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Eric J Owens
TIA! Just migrated to outlook 2003 from 2000 (on a WinXP Pro machine). Is
there a reference anywhere that explains what the various rule statements
mean, or how to change the default boolean when linking the rule statements?
I would love to make use of the new rules but am having difficulty
interpreting their meaning.
For instance, now there is a rule "sender is in 'specified' address book and
on this machine only". The rule does not make sense if the address book is
a subset of the GAL (All Users) which is not 'on this machine only'. Also,
the rule I need should work on the exchange server, not the client.
I am trying to create a rule that recognizes all the mail originating from
my own company (approx. 10,000 employees, then there are also groups, etc.),
but the 'with specific words in the sender's address' apparently does not
search within the string of messages originating from Exchange clients so
top level domain name cannot be used. Nor does looking for the domain name
in the headers seem to work. This appears to only be true of messages
originating from Exchange clients, as messages originating from unix systems
do get filtered.
I would prefer a good reference, but if none exists, then any help with
figuring how to decipher any mail originating from within the same domain
would be great.
Regards,
Eric J Owens
AT&T Business Services
MasterCard Account
there a reference anywhere that explains what the various rule statements
mean, or how to change the default boolean when linking the rule statements?
I would love to make use of the new rules but am having difficulty
interpreting their meaning.
For instance, now there is a rule "sender is in 'specified' address book and
on this machine only". The rule does not make sense if the address book is
a subset of the GAL (All Users) which is not 'on this machine only'. Also,
the rule I need should work on the exchange server, not the client.
I am trying to create a rule that recognizes all the mail originating from
my own company (approx. 10,000 employees, then there are also groups, etc.),
but the 'with specific words in the sender's address' apparently does not
search within the string of messages originating from Exchange clients so
top level domain name cannot be used. Nor does looking for the domain name
in the headers seem to work. This appears to only be true of messages
originating from Exchange clients, as messages originating from unix systems
do get filtered.
I would prefer a good reference, but if none exists, then any help with
figuring how to decipher any mail originating from within the same domain
would be great.
Regards,
Eric J Owens
AT&T Business Services
MasterCard Account