Microsoft Exchange 2003 - Global Settings, Internet Message
Introduction to Exchange 2003 Global Settings, Internet Message Formats
Even though the Global Settings folder is at the top of the Exchange System Manager, people rarely visit this
area. Nevertheless, the settings here have far reaching consequences, so make sure you investigate and then make thoughtful decisions on your Internet settings.
I use RTF format for my email, so I declare a bias in its favour. On
reflection, I would want a good reason to deny users the ability to send rich-text and graphics. Opponents of my view would argue that plain text offers simplicity, smaller message size and fewer problems.
Over to you do decide.
I put deny rich-text format in that box that says: 'Yes I understand this feature, but NO I do not need it'.
To make your decisions on rich-text format, right-click Message Delivery, Default (tab) then Advanced (tab), see diagram opposite.
I put 'Never use Exchange rich-text format' in that imaginary box that says: 'Yes I understand this feature, but NO I do not need it'.
To make your decisions on rich-text format, right-click Message Delivery, Default (tab) then Advanced (tab), see diagram opposite.
Guy Recommends:
The SolarWinds Exchange Monitor
Here is a
free tool to monitor your Exchange Server. Download and
install the utility, then inspect your mail queues, monitor the Exchange
server's memory, confirm there is enough disk space and check the CPU
utilization.
This is the real deal - there is no catch. SolarWinds provides this
fully-functioning freebie, as part of their commitment to supporting
the network management community.
Guy's advice is NO out-of-office responses. If you agree with me, just leave the checkbox blank as shown in the diagram opposite. Here are 3 reasons, for my viewpoint on Global Settings:
1) Spammers send spread-shots of 100s of emails trying to guess the names of your users' mailboxes. Now, if they receive an out-of-office reply from john.smith@ youremail.com, then they can add him to
their spam list and send poor john more and more spam.
2) It's claimed that thieves wait until they get your out-of-office reply then go around and rob your office / house. I leave you to work out the chances for your circumstances.
3) Do outsiders really need to know if one of your staff is away? These days people can pick up their email virtually anywhere via OWA or OMA, that email will get answered as soon as the recipient can
deal with it. Again I leave you to assess the merits of this argument for your scenario.
What is your attitude to non-delivery reports? Useful or a pain? On reflection, I would prefer to collect NDRs, after all they are valuable for troubleshooting, see here for the meaning of
Microsoft's
NDR error codes.
If you were to check: 'Preserve sender's display name on message', then internet recipients would not see your user's friendly or Full Name in the senders email address. I can give you an example of why
you may wish to prevent your sender's name displaying. The problem is with companies who format the display names as Lastname, Firstname.
Let me explain by way of an example. One day I had an email from Leslie B. Thomas. Well I replied Dear Leslie, whereupon they wrote back in a starchy bristling tone to say that their first name was
Thomas and they did not take kindly to being called Dear Leslie.
Guy Recommends: SolarWinds' Free Bulk Mailbox Import Tool
Import users from a spreadsheet, complete with their mailbox. Just provide a list of the
users with the fields in the
top row, and save as .csv file. Then launch this FREE utility, match
your Exchange fields with AD's
attributes, click and import the users. Optionally, you can
provide the name of the OU where the new mailboxes will be born.
There are also two bonus tools in the free download, and all 3 have been approved by Microsoft:
Bulk-import new users and mailboxes into Active Directory.
My advice is leave the Message encoding setting as 'both'. What this setting
does is allow the clients, not the server, to choose their preferred format, html or plain text. However some organizations like to enforce users to send email as plain text. On the other
hand, if you are troubleshooting winmail.dat errors, the Message format tab is the place to investigate. Here is a possible scenario that causes Outlook to create the winmail.dat files.
The position is that internally your organization loves html messages. However, people on the outside hate html and only accept plain text. When your html lovers send an email to the html
haters, the result is a plain text message with an extra winmail.dat file with all the html extra bits.
When your users send email to the internet you may want them to have different settings from when they email internally, for example send emails plain text rather than rich-text format. You also should make a decision on out-of-office
replies to recipients outside of your Exchange organization. The Global Settings folder is tucked away at the top of the Exchange System Manager. Microsoft put the folder there so that you
would investigate users settings, do not disappoint them.
If you like this page then please share it with your friends
Here is a
free tool to monitor your Exchange Server.
Download the utility, then inspect your mail queues, monitor Exchange server's
memory, confirm there is enough disk space and check the CPU utilization.