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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A good tool for those transitioning from NT 4.0
As an MCSE who feels comfortable with NT 4.0, the advent of Windows 2000 brings some feelings of anxiety. Though this book doesn't delve into the "how to" administrative tasks with Active Directory and other daily tasks that will be common, the author painted a good picture of how NT 2000 will be different. This book is an excellent tool for those who are...
Published on October 7, 1999 by Andrew Bruner (winters07@juno.com)

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Notes from a Powerpoint presentation
Bought this book last night - read the whole thing. It's only 175 pages in length - and the type is big.

Anyway - it reads like the speaker notes from a Powerpoint presentation. It does a good job of telling you what's new, but there's no meat. Techies are going to get frustrated, when I read about a cool feature I was always left with - "Well how does that...

Published on June 2, 1999 by David V. Watts (dwatts@wt.net)


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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Notes from a Powerpoint presentation, June 2, 1999
This review is from: Introducing Microsoft Windows 2000 Server (Paperback)
Bought this book last night - read the whole thing. It's only 175 pages in length - and the type is big.

Anyway - it reads like the speaker notes from a Powerpoint presentation. It does a good job of telling you what's new, but there's no meat. Techies are going to get frustrated, when I read about a cool feature I was always left with - "Well how does that work?"

Some of the figures are very sad - they obviously struggled to come up with graphics. For instance - they show the lineage of NT by drawing four boxes with an arrow going through them all - NT 3.1 to NT 3.5 to NT 4 etc. On the other hand - in the brief discussion on WMI they have a killer graphic (page 52) with no real explanation of flow.

In short - this is a detailed readme file. Short on specifics - but a very high level view of new functionality. Once the "real" books kick in this will have zero worth - which is a negative. Sales people will love it - they'll get up to speed on the "lingo" in the couple of hours it takes to read this book.

Mind you - I enjoyed it's overview - and therefore, 3 stars. If you really want to know how this stuff works you'll need the "Windows 2000 Beta training kit" - if you only buy one, make it the latter.

For the record here is what I mean by high level:

Active Directory gets 21 pages, IIS 5 gets 8 pages, Network infrastructure gets 21 pages, ZAW gets 16 pages, File system and storage management gets 11 pages,

Security gets 13 pages, Distributed Services (DHCP/WINS/DNS) gets 15 pages.

Hope that helps!

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Good introduction to Windows 2000 but no meat, July 24, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Introducing Microsoft Windows 2000 Server (Paperback)
A good, well written introduction to Windows 2000 but no meat. Windows 2000 beta from Microsoft press in combination with Mastering Active Directory (Mastering)," Robert R. King is a better choice for LAN Admins and tech people.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Avoid in most cases, May 7, 2000
This review is from: Introducing Microsoft Windows 2000 Server (Paperback)
Based on the contents of this book, Microsoft should be giving it away rather than selling it. We don't mean that comment to be an extreme criticism but it just doesn't make sense to charge so much for something that is essentially a glorified sales manual.

It's definitely easy to read but also probably too easy. You'll finish reading this book and find yourself asking, "Is that all?" Don't even attempt to bring this book along as a resource when you go to deploy Windows 2000.

If does serve a purpose of preparing people in sales roles for product. If used for that, it does the job quite well. However for most other uses, you'll definitely find better books.

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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A good tool for those transitioning from NT 4.0, October 7, 1999
This review is from: Introducing Microsoft Windows 2000 Server (Paperback)
As an MCSE who feels comfortable with NT 4.0, the advent of Windows 2000 brings some feelings of anxiety. Though this book doesn't delve into the "how to" administrative tasks with Active Directory and other daily tasks that will be common, the author painted a good picture of how NT 2000 will be different. This book is an excellent tool for those who are wanting to gain an introduction (hence the title). I would especially recommend this for Business Analysts or any Sales force who wants to learn the new lingo and imporvements that Microsoft has made. It gives a good overview for those who know networking on what's new and what's there. That is what the book is. For those seeking an insightful "how to do" systematic approach of the Beta software, you will not get it here. It is an easy read and worth it's price.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent introduction to Windows 2000 Server, June 25, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Introducing Microsoft Windows 2000 Server (Paperback)
Mr. Northrup has written a thorough overview of Win2k. He covers all of the new features and describes all of the changes from NT 4.0. The book is clearly aimed at systems administrators, but users, managers, and executives would find the title informative and approachable. Mr. Northrup's writing is concise and articulate, pleasant to read, especially when compared to the typical technical tome. I highly recommend this fine book to anyone who anticipates working with Microsoft's forthcoming OS, its well worth the investment in time and money.
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4 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Easy to read intro but too expensive, August 2, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Introducing Microsoft Windows 2000 Server (Paperback)
I read this book in a day. It's a good overview of what's new in Windows 2000 Server but not terribly deep. However, it is overpriced for what it is -- MS Press should just have combined this book with the one on 2000 Workstation and knocked ten bucks off. Also, it's kinda clear there isn't much revolutionary in 2000 Server anyway. Windows is finally catching up with things Netware has done for years and mainframes for decades.
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Introducing Microsoft Windows 2000 Server
Introducing Microsoft Windows 2000 Server by Tony Northrup (Paperback - June 1999)
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