![]() ![]() ![]() However, do note that Exchange 2000 is supported running on a Windows 2000 member server in a Windows 2003 domain controller environment. Exchange 2003 is supported by both Windows 2000 and Windows 2003, but it is very important to know that Exchange 2000 is not supported on a Windows 2003 server. The most important item to note about installing Exchange 2003 is really not about Exchange 2003 at all. Also, bear in mind the importance of using the Windows 2000 Advanced Server or Windows 2003 Enterprise editions so that you can use the /3GB boot switch for large memory Exchange servers (>1 GB). This facilitates support for clustering, multiple storage groups, and database sizes in excess of 16 GB. It is still recommended that large enterprise-style configurations use the Exchange 2003 Enterprise edition. In a nutshell, the major improvement in terms of changes between the Exchange 20 editions is the addition of front-end/back-end server functionality with the Exchange 2003 Standard edition. There is certainly no dramatic difference in the thinking that is required to design, plan, and implement an Exchange 2003 environment. Microsoft has used the expression “evolution, not revolution” in the past, and if ever there was a time to use it, that time is now for the relationship between Exchange 2000 and Exchange 2003. Kieran McCorry, in Microsoft Exchange Server 2003, Deployment and Migration SP1 and SP2, 2006 1.8 Exchange 2003 Installation Requirements ![]()
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