J
jmalloney
Ok I thought I was in the clear with the whole DST update but I guess not.
I have patched all my clients, servers, and Exchange servers. Rather than
use the dreaded tzmove on Exchange for the Outlook Clients (2000) we had our
users reschedule recurring appointments after the clients were patched, that
way they would be rescheduled for the correct time. It seems to have worked
fine for everyone except for a few clients.
On a few clients the meetings in their calendar still show 1 hour later for
the extra DST weeks. They did receive the patch and I verified this by
changing their clock to March 11 at 1:59am and watched it switch to 3am. I
set up a new meeting for them or invite them to a meeting and it will show 1
hour later still!
Heres the simliarity between these users; they are all executives who have
other people with permissions to their calendar. Some of them the
permissions are set up on the exchange server / advanced / mailbox rights
while others are simply set up using the permissions tab in outlook. Its not
happening to all execs either. Most of the executives with outlook
permissions for their calendar to other users work just fine. All use the
same version of Outlook 2000 and Windows XP, Exchange 2003.
Anyone seen this or similar?
Jay
I have patched all my clients, servers, and Exchange servers. Rather than
use the dreaded tzmove on Exchange for the Outlook Clients (2000) we had our
users reschedule recurring appointments after the clients were patched, that
way they would be rescheduled for the correct time. It seems to have worked
fine for everyone except for a few clients.
On a few clients the meetings in their calendar still show 1 hour later for
the extra DST weeks. They did receive the patch and I verified this by
changing their clock to March 11 at 1:59am and watched it switch to 3am. I
set up a new meeting for them or invite them to a meeting and it will show 1
hour later still!
Heres the simliarity between these users; they are all executives who have
other people with permissions to their calendar. Some of them the
permissions are set up on the exchange server / advanced / mailbox rights
while others are simply set up using the permissions tab in outlook. Its not
happening to all execs either. Most of the executives with outlook
permissions for their calendar to other users work just fine. All use the
same version of Outlook 2000 and Windows XP, Exchange 2003.
Anyone seen this or similar?
Jay