

The only change I might think of the the FQDN (Fully Qualified Domain Name) of the published Exchange Server. Note regarding Exchange Server 2003: In most cases, the client side setup is identical. This may very well be entirely different than the FDQN of their OWA server address, and therefore if you’re not sure, contact them or look through their support pages. You may also need to ask them for the FQDN of the Exchange server. For example, some providers may have a user naming scheme that is unique to them, or use a domain name that may not reflect the domain name that is in the e-mail address scheme. Hosting Exchange and 3rd-party providers note: If you’re hosting your mailboxes at a 3rd-party Hosted Exchange provider you may want to see what type of information that provider requires. You must have a data plan from your cellular provider, otherwise you’ll get a large bill at the end of the month… Note: These steps might work on some other Nokia phones, most likely the ones using Symbian operating system. Note: The above is not necessary if you’ve correctly published the CAS in DNS. The FQDN of the Exchange Server CAS machine these are covered in other articles on this site.Īssuming you have an Exchange Server 2007 which you want to sync your phone(s) with, this is the information you need:ĥ. I will not go into the server side details. Note: In this article I will only cover the client side (i.e. In this article I will walk you through the simple steps on how to configure your Nokia E71 cellular phone to synchronize with an Exchange Server 2007 organization. What I like about that particular phone is the simplicity of the UI and the extensible possibilities it has, without sacrificing battery power and usability like other 3G phones. The new provider offered them to use Nokia E71 phones, and after some testing we began to deploy the phone.

I have recently migrated the users (and myself) in one of the companies I do consulting for, from one cellular provider to another.
