B
Brian Maddox
Since Jan 1, 2005, any 2003 Outlook clients are not receiving any meeting
requests from other Outlook users (all versions). Also if someone goes from
non-cached mode to cached mode to test this (like some in our IT dept), they
lose all meeting and appointment requests that have been made since Jan 1.
If reverting back to non-cached the appointments and meeting requests are
still gone (they have apparently been deleted from the exchange 2003 server).
Clients have been patched to SP1 for Outlook 2003 or already were patched to
rule that out as an issue. Is this some new bug for the new year with
Outlook 2003 cached mode?
Any ideas how to first, allow cached Outlook 2003 clients to receive meeting
requests being created (and they must stay on cached - they are execs) and
secondly, how to prevent outlook appointments and meetings from being lost
when switching from non-cached to cached mode (we have already thought about
archiving the calendar items to .pst files prior to this switch if we have to
in the future).
Thanks for any insight and please respond to [email protected].
requests from other Outlook users (all versions). Also if someone goes from
non-cached mode to cached mode to test this (like some in our IT dept), they
lose all meeting and appointment requests that have been made since Jan 1.
If reverting back to non-cached the appointments and meeting requests are
still gone (they have apparently been deleted from the exchange 2003 server).
Clients have been patched to SP1 for Outlook 2003 or already were patched to
rule that out as an issue. Is this some new bug for the new year with
Outlook 2003 cached mode?
Any ideas how to first, allow cached Outlook 2003 clients to receive meeting
requests being created (and they must stay on cached - they are execs) and
secondly, how to prevent outlook appointments and meetings from being lost
when switching from non-cached to cached mode (we have already thought about
archiving the calendar items to .pst files prior to this switch if we have to
in the future).
Thanks for any insight and please respond to [email protected].