|
The Exchange Store is responsible for interfacing with the
Exchange database files. Because these files are disk based, the Exchange server
caches as much information as possible and the Store uses as much of the
machine's memory as possible, up to a default maximum of approximately 858MB of
RAM. The Store releases this memory when other processes need to use it. For
instance, on a system with 1GB of RAM, you shouldn't be surprised if the Store
typically uses more than 700MB. Having hundreds of megabytes of free memory
serves no purpose, so the Store simply puts available memory to good use.
|
|
Read more...
|
|
|
|
|
You depend on e-mail. You couldn't get your work done without it. Yet most users (not to mention IT professionals and managers) experience e-mail as a mysterious, magical function. You write a message on your computer, you click Send, and moments later, it appears in the recipient's inbox. Poof! E-mail happens invisibly. No creaking and groaning of IT infrastructure reminds you that e-mail delivery is actually a complex system with a lot of moving parts. Overall, that's a great success story—how many long-term IT services work so smoothly that users take them for granted? But if you have any responsibility for ensuring that the mail arrives, or for managing the hardworking e-mail administrators who do, it behooves you to know a minimum of the technology basics. |
|
Read more...
|
|
|
|
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next > End >>
|
| Results 25 - 28 of 40 |