Posts about BPOS:

Connecting Office 365 and FOPE

Office 365 Beta gives you automatic access to Forefront Online Protection for Exchange to protect the mail flow into your Office 365 environment.  We recently released a guidance document that includes some of the known issues and some of the scenarios for more advanced mail flows.  The document discusses the following scenarios in depth but there’s also a video available if that’s more your cup of tea.

Fully hosted scenario—Email flows exclusively through the cloud (Internet), without any interaction with on-premises servers. For more information, see Fully Hosted Scenario.

Shared address space with on-premises relay scenario—Email is hosted partially in the cloud (Internet) and partially on-premises, and mail flow is controlled on-premises.

Internal mail flow scenario—Both the sender and the recipients are within the same organization, and the organization has mailboxes both in the cloud and on-premises. However, unlike the previous scenario, not all mail is controlled by the on-premises mail server. In this scenario, email is sent between the cloud and the on-premises server without being sent to the Internet and FOPE skips all filtering operations.

Outbound smart host scenario—FOPE acts as a smart host, redirecting outbound mail to an on-premises server that applies additional processing before delivering mail to its final destination. However, incoming mail goes straight to the Exchange Online servers without passing through an on-premises server. You may want to consider this option for your organization if you have an on-premises application or other compliance solution you use to filter outgoing mail and you also want the benefits of FOPE edge, virus, policy, and spam filtering.

Inbound safe listing scenario—Email is sent inbound through FOPE to Microsoft Exchange Online from a trusted organization. In this scenario, FOPE is configured to skip IP address filtering on inbound mail sent from IP addresses specified in a safe list. You can also configure FOPE to skip policy and spam filtering.

Regulated partner with forced TLS scenario—Forced inbound and outbound transport layer security (TLS) is used to secure all routing channels with business regulated partners.

There’s no way to get access to the Office 365 Beta right now but you can get a BPOS trail if you’d like to see how exchange online works.

Connecting Office 365 and FOPE

Why not Gmail?

I was just surfing about our sites as you do and happened across this rather interesting little video that covers some of the reasons that Outlook is better for business than Gmail.  As an ex Gmail user I wasn’t thinking about this stuff when it was just me using Gmail on my own but it’s hard to see how it can work well in a corporate environment.  The amount of time a PA needs to be able to see resource availability or to securely (or in a SOx compliant way) access someone else’s info is frequent enough that they’d surely get pretty frustrated pretty quickly.  The need for BES servers to be on premise and for remote wipe to be a pain in the butt must cause lots of pain for IT Depts too.  Anyway the video walks through some scenarios quite nicely and only takes a couple of minutes.

Why not Gmail?

Why not Gmail?

Video: How to remote wipe Windows Phone 7 from BPOS

When you connect your Windows Phone 7 device up to the cloud you get a whole bunch of abilities through the windowsphone.live.com portal including the ability to remotely change device passwords, to locate your phone and to remote wipe your phone.  What you might not realise is that when you connect a device to an Exchange account you also get the ability to do a remote wipe thus giving corporate level security to your device.  Rather than detail the steps I recorded the following little video of the process:

Windows Phone 7 remote device with from BPOS

If you don’t have a BPOS account you can get one by signing up for the FREE trial

Video: How to remote wipe Windows Phone 7 from BPOS

How healthy is your BPOS service

How healthy is your BPOS service

IT Professionals love knowing what’s going on with their stuff.  Be it that blinking light that shows hard disk activity on your laptop* or knowing that your SQL Server is running perfectly you need to know what’s working and what’s not.  With the cloud that becomes ever more important as you outsource the mundane management of your stuff you need to know it’s working. 

Well now you can with a handy dashboard!

Seriously though for BPOS you now can with the Microsoft Online Services Dashboard which gives you not only current service status for every part of BPOS but also historic information (for when the Gail from accounting asks why her mail was slow on September 21st between 10:03am and 1:01pm How healthy is your BPOS service) .  The current view is “super-green” as some ‘softies like to say but if you back to September 21 in Europe you’ll see we had a hiccup.  I love the honesty of this.  It shows the right way for cloud services to be run.

How healthy is your BPOS service

Also worthy of note is that there’s an RSS feed that you can subscribe to so you can get even faster updates, so you don’t always have to check the dash.  And your users can access the portal too, so you don’t have to recreate it internally.

 

*the hard disk light, what would we do without it…it’s been there for all time and it’s still the best indication that your PC is doing something, even if you don’t know what it is…it shows it’s alive or dead.  I love that little light.

How healthy is your BPOS service

Signature Synchronisation

Signature Synchronisation 

A couple of days ago I was a partner event in Manchester and I was asked a BPOS question that totally stumped me at the time.

“Will signatures that I set on OWA (Outlook Web Access) or in Outlook synchronise across all the computers I use, and OWA?”

The simple answer is no.  But having done lots of digging around there aren’t many email solutions that do offer this kind of functionality.  The way I get around this is I use Windows Live Sync (soon to be Windows Live Mesh) part of the Windows Live Essentials Beta.  This keeps all my signatures in sync across the different machines I use.  For OWA I set my signature manually.

If anyone has any better ideas for this, please let me know.  And a thank you goes out to those who helped me to the answer.

Signature Synchronisation

Why Google is not a business platform

Danny Burlage of BPOS Rocks wrote this fantastic article on why Google is not fit for business – it’s something we know all to well, people who’ve gone Google tell us.  Danny’s article is very good so I’m not going to paraphrase it much but I love this quote:

Google’s Business Model is based on advertising, not on creating business applications.

BPOS Rocks: Why Google is not a business platform

Why Google is not a business platform

Resources for BPOS and Exchange Online

Continuing my BPOS odessy I’ve found some good resources for BPOS and Exchange Online that I thought it’d be worth pointing you to:

Online Services TechNet library – this library contains details of lots of differnet aspects of BPOS, including how to get your Exchange Online accounts to work with your mobile device (no not just Windows Mobile!).

The BPOS team blog – contains lots of tips and tricks (including the oft missed requirement for iOS 4.0.1 or higher on iPhone, it’s required because iOS 4 has some niggles with Exchange)

BPOS Live at TechEd NA – A great panel from TechEd on BPOS with some nice twitter q’s.  The sounds a bit ropey but it’s still worth the watch.

Online Services Forums – Ask questions and get help from Microsoft and the community

Email, the Lowest-Hanging Fruit of the Cloud – A great article about why it’s good to use cloud based Email

Domain and User Setup – Keith goes through how to configure your domain and setup some users on BPOs


Resources for BPOS and Exchange Online

Scenarios where BPOS is brilliant

As part of my dive into the world of Microsoft Online Services one of the things I’ve not been able to find in one place – please correct me if I’m wrong – is a list scenarios where BPOS can really help you out.  Our various partners who help you get up and running on BPOS have some good stuff so what I’ve done here is aggregated some of that info and made it more generic.

Scenarios where BPOS is brilliant

You’ve realised that Email is low hanging fruit in the cloud tree

Email is really easy to move to the cloud.  There are lots of distinct units (mail boxes) that mean the impact on testing and a gradual rollout to BPOS is simple to do.  Not only that but there’s the high availability and low cost of management, you don’t need to patch or any of that stuff and you don’t need to buy the tin.  You also don’t need to get in with both feet.  Your cloud solution (or at least BPOS) can coexist with on premise (dare we say private cloud?) meaning you get to do this as you feel comfortable with it.

Your internal customers are used to email delivered from the cloud too, in fact they probably expect it – especially the younger members of your staff.  They’ve grown up with services like Hotmail, Yahoo! mail, Gmail and the likes so they expect their email to always be there, to never go down, to never require maintenance, to have huge storage capacity (25gb is the default with BPOS).  This is an example of where the consumerisation of IT is driving your users expectations.  BPOS represents the best first step to the cloud.

You’ve out-grown your existing Exchange environment

Coexistence in Exchange means you can add to your existing Exchange infrastructure by connecting to BPOS.  That means you get your GAL extended into the cloud and it all feels seamless for your users.  There are times when you need to deploy new Exchange 2010 boxes internally but they are reducing.  Compliance could be a major turn off but in the case of BPOS that’s not the case!  SOx and the likes are supported by BPOS they aren’t by many other providers.

Storage is a big thing here.  How much storage do your on premise Exchange users get?  The 25gb offered by BPOS could be an expensive thing to grow to for all your customers, if you needed to buy the spindles and platters.

Again it goes down the cost of tin and maintenance, there are times when you’ll want to scale out your Exchange infrastructure but it now should be ROI costed against BPOS.

You’ve acquired a company on another system

I love this one.  Your company bought another company, again, without thinking about how to integrate the IT systems.  Email just works right?  Well…er..er…

We’ve seen Exchange Online used for just this scenario quite a lot.  You have to get people onto your email system yesterday, it’s imperative to keep the newly acquired business functional, profitable and (possibly) to show them who’s boss.  The ability to integrate Exchange Online rapidly with your existing structure, you can do it in about an hour if the DNS gods are shing on you and the wind is in the right direction, is superb.  They need access to your GAL, they’ve got it, they need to start receiving email @contoso.com , they’ve got it.

Not only that but all their mail can be in brought over too so they don’t loose their archive of 10 year old email Exchanges that they intend to use to justify that pay rise.

Scenarios where BPOS is brilliant

You need to move from another Internet based mail system

Same solution as above, mailboxes can be imported.  That is super cool for moving from one provider to another, if they had an outage recently because they can’t really scale and don’t really have an enterprise ready solution.  In fact this scenario applies to moving off of other in house email systems.

Asside: I once helped move from a green screen email system to a gui based one.  Email volume tripled overnight and the reason was it became more usable.  Unfortunately that solution didn’t scale, but it delivers a bit of sage advice.  Be sure what you move to can scale beyond what you currently consider the norm.

You use SBS and you’ve outgrown your 75 user limit

SBS or Small Business Server includes Exchange and it’s all a small business needs to get started.  However there’s a limit of 75 users and a tighter limit on the disk space you have installed in your box (that’s a physical limit not an OS limit).  If you need more than 75 mail boxes or you need more space than you have in that box Exchange Online is for you.

SBS and Exchange Online have been used in other interesting places too, for example the two work really well for project offices.  Everyone on the project only really works on the project but they need to be able to deal with email at a higher level.

You’re company has expanded into a new country and mail’s slow

Scenarios where BPOS is brilliantThis is another of my favourite scenarios, mainly because a friend of mine has been hit by the crippling situation that is SLoooooooooooooooW email.  She’s just started work at a new company, the company is actually new to UK and it’s main offices are in India.  Things are not so good from a reliability perspective and a speed perspective.  For example they have on premise Exchange in India (where everyone is in the same building) but have a slow link out the Internet.

When something is sent internally it’s instant, when it goes to her it can take a while, especially when it’s a 10mb Excel doc.  When she checks her email it has to cross that little tiny pipe to get back to her, whilst she’s waiting.

This could be solved by Exchange Online.  If her company set up Exchange Online for her she’d be able to take advantage of her fast home broadband connect when she’s connected to the Exchange Online servers.  Sure the files would still have to cross a tiny pipe but not whilst she’s waiting.  Her experience would be better…in fact she might not be quitting next week.

In fact there is more to BPOS than just email, Sharepoint provides the perfect solution to this problem when it’s in the cloud.  The ability to place a large file somewhere, or a report or just some info, and to only have to manage one place is astounding.  When it’s in the cloud with BPOS it’s even better for people working remotely because you don’t need to worry about your network links.

You have a short term need for extra people with email

You need 100 seats now.  You’ve got a massive sales drive hitting the ground and you need 100 new call handlers with email access like it was yesterday.  BPOS can do that, you don’t need to wait to buy the tin, build it, connect it…none of that.  You just do it.  And when it’s done, as long as it’s been over a year you unsubscribe those seats and if it’s not you begin your cloud migration because you just proved that cloud email works.

Summary

I wrote this because cloud based email is worth thinking about.  IT Pros need to be questioning when they can move to the cloud and Emails the easy way.  I’d really love to know what you think, which is what the comments are for.  Have I missed any scenarios that you think we all need to be considering?

Here’s more on BPOS by me you should signup for BPOS and start trying it out today too.

Scenarios where BPOS is brilliant

Multiple email addresses and BPOS Exchange Online

Over the past week I’ve been asking people on twitter to talk to me about their experiences with BPOS and I had an interesting conversational thread with @IAmKat about multiple email accounts and how to send and receive.  So I did some digging.

Firstly it’s really easy to receive email into one account from different addresses.  For example, say I want to collect emails sent to admin@simon-may.com and have them go to my normal mail address.  All I need to do (as the administrator of my BPOS account) is go to the Admin Center and edit my user account for the mail account where I want to receive the mail.  If I then scroll down I can add any unused alias at any domain that I’ve got associated with my account.  A great example of this would be to add the .co.uk domain if you normally use only the .com domain for your org.

Nothing here for your end user to do to receive this mail.

Multiple email addresses and BPOS Exchange Online

That’s only half the story though…what about sending?

That’s where things become more tricky.  The BPOS team blog has the answer though in the form of distribution lists.  Essentially what you do is create a dist list and allow one user to manage the list, then they can send and receive from it…it’s not super simple though which is a shame.

Multiple email addresses and BPOS Exchange Online

Business Productivity Online Standard Suite Deployment Guide

If you’re looking for help deploying BPOS and or Exchange Online then look no further, this very handy guide is what you need.  It covers all the bases from configuring mailboxes, setting up email coexistence, migrating existing mail boxes synchronising with AD to setting up Office Communications Online.

Well recommended to any IT Pros thinking about deploying BPOS.

Download details: Business Productivity Online Standard Suite Deployment Guide


Business Productivity Online Standard Suite Deployment Guide