Folder redirection with Group Policy moves user folders — Desktop, Documents, Pictures, and others — from the local PC to a network share on a server. Users access their files transparently, but the d...
Configuring DNS on Windows Server goes beyond simply checking that name resolution works. As the DNS Server role administrator, you manage zones, create and maintain records, set up forwarders, and en...
Documenting your server environment is one of those tasks that always feels like it can wait — until a server fails at midnight and the person on call has no idea what it does, what connects to it, or...
A Windows Server print server centralises printer management — users connect to shared printers via the server, drivers are deployed automatically, and you manage everything from one console. This is ...
PowerShell remoting lets you run commands on remote Windows Servers without needing a full Remote Desktop session. It is faster, scriptable, and works even on Server Core installations with no GUI. Wi...
Windows Server audit policy controls which security events are recorded in the Security event log — login attempts, account changes, file access, privilege use, and more. Configuring audit policy corr...
Setting up DHCP on Windows Server lets your server automatically assign IP addresses, subnet masks, default gateways, and DNS server addresses to devices on your network. Without DHCP, every device ne...
Group Policy is one of the most powerful tools in Windows Server administration. It lets you centrally configure settings across hundreds of computers and users — security policies, software restricti...
Windows services are background processes that run without a user interface — web servers, databases, print spoolers, update agents, and hundreds of others. Knowing how to start, stop, restart, and co...









