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David
February 24th 04, 07:06 PM
I am currently running a LCS 2003 server in a Windows 2000 domain with
approximately 20 users enabled for IM. Our main goal is to allow
clients of our company to download our customized Windows Messenger
5.0 package, and be able to connect to our corporate Live Comm server
without actually residing on our network. I am guessing this would
involve a sort of front-end/back-end LCS topology?? Hopefully this
makes sense to someone, however I can find no documentation on it
whatsoever, even to the point of whether its possible or not. If
anyone has any suggesstions or solutions, they would be much
appreciated.

Jonathan Kay [MVP]
February 24th 04, 09:46 PM
Greetings David,

See this for some of the scenarios available:
http://microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyId=B714E88B-C2DB-4709-A3F9-6A9D49A48DB9
____________________________________________
Jonathan Kay
Microsoft MVP - Windows Messenger/MSN Messenger
Associate Expert
http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/expertzone/
Messenger Resources - http://messenger.jonathankay.com

"David" > wrote in message
m...
>I am currently running a LCS 2003 server in a Windows 2000 domain with
> approximately 20 users enabled for IM. Our main goal is to allow
> clients of our company to download our customized Windows Messenger
> 5.0 package, and be able to connect to our corporate Live Comm server
> without actually residing on our network. I am guessing this would
> involve a sort of front-end/back-end LCS topology?? Hopefully this
> makes sense to someone, however I can find no documentation on it
> whatsoever, even to the point of whether its possible or not. If
> anyone has any suggesstions or solutions, they would be much
> appreciated.

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