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Joezer Cookey-Gam, Brendan Keane, Jeffrey Rosen, and Jonathan Runyon

"Professional Windows PowerShell for Exchange Server 2007 Service Pack 1"

The following is an example of a user whose full name is John Doe,
resides in the Sales OU, and is in the domain exchangeexchange.com: CN=John
Doe,OU=Sales,DC=exchangeexchange,DC=com.
??‘ Domain\Account ??“ User account: Typically this is the user ??™ s logon name that is used when the
user logs in to the domain. Following a naming convention of the first initial of the first name
and the complete last name, John Doe from sales would have the following logon name: jdoe .
??‘ UPN: The UPN, or user principal name, is default the user ??™ s logon name @ domain. So for John
Doe, it would be jdoe@exchangeexchange.com . The UPN, like the domain name and the
GUID, must be unique to the domain.
??‘ LegacyExchangeDN: Legacy DN is included for backward compatibility for previous versions
of Exchange. /o=ExchangeExchange/ou=Exchange Administrative Group
(FYDIBOHF23SPDLT)/cn=Configuration/cn=Servers/cn=MB902
??‘ SmtpAddress: This is the address that the user uses to send/receive mail. For example:
John.Doe@exchangeexchange.com .
??‘ Alias: This is usually the short name of a user.
If the PIN ( PIN ) is not specified, a new PIN will be automatically created and emailed to the user. The
PIN Expired ( PINExpired ) is also not required and will assume that the PIN should be treated as an
expired PIN and request the user to change it upon first successful login.


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