You have an Exchange Server 2003 organization. Users access public folders by using Microsoft
Office Outlook 2003 and Outlook Web Access. You plan to transition the organization to Exchange
Server 2010. You need to ensure that users can access public folders after their mailboxes have been
moved to Exchange Server 2010. What should you do?
A.
Enable public folder referrals.
B.
Run the New Organization Relationship wizard.
C.
Create public folder replicas on an Exchange Server 2010 server.
D.
Run the Microsoft Exchange Inter-Organization Application tool from an Exchange Server 2003
server.
Explanation:
Public folders, introduced in the first version of Microsoft Exchange, are designed for shared access
and provide an easy and effective way to collect, organize, and share information with other people
in your work group or organization. Public folders are hierarchically organized, stored in dedicated
databases, and can be rep Heated between servers running Exchange.
Public Folder Database Creation During Setup.
Computers running Outlook 2003 and earlier or Microsoft Entourage require a public folder
database (previously called the public folder store) to connect to Exchange. Therefore, in a pure
Exchange 2010 organization, as you install the Mailbox server rote on the first server. Setup prompts
you with the question Do you have any client computers running Outlook 2003 and earlier or
Entourage in your organization? If the answer is yes, a public folder database is created. If the
answer is no, a public folder database isn’t created.