P
PatrickJ
When I send appointments to users in other Exchange Orgnizations the meeting
time is one hour off. The meetings are sent from users in Eastern Daylight
Time US and to users in Europeran time zone where they did not do an DST
patching because they are not in the US. All of our desktops and servers are
patched, including Exchange SP2 with DST hotfix. Exchange Calendar Timezone
tool was run on the mailbox. The recipient is on an Exchange 2000 server in
the UK or Switzerland, Austria. Appointments to mailboxes within our
Exchange Organization in these companies are showing up properly
I send an appointment for now, it shows up on their calendar for 1 hour from
now so they are showing up 1 hour late for meetings.
Are all Exchange servers worlwide required to be patched?
How can I check what meeintg time data is being sent so I can tell if it is
on my side or the remote end?
time is one hour off. The meetings are sent from users in Eastern Daylight
Time US and to users in Europeran time zone where they did not do an DST
patching because they are not in the US. All of our desktops and servers are
patched, including Exchange SP2 with DST hotfix. Exchange Calendar Timezone
tool was run on the mailbox. The recipient is on an Exchange 2000 server in
the UK or Switzerland, Austria. Appointments to mailboxes within our
Exchange Organization in these companies are showing up properly
I send an appointment for now, it shows up on their calendar for 1 hour from
now so they are showing up 1 hour late for meetings.
Are all Exchange servers worlwide required to be patched?
How can I check what meeintg time data is being sent so I can tell if it is
on my side or the remote end?