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petergroft |
Posted - Feb 07 2023 : 21:24:37 Exchange 2019 turned out to be full of surprises when it comes to the release:
“New to Exchange 2019 is the ability to upgrade your operating system to a newer version while Exchange is installed on Windows Server 2019 or later” (source) Exchange 2019 is ready to handle non-English characters in email addresses. While it is possible to send email to and receive it from such addresses, you cannot add a proxy or an accepted domain with special characters just yet. Basically, this Exchange version prepares ground for the change to come. Exchange 2019 official release was announced at October 22, 2018 at the Microsoft Community Hub. Unfortunately, due to a bug in Windows Server 2019, its rollout has been paused. Exchange Server 2019 Public Preview could have been installed on Windows Server 2016 (both Core and with Desktop Experience). The final release requires Windows Server 2019. The Windows Server Evaluation media has been announced to be available soon on November 13, 2018 in Update on Windows Server 2019 availability. On January, 4th, still no media is available in the evaluation center (https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/cloud-platform/windows-server-trial). This fact has generated some negative feedback. In the meantime, customers have the option to deploy and test Windows Server 2019 in Azure. At the day of this article is published, according to the product lifecycle, Extended Support End Date (also known as the end of life) for Exchange 2016 and Exchange 2019 is the same: 10/14/2025. It does not mean everyone will stop using it right away (I’m looking at you, Exchange 2003 admins!) but that’s the deadline for some companies to migrate to a newer version. If it comes.
To know more visit- https://www.o365cloudexperts.com/blog/exchange-server-2013-to-2019-migration/ |
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