Today I had a request to change an Out of Office reply for a user who incorrectly typed the phone number for the person who was filling in for her. I immediately thought I was going to have to reset the password on the account to do this. But I didn't
I know most of the time we think of the end users as being the lowest on the technological totem pole, but I learned something from someone the other day. This person told me that you could change the subject line of a received email in Outlook. I have taught a few classes on Outlook and I thought that was crazy talk. I was wrong.
Sometimes items get hard deleted and you need a way to recover them. This script will add a registry key to allow for message recovery for all folders in Outlook. Then you will be able to click on tools>"Recover Deleted Items" from any folder!
For More information on this please see: http://www.msexchange.org/tutorials/Recovering-Deleted-Items-Exchange-Server-2003-Part1.html
Have you ever wanted to make logging in easier for your users. With Exchange 2003 and form based authentication, the users have to type in domainname\username in order for it to authenticate correctly. Here is what you have to do to get rid of this "feature"
I had a client that needed to change service credentials across 50 servers for Backup Exec at the same time. So, I wrote this script to change the credentials for any service remotely.
I will be rolling out Symantec's new SEP 11 soon and I need to remove the previous Symantec AV install. This Script should work on all SAV 9-10 installs.
This script can be easily modified to run remotely. Maybe in the near future I will add this functionality.