Dragnix122507
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- Location
- Napa, CA
I have a Doctor's Office that we've been doing some work with for a while now. They have two offices, call them Office 1 and Office 2. Office 2 is moving in about four weeks, by then we need to put in new computers, a new server, network equipment and etcetera. Right now, both offices remote into a single Windows 2003 Server (that is also a DC) at Office 1. Currently there is a total of approximately 16 users remotely logging into this server all as Administrator... It's a real mess. Anyway, here is the details for the current configuration:
Office 1:
Windows Server 2003 (DC, AD, DNS, Terminal Services)
Windows Server 2008 (SQL for their Medical Program)
12-15 users on a mix of Windows XP and Windows 7, some in the domain, some not in the domain
Office 2:
4-6 users on a mix of Windows XP and Windows 7 that remotely login to the Windows Server 2003
Here is what we're looking at for the new Office 2:
15-20 users on 15 new computers, 4-6 being re-used
Now, both offices are going to have 50/50 MBps (at least) connections from Comcast.
Here's what I'm thinking we should do:
Replace the Windows Server 2003 with a new Dell PowerEdge (Windows Server 2008). It will run two VMs, one for the DC, AD, DHCP and DNS Services, the other for all of the necessary Remote Applications. I'd leave the SQL server in place since it's not even a full year old. 15 new Dell OptiPlex 3010s running Windows 7 Professional in addition to the ones already in Office 1. They will all be joined to the domain and will access my second VM for all their remote applications and the first for other network services. They want wireless in the new office that allows both internal and external (guest) access. I was thinking I would put in a 48-port Smart/Managed Switch and 4 WAPs. I'm thinking a ZyXEL XGS1910-48 and maybe four Ubiquiti UAPs running either two VLANs or utilizing the Ubiquiti Guest Network feature. There is a VPN tunnel in place that the Telecom company put in for their VoIP phones which could make remote access and DC/AD communication quite a bit easier. So we're looking at a total of 30-35 users that will all need to be in the domain and have remote access to the terminal server. I know that we'll need that number of User CALs and Remote Desktop Services CALs. For the e-mail, they're looking into Office 365 for it's hosted exchange and chat client features.
Any input would be greatly appreciated. I've done several smaller installations/migrations, but not more than 10-15 users. I'm open to any advice anyone could offer... I'm sure I've missed something somewhere as I'm not super skilled at concisely typing information, so if you've got any questions, I'll be watching the thread for a while.
Oh and I realize it's near to impossible, but they'd like it done by early November and I've got three other, smaller projects going on that are supposed to be done by then as well. I've communicated to them that we really need to get the ball rolling, but it is what it is...
Thanks again, all.
Office 1:
Windows Server 2003 (DC, AD, DNS, Terminal Services)
Windows Server 2008 (SQL for their Medical Program)
12-15 users on a mix of Windows XP and Windows 7, some in the domain, some not in the domain
Office 2:
4-6 users on a mix of Windows XP and Windows 7 that remotely login to the Windows Server 2003
Here is what we're looking at for the new Office 2:
15-20 users on 15 new computers, 4-6 being re-used
Now, both offices are going to have 50/50 MBps (at least) connections from Comcast.
Here's what I'm thinking we should do:
Replace the Windows Server 2003 with a new Dell PowerEdge (Windows Server 2008). It will run two VMs, one for the DC, AD, DHCP and DNS Services, the other for all of the necessary Remote Applications. I'd leave the SQL server in place since it's not even a full year old. 15 new Dell OptiPlex 3010s running Windows 7 Professional in addition to the ones already in Office 1. They will all be joined to the domain and will access my second VM for all their remote applications and the first for other network services. They want wireless in the new office that allows both internal and external (guest) access. I was thinking I would put in a 48-port Smart/Managed Switch and 4 WAPs. I'm thinking a ZyXEL XGS1910-48 and maybe four Ubiquiti UAPs running either two VLANs or utilizing the Ubiquiti Guest Network feature. There is a VPN tunnel in place that the Telecom company put in for their VoIP phones which could make remote access and DC/AD communication quite a bit easier. So we're looking at a total of 30-35 users that will all need to be in the domain and have remote access to the terminal server. I know that we'll need that number of User CALs and Remote Desktop Services CALs. For the e-mail, they're looking into Office 365 for it's hosted exchange and chat client features.
Any input would be greatly appreciated. I've done several smaller installations/migrations, but not more than 10-15 users. I'm open to any advice anyone could offer... I'm sure I've missed something somewhere as I'm not super skilled at concisely typing information, so if you've got any questions, I'll be watching the thread for a while.
Oh and I realize it's near to impossible, but they'd like it done by early November and I've got three other, smaller projects going on that are supposed to be done by then as well. I've communicated to them that we really need to get the ball rolling, but it is what it is...
Thanks again, all.