| Details | | Publication Date: | 1996-05-01 | | Series: | McGraw-Hill Series on Computer Communications |
| Size | | Length: | 263 pages | | Height: | 9.0 in | | Width: | 7.5 in | | Thickness: | 0.8 in | | Weight: | 17.6 oz |
Publisher's Note A vital tool for network managers, designers, and administrators, this book gives you the expertise needed to optimize today's predominant groupware product - Lotus Notes. It draws heavily on IBM's experience in implementing Notes across its own global network and in internetworking its many partners and consulting clients. This practical, case-based reference lays out design approaches and options for various enterprises, and offers you in-depth advice on effective database distribution, replication, mail routing, bandwidth management, dial access, and connection to outside domains; advanced topics such as naming standards, address books, data repositories, and remote monitoring; and methods of leveraging the Internet for many of the network requirements of Lotus Notes. You also find extensive guidance for enterprises shadowing the mainframe...detailed coverage of firewalls and network security...and tips and tools for all IBM environments, including Warp, as well as some for Windows, Mac, and Novell network environments.
Here's the first professional guide to optimizing what has become the standard software for companies sharing information across the enterprise: Lotus Notes. This book draws on IBM's experiences in implementing Notes across its own global network and in internetworking its many partners and consulting clients to provide a rich imaginative resource. The guide lays out design approaches and options for various enterprises and provides in-depth advice for effective database distribution, replication, mail routing, bandwidth management, dial access, security, and connection to outside domains. It also covers such advanced topics as naming standards, address books, data repositories, and remote monitoring. Plus methods for leveraging the Internet for many of the network requirements of Lotus Notes are emphasized throughout the book.
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