J
Jim
Mark had asked a similar question to ours in 2005, but there was no reply
acceptable to the management.
Is there a way to conceal from all other users the free/busy status of a
user? (Yes, I know this is contrary to the way a calendaring system is meant
to function ina work environment.) All users are running Outlook 2003.
Having his AA marking all events as Private is not what they want because
free time can still be seen. What they want is a solid barwith no detail
visable to any user who has the temerity to try to invite the exec to a
meeting. If we could get it to display the hashes you get when a users
free/busy is corrupted that would be perfect. Adding a 24-hour busy event to
every day will not hide the presence of the actual events if you mouse over
them. Did I say paranoid?
Tara's suggestion of making sure the user's calendar's Default Permissions
is set to none does not work. That's the way it is out of the box.
Perhaps though there is a similar permission on the Exchange 2003 server?
acceptable to the management.
Is there a way to conceal from all other users the free/busy status of a
user? (Yes, I know this is contrary to the way a calendaring system is meant
to function ina work environment.) All users are running Outlook 2003.
Having his AA marking all events as Private is not what they want because
free time can still be seen. What they want is a solid barwith no detail
visable to any user who has the temerity to try to invite the exec to a
meeting. If we could get it to display the hashes you get when a users
free/busy is corrupted that would be perfect. Adding a 24-hour busy event to
every day will not hide the presence of the actual events if you mouse over
them. Did I say paranoid?
Tara's suggestion of making sure the user's calendar's Default Permissions
is set to none does not work. That's the way it is out of the box.
Perhaps though there is a similar permission on the Exchange 2003 server?