Our Pages Are Best Viewed At 800 x 600 Resolution
Return
to Main Menu
Back One Page
Place Order by Mail
Contact Us
|
|
Irfan
Chaudhry John Mueller
ISBN: 0-7356-0633-1
Pages: 576
Disk:
Suggested Retail Price: $49.99 US
Stolin-Softwares Price: $39.99
Your Savings is: $10.00
Release: 6/28/2000
Level: Int/Adv |
Performance tuning and optimization (PTO)
can reduce your cost of ownership by ensuring you get the performance you've
paid for from existing hardware, software, and network infrastructure.
MICROSOFT® WINDOWS® 2000 PERFORMANCE TUNING TECHNICAL REFERENCE
gives you both theoretical and real-world information about PTO for Windows
2000 Server and provides hands-on techniques and information about the
latest tuning tools. This book's insights and tips will help you tune Windows
2000 for maximum performance and work around bottlenecks. You'll get the
technical drill-down on how to reduce application errors, increase user
productivity, avoid server downtime, and take advantage of Active Directory™
services. This comprehensive one-volume reference will help you to:
-
Master Windows 2000 tuning fundamentals: Grasp
how the Windows 2000 Server kernel and features such as processes, threads,
and memory management can affect performance.
-
Spot and fix bottlenecks: Discover how to
use the Windows 2000 Server system monitor and network monitor to diagnose
and eliminate processor, memory, and disk problems that affect network
performance.
-
Use Active Directory services and other advanced
features: Learn how to make the most of Active Directory services in tuning
and find out how to use techniques such as CPU and bandwidth throttling
and HTTP compression to get top performance.
-
Exploit the latest performance-tuning tools:
Find out how to use performance-tuning tools available in the Microsoft
Windows 2000 Server Resource Kit and from third parties.
-
Optimize Windows 2000 for the Internet: Discover
how to optimize Windows 2000 for peak performance as an Internet server
and find out how technologies such as processor quotas, accounting, and
Active Server pages can affect performance.
|
|