P
Phillip Armitage
I've been asked to set up Exchange Server 2003 and implement it so that
users from both inside and outside our company can access it. I've played
with Exchange's web access client and that is working fine. What I'm testing
now is Outlook installed on individual workstations.
Can Outlook 2003 be configured so that it communicates and displays only
information (mail, contacts, calendars, and the such) that is stored on the
Exchange server. That is, when I install Outlook and it by default creates a
personal folder on the local hard drive, must I keep this or can I delete it
and just use the server as my data repository?
I look forward to your response.
users from both inside and outside our company can access it. I've played
with Exchange's web access client and that is working fine. What I'm testing
now is Outlook installed on individual workstations.
Can Outlook 2003 be configured so that it communicates and displays only
information (mail, contacts, calendars, and the such) that is stored on the
Exchange server. That is, when I install Outlook and it by default creates a
personal folder on the local hard drive, must I keep this or can I delete it
and just use the server as my data repository?
I look forward to your response.