Migration to Windows Server 2003 & Exchange
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User Management Resource Administrator's ability to mass create and update user accounts makes it the ideal migration instrument rather than traditional scripting solutions. The flexibility offered by our visual scripting engine without requiring script development and maintenance, makes User Management Resource Administrator the most attractive migration solution on the market today.
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| "Last summer we migrated our entire network from Windows NT to
Windows
2003 in 7 weeks, using Windows XP for the workstations. One last job was
left: In 2 days time, 300 colleagues and 3000 students would need to access
the network. This meant that the user accounts would have to be created
in Active Directory, put into the right OU and assigned to security groups.
2 days later, before the deadline, User Management Resource Administrator
had succeeded in completely creating and configuring all user accounts
and resources." - Peter van den Hoek - Calvijn
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Complete user and resource migration in one day! |
| User Management Resource Administrator is the #1 solution for performing the following migration steps according to your specific company requirements. UMRA makes the process of completing migrations easy; it minimizes steps, eliminates the need for scripting and migrations take place in the background – end-users generally are not aware that anything has even changed. The transition is smooth and seamless. |
| All of the actions below can be combined in a single batch run using CSV input: |
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- Step 1: Create new user accounts - Use input from
a CSV-style text file containing minimal information such as firstname
and lastname to
create fully qualified Active Directory user accounts based on advanced
username and displayname generation with duplicate handling.
Learn more...
- Step 2: Configure OU assignment - Configure variable
mappings to assign
Organizational Unit containers for new user accounts. Use variables such
as location or department fields in your CSV and easily map these to
OUs. Le
arn more...
- Step 3: Set group memberships - Assign single or
multiple group memberships
for your new user accounts, based on fixed group names or variable group
name mappings using input from your CSV file. Learn more...
- Step 4: Create home directories and set permissions -
Create home directories
for new or existing user accounts, optionally share them and set
permissions on the folders using the same easy layout as the Windows
explorer. Learn more...
- Step 5: Set Terminal Server settings - Configure
Terminal Server specific
settings such as additional TS profile and server for your new or existing
user accounts. Learn more...
- Step 6: Create Exchange mailbox - Create Exchange
2000, 2003, or 2007 mailboxes for new or existing user accounts in the Active
Directory. You also have the ability to modify the permissions on the newly created mailbox. Advanced
formatting capabilities are offered for the primairy and secondary (proxy)
e-mail addresses. Learn more...
- Step 7: Specify additional Active Directory attribute
information -
Use any additional input from a CSV file to set additional Active
Directory attributes such as phone and address information or special
attributes for custom applications. All available AD attributes are
supported. Learn
more...
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I have some questions, can you assist me?
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| We are absolutely confident that User Management Resource Administrator will work for your environment -whatever the size; we can show you the product and all its capabilities in just 30 minutes on our test server for
free! |
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