Calendar time change

J

Jr

Since the daylight saving time change. We are having
trouble with users calender appointments being 1 hour off.
We are using Exchange 5.5/Outlook 2000. In Outlook we had
them check the box indicating adjustment for daylight
saving time. After 2 days the time changed back an hour
again. This seems to be only happening with our 2000 and
XP users only. We were able to correct the problem with
our XP users, but not the Windows 2000 users. Any ideas
what is causing this.
With the check mark set for "Adjust for daylight saving
time" the "current time" setting shows 1 hour ahead. When
the check mark is removed it shows the current time.
The system time that displays in the sytem tray is current
when the check mark is set, but the current time in
Outlook 2000 is not...confused? I am.
We are on Central time.
 
D

Diane Poremsky [MVP]

Is the time zone correct on the computer?

1) Verify the time zone is correct on the computer. Change it to something
else, change it to the correct zone. Enable/disable the DST option and
apply - then reenable it (if your area supports DST).
2) Open Outlook - verify the settings match the settings in windows. Change
the setting, apply, then apply the correct settings. (The computer's
settings should change when you change them in Outlook.)
3) Go back to the windows settings and verify they are correct.

After doing this, does it still change to the old time after 2 days?
 
J

Jim Caristi

I'm having the same problem with Outlook 2002. I have
tried all the suggestions below, and the check box always
reverts to "unchecked" in Outlook. I even located an
article in the MS KB that gave a "workaround" involving
just setting the checkbox and closing Outlook and
reopening it. That didn't work either.
When I tried the suggestion below, changing Outlook's time
did change the computer's time. But any attempt to impose
DST in any time zone failed. Any help would be
appreciated. Thanks.
-----Original Message-----
Is the time zone correct on the computer?

1) Verify the time zone is correct on the computer. Change it to something
else, change it to the correct zone. Enable/disable the DST option and
apply - then reenable it (if your area supports DST).
2) Open Outlook - verify the settings match the settings in windows. Change
the setting, apply, then apply the correct settings. (The computer's
settings should change when you change them in Outlook.)
3) Go back to the windows settings and verify they are correct.

After doing this, does it still change to the old time after 2 days?

--
Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook]
Author, Teach Yourself Outlook 2003 in 24 Hours
Coauthor, OneNote 2003 for Windows (Visual QuickStart Guide)
Author, Google and Other Search Engines (Visual QuickStart Guide)


Outlook & Exchange Solutions Center: http://www.slipstick.com




Since the daylight saving time change. We are having
trouble with users calender appointments being 1 hour off.
We are using Exchange 5.5/Outlook 2000. In Outlook we had
them check the box indicating adjustment for daylight
saving time. After 2 days the time changed back an hour
again. This seems to be only happening with our 2000 and
XP users only. We were able to correct the problem with
our XP users, but not the Windows 2000 users. Any ideas
what is causing this.
With the check mark set for "Adjust for daylight saving
time" the "current time" setting shows 1 hour ahead. When
the check mark is removed it shows the current time.
The system time that displays in the sytem tray is current
when the check mark is set, but the current time in
Outlook 2000 is not...confused? I am.
We are on Central time.


.
 
D

Diane Poremsky [MVP]

Do you have the latest Office SP installed?

--


Jim Caristi said:
I'm having the same problem with Outlook 2002. I have
tried all the suggestions below, and the check box always
reverts to "unchecked" in Outlook. I even located an
article in the MS KB that gave a "workaround" involving
just setting the checkbox and closing Outlook and
reopening it. That didn't work either.
When I tried the suggestion below, changing Outlook's time
did change the computer's time. But any attempt to impose
DST in any time zone failed. Any help would be
appreciated. Thanks.
-----Original Message-----
Is the time zone correct on the computer?

1) Verify the time zone is correct on the computer. Change it to something
else, change it to the correct zone. Enable/disable the DST option and
apply - then reenable it (if your area supports DST).
2) Open Outlook - verify the settings match the settings in windows. Change
the setting, apply, then apply the correct settings. (The computer's
settings should change when you change them in Outlook.)
3) Go back to the windows settings and verify they are correct.

After doing this, does it still change to the old time after 2 days?

--
Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook]
Author, Teach Yourself Outlook 2003 in 24 Hours
Coauthor, OneNote 2003 for Windows (Visual QuickStart Guide)
Author, Google and Other Search Engines (Visual QuickStart Guide)


Outlook & Exchange Solutions Center: http://www.slipstick.com




Since the daylight saving time change. We are having
trouble with users calender appointments being 1 hour off.
We are using Exchange 5.5/Outlook 2000. In Outlook we had
them check the box indicating adjustment for daylight
saving time. After 2 days the time changed back an hour
again. This seems to be only happening with our 2000 and
XP users only. We were able to correct the problem with
our XP users, but not the Windows 2000 users. Any ideas
what is causing this.
With the check mark set for "Adjust for daylight saving
time" the "current time" setting shows 1 hour ahead. When
the check mark is removed it shows the current time.
The system time that displays in the sytem tray is current
when the check mark is set, but the current time in
Outlook 2000 is not...confused? I am.
We are on Central time.


.
 
J

Jim Caristi

Thank you! That did it!
-----Original Message-----
Do you have the latest Office SP installed?

--


Jim Caristi said:
I'm having the same problem with Outlook 2002. I have
tried all the suggestions below, and the check box always
reverts to "unchecked" in Outlook. I even located an
article in the MS KB that gave a "workaround" involving
just setting the checkbox and closing Outlook and
reopening it. That didn't work either.
When I tried the suggestion below, changing Outlook's time
did change the computer's time. But any attempt to impose
DST in any time zone failed. Any help would be
appreciated. Thanks.
-----Original Message-----
Is the time zone correct on the computer?

1) Verify the time zone is correct on the computer. Change it to something
else, change it to the correct zone. Enable/disable the DST option and
apply - then reenable it (if your area supports DST).
2) Open Outlook - verify the settings match the settings in windows. Change
the setting, apply, then apply the correct settings.
(The
computer's
settings should change when you change them in Outlook.)
3) Go back to the windows settings and verify they are correct.

After doing this, does it still change to the old time after 2 days?

--
Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook]
Author, Teach Yourself Outlook 2003 in 24 Hours
Coauthor, OneNote 2003 for Windows (Visual QuickStart Guide)
Author, Google and Other Search Engines (Visual QuickStart Guide)


Outlook & Exchange Solutions Center: http://www.slipstick.com




Since the daylight saving time change. We are having
trouble with users calender appointments being 1 hour off.
We are using Exchange 5.5/Outlook 2000. In Outlook we had
them check the box indicating adjustment for daylight
saving time. After 2 days the time changed back an hour
again. This seems to be only happening with our 2000 and
XP users only. We were able to correct the problem with
our XP users, but not the Windows 2000 users. Any ideas
what is causing this.
With the check mark set for "Adjust for daylight saving
time" the "current time" setting shows 1 hour ahead. When
the check mark is removed it shows the current time.
The system time that displays in the sytem tray is current
when the check mark is set, but the current time in
Outlook 2000 is not...confused? I am.
We are on Central time.


.


.
 

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