R
rwoods
We were previously using Outlook 2002 on Exchange Server 2003. Our internal
mail was handled by the Exchange Server and we use POP3 accounts for our
external mail. With the previous configuration we set the POP3 accounts as
default. When sending an internal e-mail we were able to pick addresses from
the global address list and Outlook would know to send it through the
internal system without manually switching the account before sending the
mail. We recently upgraded a number of users to Outlook 2003 and this no
longer works. If the POP3 account is set as default and you choose an
internal address, Outlook tries to send it through the POP3 account. Is this
a setting I have missed (since it appears to be ok with a few users) or is
this just not possible with 2003? My boss also said he used to be able to mix
accounts. He could send a message with an external address in the "To" field
and an internal address in the "Cc" field. Can anyone shed some light on this?
Thanks for the help.
Rick
mail was handled by the Exchange Server and we use POP3 accounts for our
external mail. With the previous configuration we set the POP3 accounts as
default. When sending an internal e-mail we were able to pick addresses from
the global address list and Outlook would know to send it through the
internal system without manually switching the account before sending the
mail. We recently upgraded a number of users to Outlook 2003 and this no
longer works. If the POP3 account is set as default and you choose an
internal address, Outlook tries to send it through the POP3 account. Is this
a setting I have missed (since it appears to be ok with a few users) or is
this just not possible with 2003? My boss also said he used to be able to mix
accounts. He could send a message with an external address in the "To" field
and an internal address in the "Cc" field. Can anyone shed some light on this?
Thanks for the help.
Rick