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PREVENTING VIRUSES, WORMS, SPYWARE & SPAM
The
internet is an amazing place that allows each and every
one of us easy access to a wide variety of resources.
Unfortunately, there is an increasing amount of viruses,
worms, spyware and spam that can easily infect your
computer. Your computer in fact may already be infected
and you may not even know it.

THE
IMPORTANCE OF PREVENTING DATA LOSS
Data
loss itself can come in a variety of forms. A virus
can infect your network deleting documents throughout
the company. An employee might maliciously delete sensitive
documents. An important document might be accidentally
overwritten by using the same filename. An electrical
outage might cause your server to crash and damage the
hard drive storing all company data. The company database
might become corrupted. There are a very wide variety
of potential technical disasters just waiting to happen.

SAVE
MONEY WITH A DOMAIN ENVIRONMENT
We
routinely encounter businesses that have setup their
networks in a “peer to peer” or “workgroup” configuration
as opposed to establishing a domain. A peer to peer
network is a configuration that was made popular in
1992 with the release of Microsoft Windows for Workgroups
3.11. Peer to peer networks were easy to setup and required
only a basic knowledge of computer networking. In Windows
XP, this technology is often referred to as “File &
Printer Sharing.” Many businesses forego the cost of
establishing a domain due to their belief that a peer
to peer network is quicker and therefore cheaper to
setup. However as we will demonstrate in this article,
establishing a domain provides your business with a
complete business solution that will serve your needs
now and into the future.

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SAVE
MONEY WITH A DOMAIN ENVIRONMENT
We
routinely encounter businesses that have setup their
networks in a “peer to peer” or “workgroup” configuration
as opposed to establishing a domain. A peer to peer
network is a configuration that was made popular in
1992 with the release of Microsoft Windows for Workgroups
3.11. Peer to peer networks were easy to setup and
required only a basic knowledge of computer networking.
In Windows XP, this technology is often referred to
as “File & Printer Sharing.”
Many
businesses forego the cost of establishing a domain
due to their belief that a peer to peer network is
quicker and therefore cheaper to setup. However as
we will demonstrate in this article, establishing
a domain provides your business with a complete business
solution that will serve your needs now and into the
future. It provides you with a central location from
which to manage your network – simplifying your network
and therefore dramatically reducing technical support.
The
Peer To Peer Network
- A
peer to peer network does not require a server.
However it is not uncommon for us to encounter a
peer to peer network that has a server which has
simply been configured as a peer rather than a domain
controller.
-
In a “peer to peer” or “workgroup” configuration,
each workstation on the network must be separately
configured.
-
The management of your network is spread out amongst
all workstations on the network. When a technical
issue arises, it is not uncommon that it be addressed
on each workstation.
- For
each staff member to have access to each workstation,
a user account must be created on each workstation.
- Shared
drives must be mapped manually from each workstation.
-
Shared printers must be manually connected and printer
drivers installed on each workstation.
-
The user account name on the workstation must match
the server if one exists on the network. So the
user account must be created not only on the workstation
but on the server as well.
- In
a peer to peer network, company data and electronic
mail is stored on various workstations throughout
the network rather than being stored in one central
location. The daily backup job if one exists is
therefore not able to backup all company data because
it is not in one central location.
- The
domain environment requires a server running the
Windows Server operating system. The server is then
configured as a domain controller.
-
The user accounts for the network are created in
one place – on the server. The workstations on the
network are then simply joined to the domain which
allows staff members to utilize their user accounts.
- The
management of the network is conducted from one
place – on the server. When a technical issue arises,
it is typically addressed from one place on the
server which often resolves the problem for the
workstations on the network as well.
-
When a user logs in to the network, the server grants
access to files and directories as defined by the
business owner and/or network administrator. In
addition, they are passed through a login script
which maps common network drive letters throughout
the network.
-
For a user to have access to a printer, they are
simply connected to a print queue on the server.
The print driver is only installed once on the server
and the workstations are then connected to the print
queue.
-
All data in the domain is then typically stored
in one place – on the server. The daily backup then
insures that all data such as company files and
electronic mail are backed up from this location
on a daily basis.
If
you haven’t already done so, we would be happy to
configure your network as a domain environment! Give
us a call at (541) 345-0408.
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