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Preface
Microsoft's server-oriented Windows operating
systems have grown by leaps and bounds in their capabilities,
complexities, and sheer number of features since the release of
Windows NT Server in the early 1990's. With each release, system
administrators have found
One source of help for the beleaguered
administrator has always been the technical book market and its
communities of authors, publishers and
I'm wagering that you don't (my luck in Las Vegas notwithstanding), and it was in that spirit that I set out to write Learning Windows Server 2003 . I wanted to trim down the content of this volume so that I included just enough theory on a subject for you to understand how different features and systems work in this version of Windows. I wanted you to come away from reading sections with a firm understanding of what's happening under the hood of the system, but without the sense that you're taking a graduate course in OS theory. Most of all, I wanted this book to be a practical guide that helps you get your work done"here's how it works, here's how to do it."
The result of that effort is the book you're
either holding in your hands right now or reading online: a book
with a more compact presentation, a lower price, and a tighter
focus on
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