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Terminal Services for Windows Server 2008 |
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You Will Learn How To
- Implement and administer Terminal Services in your Windows Server
2008 enterprise
- Install and manage Terminal Servers and Remote Desktop clients
- Enhance a Terminal Services environment with TS Gateway, TS RemoteApp,
and TS Web Access
- Troubleshoot and optimize Terminal Servers and clients
- Manage Terminal Services network infrastructure requirements
- Secure Terminal Services to ensure privacy and legitimate access
Course Benefits
The growth of distributed workforces places increasing pressures on organizations'
IT resources. Windows Server 2008 Terminal Services (TS) provides a centralized
system for accessing applications easily and securely from any network-connected
location. In this course, you learn to install, administer and troubleshoot TS,
maximize remote access technologies, and manage security.
Who Should Attend
Those responsible for setting up and managing a Windows Server 2008 Terminal Services
environment. Knowledge of Windows at the level of, "Windows
Server 2008 Comprehensive Introduction," or, "Windows
Server 2003 Comprehensive Introduction," is assumed.
Hands-On Training
Practical exercises provide hands-on experience in configuring and implementing
Windows Server 2008 Terminal Services. Exercises include:
- Installing Terminal Services
- Configuring Terminal Server and client settings
- Setting up a Terminal Services Gateway
- Deploying applications with TS RemoteApp
- Providing external connectivity with TS Web Access
- Administering Terminal Servers with Group Policies
- Clustering Terminal Servers with NLB
- Securing Terminal Services sessions
Course Content
- Establishing the rationale for thin client technology
- Justifying the business case for Terminal Services
- Exploring third-party interoperability
- Configuring a Terminal Server and TS Licensing
- Modifying Active Directory account settings for TS users
- Accessing TS with the Remote Desktop client
- Navigating the Terminal Services Manager
- Adding new Terminal Servers to the console
- Adding Group Policy Objects to the Active Directory
- Assigning settings to Terminal Servers and clients
- Enabling secure TS client access via the Internet
- Monitoring active TS client connections
- Forcing disconnection of unwanted user sessions
- Providing remote access to Windows-based applications
- Creating .RDP files and .MSI packages for distribution
- Automating RemoteApp distribution with Group Policies
- Installing TS Web Access on an IIS Web server
- Connecting to Terminal Servers with a Web browser
- Establishing Remote Control security policies
- Shadowing TS client sessions
- Preventing TS Server monopolization
- Throttling resource-intensive tasks
- Curtailing multimedia access
- Preventing installation of unapproved software
- Purging profiles and temporary folders
- Providing optimal USB PnP support
- Ensuring consistent resource redirection
- Resolving print driver issues with TS Easy Print
- Ensuring end user licensing agreement (EULA) compliance
- Controlling application execution
- Benchmarking to determine performance limitations
- Monitoring thin client traffic with a protocol analyzer
- Managing TCP port requirements for Terminal Services
- Opening workstation ports for Remote Desktop access
- Clustering TS Servers with Network Load Balancing (NLB)
- Preventing abandoned connections with TS Session Broker
- Adjusting firewalls for Terminal Services
- Configuring TS authentication and encryption
- Denying access to non-compliant clients
- Improving TS security with SSL and VPNs
- Authorizing internal Terminal Server access
- Providing secure logons to external clients
- Choosing appropriate TS Gateway authentication
- Accommodating Remote Desktop access for distributed workforces
- Incorporating port redirection into a TS security plan
- Limiting TS client configurations and activities
- Accessing TS from smartphones and PDAs
- Determining the best clients for your devices
- Configuring appropriate connectivity options
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