Outlook 2003 with Exchange 2000

C

Carlos

I created an appointment and sent an invitation to my home address not part
of network. I have same version of Outlook on my home computer. I recieved
the e-mail, I accepted the meeting invite and it added it to my calendar on
my home computer fine. I then recieved an e-mail saying that my home address
has accepted.
But in the actual invite in the calendar in the office it say 2 attendees
accepted but "No Information" is shown for the actual calendar part.
I thought this person would be listed as part of the meeting.

Please advise.
 
R

Roady [MVP]

This information can only be available when you published your Free/Busy
information since your home computer is outside of the Exchange
organisation.

--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
www.howto-outlook.com

Tips of the month:
-What do the Outlook Icons Mean?
-Create an Office 2003 CD slipstreamed with Service Pack 1
 
C

Carlos

I dont quite understand what you mean? Because the person outside the
organization "acceppted" the meeting and it shows 1 person accepted but on
the scheduling tab it only shows the "No Information".
Is there any article on this somewhere as well. I need to show this to
others.
Thanks.

Roady said:
This information can only be available when you published your Free/Busy
information since your home computer is outside of the Exchange
organisation.

--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
www.howto-outlook.com

Tips of the month:
-What do the Outlook Icons Mean?
-Create an Office 2003 CD slipstreamed with Service Pack 1

-----
Carlos said:
I created an appointment and sent an invitation to my home address not part
of network. I have same version of Outlook on my home computer. I recieved
the e-mail, I accepted the meeting invite and it added it to my calendar
on
my home computer fine. I then recieved an e-mail saying that my home
address
has accepted.
But in the actual invite in the calendar in the office it say 2 attendees
accepted but "No Information" is shown for the actual calendar part.
I thought this person would be listed as part of the meeting.

Please advise.
 
R

Roady [MVP]

The availability information needs to be published. For people inside your
Exchange organisation this is published to the Exchange server automatically
and can only be accessed by people inside your organisation.

To publish your free/busy information to the Internet see;
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/827775

--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
www.howto-outlook.com

Tips of the month:
-What do the Outlook Icons Mean?
-Create an Office 2003 CD slipstreamed with Service Pack 1

-----
Carlos said:
I dont quite understand what you mean? Because the person outside the
organization "acceppted" the meeting and it shows 1 person accepted but on
the scheduling tab it only shows the "No Information".
Is there any article on this somewhere as well. I need to show this to
others.
Thanks.

in
message news:[email protected]...
This information can only be available when you published your Free/Busy
information since your home computer is outside of the Exchange
organisation.

--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
www.howto-outlook.com

Tips of the month:
-What do the Outlook Icons Mean?
-Create an Office 2003 CD slipstreamed with Service Pack 1

-----
Carlos said:
I created an appointment and sent an invitation to my home address not part
of network. I have same version of Outlook on my home computer. I recieved
the e-mail, I accepted the meeting invite and it added it to my
calendar
on
my home computer fine. I then recieved an e-mail saying that my home
address
has accepted.
But in the actual invite in the calendar in the office it say 2 attendees
accepted but "No Information" is shown for the actual calendar part.
I thought this person would be listed as part of the meeting.

Please advise.
 

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