Located outside our service areas? No problem. We also offer this course in the Live
Online format. If you prefer face-to-face interaction, we offer hotel/airfare packages that are extremely inexpensive. Quite often, we bundle the hotel stay into the cost of the class for no extra charge.
Audience
This course is intended for Windows Server IT professionals, administrators and decision makers who have knowledge and practical experience with previous versions of Microsoft Windows Server (Windows Server 2000/2003/ 2008 or 2008 R2) and network technologies. It is an excellent training course for IT Administrators, who want to expand their knowledge about Windows Server 2012 and want to learn about its amazing new features.
Prerequisites
This Windows Server 2012 training course is ideal for IT professionals who have three or more years of experience designing, configuring or supporting Microsoft Windows Server operating systems. Before attending this course, students must have:
- Basic understanding and experience with Microsoft Windows Server (2000/2003/2008/R2)
- TCP/IP and networking skills
- Basic understanding and experience with virtual clients/server (VMware or Microsoft)
- Experience working in a domain environment
- Experience using desktop and command-line tools
At Course Completion
After completing this course, students will get the "big picture" about the new features of Windows Server 2012.
Course Outline
Module 1: Server Management in Windows Server 2012
Lesson 1: What's New in Server Manager
Lesson 2: Windows PowerShell and Server Core Enhancement
Lesson 3: What's New in AD DS?
Lesson 4: Dynamic Access Control
Module 2: Storage, Networking and Availability in Windows
Lesson 1: Storage Enhancements
Lesson 2: What's New in Remote Access
Lesson 3: New and Improved Networking Technologies
Lesson 4: Availability Enhancements
Module 3: Hyper-V in Windows Server 2012
Lesson 1: Storage Enhancements
Lesson 2: What's New in Networking
Lesson 3: Introducing Hyper-V Replica
Lesson 4: What's New in Guest Clustering and VM Monitoring
Lesson 5: Virtual Machine Movement in Hyper-V