Friday, February 20, 2009

Microsoft Press Book Connection Newsletter

MS Press
Active Directory Administrator's Pocket Consultant   
Active Directory Administrator's Pocket Consultant, by William Stanek

Introduced by Maria Gargiulo, content development manager, Microsoft Learning

No one knows more about our excellent upcoming title Active Directory Administrator's Pocket Consultant than its author, William Stanek. The best-selling author of nearly 100 books, and series editor for the Administrator's Pocket Consultants, William discusses his approach to his most recent Microsoft Press title in the following article. For information on William's many other books, visit his Web site, www.williamstanek.com.

Yesterday, my newest book for IT professionals, Active Directory Administrator's Pocket Consultant, shipped. As the author of nearly 100 books, I've written about many different server technologies and products, but one of my favorites has always been Active Directory. When Microsoft introduced Windows 2000, the most important change was the inclusion of Active Directory. Active Directory is based on standard Internet protocols and has a design that helps you clearly identify the physical and logical components of your network's structure. Although Active Directory offers many great benefits, it continues to be a challenge for network and system administrators to design, implement, and support.

Active Directory Administrator's Pocket Consultant provides system and network administrators, developers, programmers, and other IT professionals with a clear, detailed look at Active Directory for Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2008, and beyond. The upgraded Active Directory that ships with Windows Server 2008 and Windows Server 2008 Release 2 has new and enhanced features, and this book answers the questions of what the changes are, how you can take advantage of the changes, and why you'd want to use the new features in the first place.

Having written many Windows books, I was able to bring to this book the perspective gained from working with the underlying technologies for many years. Long before Active Directory was created, I was working with, researching, and writing about the predecessor software. The advantage for you, the reader, is that my solid understanding of these technologies allowed me to dig into the architecture and provide a comprehensive view.

As you've probably noticed, there's a lot of information about Active Directory on the Web and in other printed books. There are tutorials, reference sites, discussion groups, and more to help make it easier to work with Active Directory. However, the advantage of reading this book is that all the information you need to deploy and run Active Directory is organized in one place and presented in a straightforward fashion. This book has everything you need to customize Active Directory installations, master Active Directory configuration, and maintain domain controllers.

While the book won't necessarily replace a 1,000-page reference, it does offer unique insights and is focused on accomplishing the task at hand. In this book, I teach how features work, why they work the way they work, and how to customize them to meet your needs. You'll also learn why you may want to use certain features, and when to use other features to resolve any issues you are having. For example, when I discuss sites and subnets, I cover guidelines for establishing site boundaries and creating subnets. I discuss configuring Active Directory so clients find appropriate domain controllers. I talk about configuring site links and replication between sites. I suggest when to bridge sites and specify how to configure site bridges. I also provide extensive guidelines for monitoring, verifying, and troubleshooting site links and replication between sites.

In addition, this book provides tips, best practices, and examples of how to optimize Active Directory to meet your needs.


For Developers

Solid Code   

Excerpt from the book's Foreword, written by Microsoft Press author and Wintellect co-founder John Robbins:

We still have a long way to go before our field is a real engineering field, but the signs are encouraging. I think a big change will occur when we finally start treating testing as a real profession—one that is equal to or more important than development. While I probably won't see the transition to software engineering before I retire, I'm very encouraged by the progress thus far. Let's all keep pushing and learning so we can finally really be called engineers.

This book, Solid Code, is a great step in the direction of treating software as an engineering discipline. Bookstores' programming shelves groan under two types of development books. The first kind is the hand-waving software management type, and the second is the gritty internals of a technology type; I'm guilty of writing the latter. While those books have their uses and are helpful, the type of books we are missing are the ones that talk about real-world team software development. The actual technology is such a small part of a project; it's the team and process aspects that present the biggest challenges in getting a software project shipped. Solid Code does a great job of hitting that super-hard middle ground between the management books and the technology books. By covering ideas from how to model software to security design to defensive programming, John and Donis show you how the best practices you can apply to your development will make it even better. Reading Solid Code is like experiencing a great project led by a top development manager and working with excellent coworkers.

The whole book is excellent; I especially loved the emphasis on planning and preparation. Many of the projects that my company, Wintellect, has had to rescue are the direct result of poor planning. Take those chapters to heart so you'll avoid the mistakes that will cost you tons of money and time. Another problem the book addresses is the tendency to leave performance tuning and security analysis for the very end of the project. As the title of Chapter 4 so succinctly points out, "Performance Is a Feature." The recommendations in those chapters are invaluable. Finally, the book's emphasis on real-world coding and debugging will pay dividends even when the code goes into maintenance mode. Even though I've been working in the field nearly 20 years, I picked up a lot of great ideas from Solid Code.

Every developer needs to read this book, but there are others in your company who need to read it as well. Make your manager, your manager's manager, and your manager's manager's manager read this book! The one question I always get from senior managers at any company is "How does Microsoft develop software?" With the Inside Microsoft sections in most chapters of Solid Code, your management will see how Microsoft has solved problems in some of the largest applications in use today. Now start reading! It's your turn to help move our industry into a real engineering discipline!


Special Offers

New E-Book Offer for Virtualization
Learn how to plan, implement, and manage virtual infrastructure solutions with Understanding Microsoft Virtualization Solutions, by Mitch Tulloch with the Microsoft Virtualization Teams. The technologies covered include Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V, System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2009, Microsoft Application Virtualization 4.5, Microsoft Enterprise Desktop Virtualization, and Microsoft Virtual Desktop Infrastructure.
Register and download the e-book today.


Microsoft Press 25th Anniversary "Free E-Book of the Month" Offers
Help us celebrate our 25th anniversary with a free e-book offer. Read your Microsoft Press Book Connection Newsletter for notification of offers, and to register and download the selection each month. The monthly free e-book offer can be found in the top right corner of this monthly newsletter. These offers expire on February 25, 2009, so download the e-books today:

Microsoft Visual C# 2008 Express Edition: Build a Program Now!, by Patrice Pelland
Windows Vista Resource Kit, Second Edition, by Mitch Tulloch, Tony Northrup, and Jerry Honeycutt, with the Windows Vista Team


Taking a Certification Exam Soon? Microsoft Gives You a Second Shot at Passing
In the real world, you might need more than one chance at certification. With Second Shot, if you do not pass any IT professional, developer, or project manager certification exam on your first try, you can retake the exam without an additional cost. This offer is good through June 30, 2009.
Find Self-Paced Training Kits from Microsoft Press to help you study for your exam (Amazon.com).

MS Press

February 20, 2009

In This Issue:
Special Offers
25th Anniversary Free
E-Book Program Offers:
Microsoft Visual C# 2008 Express Edition: Build a Program Now! by Patrice Pelland
Windows Vista Resource Kit, Second Edition by Mitch Tulloch, Tony Northrup, and Jerry Honeycutt, with the Windows Vista Team
Quick Links
Microsoft Press Online Developer Tools site
Microsoft Press Online Windows Server and Client site
Hot Sellers
For Developers
Code Complete, Second Edition, by Steve McConnell

For Home and Office Users
Windows Vista Plain & Simple, by Jerry Joyce and Marianne Moon

For IT Professionals
Windows Server 2008 Inside Out, by William R. Stanek

For Certification
MCITP Self-Paced Training Kit (Exams 70-640, 70-642, 70-643, 70-647): Windows Server 2008 Enterprise Administrator Core Requirements, by Dan Holme, Nelson Ruest, Danielle Ruest, Tony Northrup, J.C. Mackin, Anil Desai, Orin Thomas, John Policelli, Ian McLean, P. Mancuso, and D.R. Miller
Latest Releases
For Developers
Microsoft SQL Server 2008 MDX Step by Step, by Bryan C. Smith and C. Ryan Clay with Hitachi Consulting
Microsoft .NET and SAP, by Juergen Daiberl, Steve Fox, Scott Adams, and Thomas Reimer
Smart Business Intelligence Solutions with Microsoft SQL Server 2008, by Lynn Langit, Kevin S. Goff, Davide Mauri, Sahil Malik, and John Welch
Solid Code, by Donis Marshall and John Bruno
Microsoft SQL Server 2008 Reporting Services Step by Step, by Stacia Misner

For Home and Office Users
Building Web Applications with Microsoft Office SharePoint Designer 2007 Step by Step, by John Jansen

For Certification
MCTS Self-Paced Training Kit (Exam 70-505): Microsoft .NET Framework 3.5—Windows Forms Application Development, by Matthew A. Stoecker and Steven J. Stein
Coming Soon
For Developers
Microsoft SQL Server 2008 Internals, by Kalen Delaney, Paul S. Randal, Kimberly L. Tripp, Conor Cunningham, and Adam Machanic
Inside Microsoft SQL Server 2008: T-SQL Querying, by Itzik Ben-Gan, Lubor Kollar, Dejan Sarka, Steve Kass (Solid Quality Mentors)

For Certification
MCTS Self-Paced Training Kit (Exam 70-561): Microsoft .NET Framework 3.5—ADO.NET, by Shawn Wildermuth, Jim Wightman, Mark Blomsma
MCTS Self-Paced Training Kit (Exams 70-648 and 70-649): Transitioning your MCSA/MCSE to Windows Server 2008 Technology Specialist, by Orin Thomas and Ian McLean
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