MailScanner on Exchange
hermit921
hermit921 at yahoo.com
Tue Nov 1 17:08:17 GMT 2005
The idea is to get rid of the MailScanner systems as being a waste of time,
money, hardware, etc. There will be a cluster of Exchange servers facing
the internet that do something, and then pass email to the back end where
users will interact.
"All the functionality of MailScanner" will be replicated on either the
front end or back end - that isn't clear. Of course we will have to go
from free products to much more expensive commercial products, but that
doesn't seem to be relevant.
My question is very specific. Do people have a comparison chart, or even
product list, of applications that run on an Exchange server to duplicate
MailScanner functionality?
hermit921
At 08:46 AM 11/1/2005, Stephen Swaney wrote:
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: MailScanner mailing list [mailto:MAILSCANNER at JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On
> > Behalf Of hermit921
> > Sent: Tuesday, November 01, 2005 11:20 AM
> > To: MAILSCANNER at JISCMAIL.AC.UK
> > Subject: MailScanner on Exchange
> >
> > My company decided to move to Exchange for its main mail server "It's a
> > Management decision". The two people hired to manage Exchange claim there
> > are products that run on the Exchange server that do everything
> > MailScanner
> > (and associated programs) can do. I don't believe it. Could I be wrong,
> > or even mostly wrong, about this?
> >
> > hermit921
>
>This question should set off a flurry of responses :) An Exchange server can
>work quite well if you have many $$$, plenty of good technical support and
>lots of computer resources but they should always be protected from the
>Internet. I come from a paranoid investment banking environment and there
>they always protect the Exchange servers behind gateways!
>
>A few of my comments:
>
>1. Exchange servers tend to be relatively BUSY. Having a MailScanner gateway
>in front of the Exchange server will GREATLY reduce the load on the Exchange
>server because it will stop most of the Junk at the gateway. We have
>installed MailScanner gateways on sites that thought they needed an
>expensive Exchange hardware upgrade. The load was so greatly reduced; the
>old hardware is still running quietly with no strain.
>
>2. You can run multiple free (or lower cost) Virus scanners on the
>MailScanner gateway. You'll still want a virus scanner on the Exchange
>server to internal mail for viruses but if you have an enterprise license
>for a virus scanner, you can probably also use that scanner on the gateway
>at no additional cost.
>
>3. I like to keep Microsoft servers as far away from the Internet as
>possible. Having a gateway and configuring your Exchange server correctly
>will keep it a lot safer, more reliable and quieter.
>
>4. Read Microsoft's white paper on how to stop spam :) The list is down so I
>can't find the link but it's quite amusing and quit sophomoric. Possibly
>some packrat can send you the link.
>
>Stephen Swaney
>Fort Systems Ltd.
>stephen.swaney at fsl.com
>www.fsl.com
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