Outlook meeting invite problems

G

Guest

I have installed 2 licences of Outlook 2007 (no Exchange - yet). When the
other person sends me an invite to an "Appointment" via email, it does not
come up with the "Accept/Decline" box. Instead it refers to "as the meeting
organiser, you do not have to respond to this message". It obviously thinks
that the 2nd licence is still me. How do I fix this?
 
G

Guest

You don't install licenses, you install the program. Licenses only authorize
you to use the program and have nothing to do with the profile that creates
the meeting request. How are the profiles set up? 2 different people or
aliases of the same person?
 
N

Nick Carus

Hi Milly. Thanks for your reply.

OK - wrong terminology about licences! I have installed Outlook on 2 PC's -
mine and my colleagues. She is trying to send me meeting/appointment invites
via email, and they land in my inbox without the expected accept/decline box
- instead it says that as I'm the meeting organiser, I don't have to respond.
Obviously during the install I made a mistake in configuring it with my ID.
Can I change this? How??

Regards

Nick.

Milly Staples said:
You don't install licenses, you install the program. Licenses only authorize
you to use the program and have nothing to do with the profile that creates
the meeting request. How are the profiles set up? 2 different people or
aliases of the same person?

--
Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook}
Please post all followup questions to the newsgroups only to keep the
discussion intact.


Nick Carus said:
I have installed 2 licences of Outlook 2007 (no Exchange - yet). When the
other person sends me an invite to an "Appointment" via email, it does not
come up with the "Accept/Decline" box. Instead it refers to "as the meeting
organiser, you do not have to respond to this message". It obviously thinks
that the 2nd licence is still me. How do I fix this?
 
M

Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook]

Create a new mail profile for her using her credentials from the ISP.

--
Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook]

Post all replies to the group to keep the discussion intact.

After furious head scratching, Nick Carus asked:

| Hi Milly. Thanks for your reply.
|
| OK - wrong terminology about licences! I have installed Outlook on 2
| PC's - mine and my colleagues. She is trying to send me
| meeting/appointment invites via email, and they land in my inbox
| without the expected accept/decline box - instead it says that as I'm
| the meeting organiser, I don't have to respond. Obviously during the
| install I made a mistake in configuring it with my ID. Can I change
| this? How??
|
| Regards
|
| Nick.
|
| "Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook]" wrote:
|
|| You don't install licenses, you install the program. Licenses only
|| authorize you to use the program and have nothing to do with the
|| profile that creates the meeting request. How are the profiles set
|| up? 2 different people or aliases of the same person?
||
|| --
|| Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook}
|| Please post all followup questions to the newsgroups only to keep the
|| discussion intact.
||
||
|| "Nick Carus" wrote:
||
||| I have installed 2 licences of Outlook 2007 (no Exchange - yet).
||| When the other person sends me an invite to an "Appointment" via
||| email, it does not come up with the "Accept/Decline" box. Instead
||| it refers to "as the meeting organiser, you do not have to respond
||| to this message". It obviously thinks that the 2nd licence is still
||| me. How do I fix this?
 

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