D
Duy Nguyen
This is what's happening. When users create calendar events in CA (Pacific
time), Outlook will convert the time difference when user's view it in VA
(Eastern time).
In this case, we set an All Day on Monday in CA, which is essentially Monday
12:00AM to Tuesday 12:00AM. Though you only see it as if its one day, its
defined as 24 hours. Outlook will then translate the Pacific time into
Eastern time for people on PC's with an Eastern time zone. That is why
user's in VA see it as Monday 3:00AM to Tuesday 3:00AM. Outlook is
compromising the 3 hour difference between the two different time zones.
The problem with this is that users in CA sees it as one day but when users
in VA see it, its looks as if its two days.
Any solution or work around?
time), Outlook will convert the time difference when user's view it in VA
(Eastern time).
In this case, we set an All Day on Monday in CA, which is essentially Monday
12:00AM to Tuesday 12:00AM. Though you only see it as if its one day, its
defined as 24 hours. Outlook will then translate the Pacific time into
Eastern time for people on PC's with an Eastern time zone. That is why
user's in VA see it as Monday 3:00AM to Tuesday 3:00AM. Outlook is
compromising the 3 hour difference between the two different time zones.
The problem with this is that users in CA sees it as one day but when users
in VA see it, its looks as if its two days.
Any solution or work around?