I'd avoid Office 2007 if your users aren't ready for it, the user interface has been completely re-written (Vista-ised if you like), so there's a bit of a retraining issue. But Office 2003 is sufficiently like Office XP on the surface for them to adapt easily.
We haven't rolled fully out Office 2007 yet, but we have a few people using it. Mainly those that need more than 65,000 rows in Excel (that limit has gone in 2007). But we probably will when we roll out Vista later this year (now we've finished testing it with all our apps)
You can set up all the Outlook settings through Group Policy on your domain controller. Then it'll be how you want it.
Microsoft are putting more and more emphasis on centralised management these days. Which makes sysadmin jobs much less tedious. If you deploy the initial install with RIS/WAIK, including unattended installations of Office, Acrobat etc, and then control what users can do with Group Policies and keep the systems patched with WSUS, and use VNC or Remote Assistance for tech support issues, you hardly ever have to leave your own desk!
Which makes sysadmin jobs much less tedious. Huzzah! Now, if only I knew what I was doing ... [grin]
VNC, however, I do use - even just for overseeing the install process from a desk away. Yes, I am that lazy.
A quick check of the default settings on the HP Security Tools BIOS monitor revealed that these laptops have the network boot disabled by default. Nice of them.
You would want Network Boot disabled by default, otherwise it'd be doing it every time you turned it on with a network cable plugged in. So you enable it, do the install, then disable it again. Or it's often there on a 'boot from' menu, like where you'd choose to boot from CD or USB (or floppy if your PCs still have them!).
You would want Network Boot disabled by default, otherwise it'd be doing it every time you turned it on with a network cable plugged in. So you enable it, do the install, then disable it again. D'oh. I am a muppet. Of course.
a 'tech talk' icon Mine's the inside of one of my PCs, with some blur and softglow effects, the "Ball-tongue" font and then some glow effects applied to the font too ...
no subject
We haven't rolled fully out Office 2007 yet, but we have a few people using it. Mainly those that need more than 65,000 rows in Excel (that limit has gone in 2007). But we probably will when we roll out Vista later this year (now we've finished testing it with all our apps)
no subject
no subject
Microsoft are putting more and more emphasis on centralised management these days. Which makes sysadmin jobs much less tedious.
If you deploy the initial install with RIS/WAIK, including unattended installations of Office, Acrobat etc, and then control what users can do with Group Policies and keep the systems patched with WSUS, and use VNC or Remote Assistance for tech support issues, you hardly ever have to leave your own desk!
no subject
Huzzah! Now, if only I knew what I was doing ... [grin]
VNC, however, I do use - even just for overseeing the install process from a desk away. Yes, I am that lazy.
A quick check of the default settings on the HP Security Tools BIOS monitor revealed that these laptops have the network boot disabled by default. Nice of them.
no subject
(I really must make a 'tech talk' icon)
no subject
D'oh. I am a muppet. Of course.
Mine's the inside of one of my PCs, with some blur and softglow effects, the "Ball-tongue" font and then some glow effects applied to the font too ...
no subject
(and not in any way an artefact of the 'how do you take a photo of your camera's viewfinder' situation)
no subject
With a second camera? On macro mode? [grin]
Looks a bit like an old space invaders game, actually. [grin]
no subject
I'll probably do a better one next time I can take a photo with someone else's camera (eg the one at work).
no subject
Ah! That would do it.