FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS Defining the organisation Windows 2000 characteristics
SURVEYING THE ENTERPRISE Users view of Active Directory Distributed computing and enterprise security
DEFINE NAMING CONTEXTS Define DNS namespace Optimize Global Catalog availability Extending the shema Accessing the AD with LDAP query tools
PLANNING ACTIVE DIRECTORY Translate the organisation into domain and Organizational Units (OUs) Building trees and forests Internal vs. external namespaces
INTEGRATING HETEROGENEOUS NETWORKS Establish effective trust relationships Model groups and group types for mixed- and native-mode operation Domain models in a complex environment Windows 95/98 integration
DEVELOP A MIGRATION STRATEGY Devise a migration plan Take stock for migration element Determined when to move to native mode
PERFORM MIGRATION Ensure a smooth migration Transform NT domain models to a tree or forest Consolidate enterprise domains
DEPLOY GPOS ON OUS Simple and multilevel inheritance GPO-filtered deployment
GROUP-BASED ADMINISTRATIVE ROLES Organize administrative group hierarchies Security and distribution groups Efficient enterprise-wide group nesting
IMPLEMENT OBJECT SECURITY Control access to objects Define objects visibility in the AD Delegate administration with OUs
DOMAIN CONTROLLERS AND MULTIMASTER REPLICATION Fine-tune replication with the Sites and Service Managers Identify the logon server
REPLICATION TOPOLOGIES FSMO roles and their impact Build infrastructure for inter- and intra- site replication Optimizing replication Choosing replication intervals for your network's need Defining a replication sequence for optimal availability
ROLL-OUTS Perform an audit of existing network systems Implement a plan for migration
CREATE A MODEL ENVIRONMENT Select appropriate equipment Integrating a lab with your production environment Implementing the roll-out plan |