|  |     Exchange application management is done via the Exchange Administrator
    tool, which can run on any Windows NT Workstation or Server.
    
    Various built-in Windows NT tools work remotely, too.  User Manager,
    Server Manager, Event Viewer, Performance Monitor, etc.  Heck, the
    first three even run on Windows 95.
    
    The term "remote server management" is too generic.  Give specifics on
    what you need to do.
    
    There is no "console" on an NT box.  If the system is dead, it's dead.
    The closest thing is the "Remote Server Manager" EISA card via a modem
    you can dial into.
    
    If you're talking about simply "taking over" the display remotely (while
    it's working, of course) for tasks that require local access, SMS 1.2 can
    do it... so can PC-Anywhere 32 (nicely, but not very integrated) and
    McAfee Remote Desktop 32 (the slowest and buggiest, but integrated).
    There are probably more.
    
    Have fun.
    
    --Ron
 | 
|  | Hi Ron,
Thanks for the info.
It seems that the exchange admin utility can only be used if your PC is logged
onto the same domain as the exchange server. This looks to be the only tool
that passes on the originating domain and user name, which causes a No Access
situation (unless you could set up trust, which the customer won�t
appreciate due to security).
Any ideas?
Regards,
Rene
[Posted by WWW Notes gateway]
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