Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Research lang...

Outlook Express is a different program from the Microsoft Office Outlook e-mail client which ships with Microsoft Office for Windows. The two programs do not share common code, but do share a common architectural philosophy. The similar names lead many people to incorrectly conclude that Outlook Express is a stripped down version of Outlook. Outlook Express is bundled with Internet Explorer.
Windows 95 included Internet Mail and News, a simple precursor to Outlook Express. Internet Mail and News handled plain text e-mail (not HTML mail), and had none of the security holes Outlook is known for. However, Microsoft did not provide it with a way to back up the address book — something that would later create a great deal of frustration among users.
Outlook Express has been vulnerable to a number of problems which could corrupt its files. This has led to a thriving market for programs which can backup, restore, and recover corrupted OE files. A cursory Internet search on the term Outlook Express will reveal dozens of such rescue programs. However, Microsoft has released a procedure for Windows XP which may be able to correct problems and restore access to e-mail messages without resorting to third party solutions using their Outlook Express Basic Repair Kit.
Kinds Of Servers
MS Exchange Servers




Mail server A computer in a network that provides "post office" facilities. It stores incoming mail for distribution to users and forwards outgoing mail through the appropriate channel. The term may refer to just the software that performs this service, which can reside on a machine with other services.















Communication Server
that connects several communications lines to a computer and performs the actual transmitting and receiving as well as various message coding and decoding activities.


















File and Print Server
A computer in a network that controls one or more printers. It is either part of the network operating system or an add-on utility that stores the print-image output from users' machines and feeds it to the printer one job at a time. The computer and its printers are known as a "print server" or a file server with "print services."


























Fax server A computer in a network that provides a bank of fax/modems, allowing users to fax out and remote users to fax in over the next available modem. The fax server may be a dedicated machine or implemented on a file server that is providing other services.








































Application server Before the Web, the term referred to a computer in a client/server environment that performed the business logic (the data processing). In a two-tier client/server environment, which is most common, the user's machine performs the business logic as well as the user interface, and the server provides the database processing. In a three-tier environment, a separate computer (application server) performs the business logic, although some part may still be handled by the user's machine.




































































































A web server is a computer running web server software on which your web site files are stored (hosted). The requirements for configuring an effective server are complex. Security alone is a full-time preoccupation. Unless you already have an in-house web server and experienced staff to maintain it, we recommend outsourcing site hosting.