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Showing posts from November, 2014

How To Transfer or Seize (FSMO Roles) - Windows Server 2012

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FSMO roles are the Flexible Single Master Operation Roles of Active Directory which consist of the following five roles in two categories Forest Wide Roles     1. Schema master     2. Domain naming master Domain Wide Roles     3. RID master     4. PDC emulator and,     5. Infrastructure master As a system administrator it very important to plan the storage of this Roles properly after building your domain. Read full article on Active Directory FSMO Roles on Microsoft's Blog HERE However, very important task is to know how to manipulate the FSMO Roles after understanding them theoritically. The video below shows how to transfer the FSMO roles between servers both on the Graphical User Interface and the Command Line Interface. And it also talks about seizing of the FSMO roles.

#InspirationalTuesdays: Dealing with Lifes Problems

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Hello friends, here is another touching webisode of   #InspirationalTuesdays . Talking about how you can deal with any issue of Life easily. Enjoy reading the lovely article below and leave your response in the comment box. How often have you been living life, happy and content, and then suddenly life slaps you in the face with something unexpected? We all have problems, and the truth of the matter is that problems will never go away. They will just change form. One time you may be struggling with health, the next with money, and still the next with relationships. That is both the curse and blessing of life. However, you don't have to suffer because everything isn't perfect in your life. Behind the Scenes of Problems Nothing becomes a problem until you label it so. You've probably noticed that different people have different opinions of what problems are, and how much attention should be given to any one thing. This means that problems exist in our heads, and

Breaking the speed record: New invented Multi-core optical fiber cables transfers data 255 TBps

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Researchers at the Eindhoven University of Technology and the University of Central Florida have developed a new fiber optics cable capable of transmitting the contents of over 5,000 DVDs in a single second – a speed six times greater than the previous record. The advance could help us reach petabit-per-second speeds over the next few years, which will be crucial for keeping up with growing bandwidth demands. By upgrading the equipment at both ends of the cable, IT experts have been able to improve the transmission speed of fiber optics by a factor of 10 every four years, keeping up with the increasing demands for internet traffic. However, over the next few years, this will no longer be enough. Fiber cables as they are currently being made face an inescapable speed limit  of about 100 terabits per second. If we want to avoid a "capacity crunch" by the end of the decade, we'll soon need to replace them with new types of cables that are able to push that limit much fu