50 a seat, really

From: stephan.b...@bdtechnology.org [mailto:stephan.b...@bdtechnology.org] On 
Behalf Of Stephan Barr
Sent: Saturday, August 21, 2010 9:32 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

Goggle Apps cost $50 per seat, per email address, per year. There are no other 
costs.  For the $50 here's a short list of what you get:

 *   Vanity email address / 
your.n...@yourdomainname.commailto:your.n...@yourdomainname.com
 *   SSL
 *   AntiSpam, AntiVirus
 *   Postini
 *   25GB of storage per email address


On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 3:48 AM, Dave Wade 
dave.w...@stockport.gov.ukmailto:dave.w...@stockport.gov.uk wrote:
Paul,

I am a Radio Ham and one of the guys I chat to works in a small (about 25 
staff) organization, and has just upgraded his system to Windows/2008r2 and  
Exchange 2010. When I expressed suprise that he wasn't out sourcing to Google 
apps or some thing of that ilk he said when costed over 4 years it looked very 
expensive, especially given the uncertainty in pricing given we work in 
Sterling...

Dave Wade
0161 474 5456


From: Paul Hutchings
Sent: Fri 20/08/2010 17:13

To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.


I've never really seen it as Google vs. Exchange tbh, I think both do

different things and suit different needs.



Office with half a dozen people and no real IT need or infrastructure

and I think I'd find it hard to see past Google Apps or Hosted Exchange,

even scaled up to a couple dozen staff and a single server I'm not sure

Exchange would be first choice simply because if nothing else you do

need to back it up and someone needs to ensure that happens.



On the other hand, if you have a few dozen or a few hundred users and

have even a modest investment in things like a SAN or vmware and decent

connectivity and someone with IT knowledge then I'm not sure it's so

easy a decision.



-Original Message-

From: Jason Gurtz [mailto:jasongu...@npumail.commailto:jasongu...@npumail.com]

Sent: 20 August 2010 13:23

To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this

week.



Would definitely be interested in some details as far as client size,

feature usage (shared calendars, contacts, etc...), and the technical

level of the users.



It seems from past things I've read, the service is better suited to

companies with a greater proportion of more savvy users.



Jason



 -Original Message-

 From: Stephan Barr 
 [mailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.commailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com]

 Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2010 19:14

 To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

 Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps

this

 week.



 Maybe you haven't used it recently. Groups do not count as email

 addresses and meet the need of distribution lists and shared boxes.



 definitely different cost model. Per each client they will save

thousands


RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

2010-08-22 Thread John Hornbuckle
When it comes to the theft or unintentional leaking of data, most of the foxes 
are already in the henhouse because they're internal users.




John



From: Matt Moore [mailto:mattmoore...@hotmail.com]
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 3:45 PM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

Would you trust the fox in the hen house?

From: John Hornbuckle [mailto:john.hornbuc...@taylor.k12.fl.us]
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 11:16 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

Is there some evidence to indicate that if one uses Google to host their data, 
they're agreeing to allow Google to use their data?

We use Google/Postini to archive our e-mail, and I saw nothing in our contract 
that would make the mining of our data by Google acceptable.

And while I'm reasonably confident that our network is secure, I'll readily 
admit that Google's is very likely more secure than ours. In all honesty, our 
data is likely safer within their infrastructure than within our own.



John Hornbuckle
MIS Department
Taylor County School District
www.taylor.k12.fl.ushttp://www.taylor.k12.fl.us




From: Matt Moore [mailto:mattmoore...@hotmail.com]
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 12:48 PM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

Oh yes! And not to just anyone, the biggest data miners in the world.

From: Hank . [mailto:hgedr...@gmail.com]
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 4:50 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

But you forgot to mention that you get to give all of your data to someone else.

Remember one of the most basic of about security is that you maintain physical 
control of your data.
On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 12:32 PM, Stephan Barr 
stephanbarr.li...@gmail.commailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com wrote:
Goggle Apps cost $50 per seat, per email address, per year. There are no other 
costs.  For the $50 here's a short list of what you get:

 *   Vanity email address / 
your.n...@yourdomainname.commailto:your.n...@yourdomainname.com
 *   SSL
 *   AntiSpam, AntiVirus
 *   Postini
 *   25GB of storage per email address


On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 3:48 AM, Dave Wade 
dave.w...@stockport.gov.ukmailto:dave.w...@stockport.gov.uk wrote:
Paul,

I am a Radio Ham and one of the guys I chat to works in a small (about 25 
staff) organization, and has just upgraded his system to Windows/2008r2 and  
Exchange 2010. When I expressed suprise that he wasn't out sourcing to Google 
apps or some thing of that ilk he said when costed over 4 years it looked very 
expensive, especially given the uncertainty in pricing given we work in 
Sterling...

Dave Wade
0161 474 5456


From: Paul Hutchings
Sent: Fri 20/08/2010 17:13

To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.


I've never really seen it as Google vs. Exchange tbh, I think both do

different things and suit different needs.



Office with half a dozen people and no real IT need or infrastructure

and I think I'd find it hard to see past Google Apps or Hosted Exchange,

even scaled up to a couple dozen staff and a single server I'm not sure

Exchange would be first choice simply because if nothing else you do

need to back it up and someone needs to ensure that happens.



On the other hand, if you have a few dozen or a few hundred users and

have even a modest investment in things like a SAN or vmware and decent

connectivity and someone with IT knowledge then I'm not sure it's so

easy a decision.



-Original Message-

From: Jason Gurtz [mailto:jasongu...@npumail.commailto:jasongu...@npumail.com]

Sent: 20 August 2010 13:23

To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this

week.



Would definitely be interested in some details as far as client size,

feature usage (shared calendars, contacts, etc...), and the technical

level of the users.



It seems from past things I've read, the service is better suited to

companies with a greater proportion of more savvy users.



Jason



 -Original Message-

 From: Stephan Barr 
 [mailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.commailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com]

 Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2010 19:14

 To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

 Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps

this

 week.



 Maybe you haven't used it recently. Groups do not count as email

 addresses and meet the need of distribution lists and shared boxes.



 definitely different cost model. Per each client they will save

thousands

 per year.





 On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 5:25 PM, Duncan Turnbull

dun...@e-simple.co.nzmailto:dun...@e-simple.co.nz

 wrote:





   There is a different cost model here, and some limitations but

 various upsides



RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

2010-08-22 Thread Matt Moore
As always it boils down to a personal choice.  If you feel good about
advising others to use them, then do it.  In all the dealings I've had with
them, I'd rather not.

 

From: John Hornbuckle [mailto:john.hornbuc...@taylor.k12.fl.us] 
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 3:05 PM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.

 

When it comes to the theft or unintentional leaking of data, most of the
foxes are already in the henhouse because they're internal users.

 

 

 

 

John

 

 

 

From: Matt Moore [mailto:mattmoore...@hotmail.com] 
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 3:45 PM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.

 

Would you trust the fox in the hen house?

 

From: John Hornbuckle [mailto:john.hornbuc...@taylor.k12.fl.us] 
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 11:16 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.

 

Is there some evidence to indicate that if one uses Google to host their
data, they're agreeing to allow Google to use their data?

 

We use Google/Postini to archive our e-mail, and I saw nothing in our
contract that would make the mining of our data by Google acceptable.

 

And while I'm reasonably confident that our network is secure, I'll readily
admit that Google's is very likely more secure than ours. In all honesty,
our data is likely safer within their infrastructure than within our own.

 

 

 

John Hornbuckle

MIS Department

Taylor County School District

www.taylor.k12.fl.us

 

 

 

 

From: Matt Moore [mailto:mattmoore...@hotmail.com] 
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 12:48 PM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.

 

Oh yes! And not to just anyone, the biggest data miners in the world.  

 

From: Hank . [mailto:hgedr...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 4:50 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.

 

But you forgot to mention that you get to give all of your data to someone
else.

Remember one of the most basic of about security is that you maintain
physical control of your data.

On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 12:32 PM, Stephan Barr stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com
wrote:

Goggle Apps cost $50 per seat, per email address, per year. There are no
other costs.  For the $50 here's a short list of what you get:

*   Vanity email address / your.n...@yourdomainname.com
*   SSL
*   AntiSpam, AntiVirus
*   Postini
*   25GB of storage per email address

 

 

On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 3:48 AM, Dave Wade dave.w...@stockport.gov.uk
wrote:

Paul,

 

I am a Radio Ham and one of the guys I chat to works in a small (about 25
staff) organization, and has just upgraded his system to Windows/2008r2 and
Exchange 2010. When I expressed suprise that he wasn't out sourcing to
Google apps or some thing of that ilk he said when costed over 4 years it
looked very expensive, especially given the uncertainty in pricing given we
work in Sterling...

 

Dave Wade

0161 474 5456

 

  _  

From: Paul Hutchings
Sent: Fri 20/08/2010 17:13 


To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.

 

I've never really seen it as Google vs. Exchange tbh, I think both do
different things and suit different needs.
 
Office with half a dozen people and no real IT need or infrastructure
and I think I'd find it hard to see past Google Apps or Hosted Exchange,
even scaled up to a couple dozen staff and a single server I'm not sure
Exchange would be first choice simply because if nothing else you do
need to back it up and someone needs to ensure that happens.
 
On the other hand, if you have a few dozen or a few hundred users and
have even a modest investment in things like a SAN or vmware and decent
connectivity and someone with IT knowledge then I'm not sure it's so
easy a decision.
 
-Original Message-
From: Jason Gurtz [mailto:jasongu...@npumail.com] 
Sent: 20 August 2010 13:23
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this
week.
 
Would definitely be interested in some details as far as client size,
feature usage (shared calendars, contacts, etc...), and the technical
level of the users.
 
It seems from past things I've read, the service is better suited to
companies with a greater proportion of more savvy users.
 
Jason
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Stephan Barr [mailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2010 19:14
 To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
 Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps
this
 week.
 
 Maybe you haven't used it recently. Groups do not count as email
 addresses and meet the need of distribution lists and shared boxes.
 
 definitely different cost model. Per each client they will save

RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

2010-08-22 Thread Andy Shook
Well said Dark-rock. :)

To give you a different perspective, Peak 10 has been doing cloud for a 
little over four years and  the adoption rate is incredible.  $SMBs to 
$Fortune200s (I deal with them all) are sick of capital outlay for hardware, 
they're tired of the of the IT cycle and just want their stuff to work and be 
available with an SLA.  I don't want to turn this into a pitch, out of respect 
for my favorite list but I felt lead to mention it from the MSP side of the 
house.


Shook

From: Martin Blackstone [mailto:mblackst...@gmail.com]
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 10:28 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

True to a point.
Let's face it, the cloud is here and one way or another you are going to end up 
there. Either you get on board or your CFO will for you.
I will say if we were not a VAR, didn't have access to outstanding hardware, 
and didn't eat our own dogfood, I would put Exchange in the cloud in a 
heartbeat.
Besides how many of us are in there already? Who uses Salesforce or Netsuite or 
some other such service? Online marketing, etc.
How many of us at home are backing up to the cloud?




From: Hank . [mailto:hgedr...@gmail.com]
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 4:50 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.

But you forgot to mention that you get to give all of your data to someone else.

Remember one of the most basic of about security is that you maintain physical 
control of your data.
On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 12:32 PM, Stephan Barr 
stephanbarr.li...@gmail.commailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com wrote:
Goggle Apps cost $50 per seat, per email address, per year. There are no other 
costs.  For the $50 here's a short list of what you get:

 *   Vanity email address / 
your.n...@yourdomainname.commailto:your.n...@yourdomainname.com
 *   SSL
 *   AntiSpam, AntiVirus
 *   Postini
 *   25GB of storage per email address


On Sat, Aug 21, 2010 at 3:48 AM, Dave Wade 
dave.w...@stockport.gov.ukmailto:dave.w...@stockport.gov.uk wrote:
Paul,

I am a Radio Ham and one of the guys I chat to works in a small (about 25 
staff) organization, and has just upgraded his system to Windows/2008r2 and  
Exchange 2010. When I expressed suprise that he wasn't out sourcing to Google 
apps or some thing of that ilk he said when costed over 4 years it looked very 
expensive, especially given the uncertainty in pricing given we work in 
Sterling...

Dave Wade
0161 474 5456


From: Paul Hutchings
Sent: Fri 20/08/2010 17:13

To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this week.


I've never really seen it as Google vs. Exchange tbh, I think both do

different things and suit different needs.



Office with half a dozen people and no real IT need or infrastructure

and I think I'd find it hard to see past Google Apps or Hosted Exchange,

even scaled up to a couple dozen staff and a single server I'm not sure

Exchange would be first choice simply because if nothing else you do

need to back it up and someone needs to ensure that happens.



On the other hand, if you have a few dozen or a few hundred users and

have even a modest investment in things like a SAN or vmware and decent

connectivity and someone with IT knowledge then I'm not sure it's so

easy a decision.



-Original Message-

From: Jason Gurtz [mailto:jasongu...@npumail.commailto:jasongu...@npumail.com]

Sent: 20 August 2010 13:23

To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

Subject: RE: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps this

week.



Would definitely be interested in some details as far as client size,

feature usage (shared calendars, contacts, etc...), and the technical

level of the users.



It seems from past things I've read, the service is better suited to

companies with a greater proportion of more savvy users.



Jason



 -Original Message-

 From: Stephan Barr 
 [mailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.commailto:stephanbarr.li...@gmail.com]

 Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2010 19:14

 To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

 Subject: Re: Exchange is history?: Moved two clients to GoogleApps

this

 week.



 Maybe you haven't used it recently. Groups do not count as email

 addresses and meet the need of distribution lists and shared boxes.



 definitely different cost model. Per each client they will save

thousands

 per year.





 On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 5:25 PM, Duncan Turnbull

dun...@e-simple.co.nzmailto:dun...@e-simple.co.nz

 wrote:





   There is a different cost model here, and some limitations but

 various upsides



   One big issue I see is if you have lots of shared mailboxes e.g.

 for client projects or other reasons then you have to pay for all of

 those as a license, as always it will be horses for courses



   What about Microsoft Live



   Cheers Duncan



   On