Re: Help, Please.

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Hi,

Assuming that you use Outlook to connect to the mailboxes, you can give
users permissions on any folder in Outlook (magic right-mousclick or Extra -
Options - Delegates) and users will be able to open the Calendar(s) from
Outlook with File - Open - Other User's folder, you can setup a Calendar
sharing environment within 2 minutes. It's also possible to create a
Calendar Public Folder and grant users permissions (right - mouseclick).
These are just a few hints, regarding your previous remarks it would be good
to read the Help from Outlook and Exchange to get more detailed information.

You will have to configure password policies on the Domain level with Group
Policy, then run gpupdate on the DC's and your policy should work fine.

Regards,

Menko den Ouden

"S.Hanagan" <SHanagan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:7C9C2810-4842-4096-B967-39E6648A446F@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Let's start with the assumption that I know nothing about Windows Server
> 2003 and Exchange Server 2003. I only bought them and have questions
> about
> them because I want the calendars in my 7 person organization to be
> visible
> and able to be modified by more than one person and I was told this is the
> way to do it.
>
> Assume also that I have NT 4.0 and Exchange Server 5.5 up and running
> without a problem, and appear to have both Windows Server 2003 and
> Exchange
> Server 2003 up and running but can't figure out how to configure them to
> enable the sharing of calendars.
>
> You can further assume that I have played around with the 2003 servers but
> have not been able to figure this problem out. My current stumbling block
> is
> that even after setting security Password policies for the DC to not to
> require suggested complexity and pretty much setting all the setting to
> what
> I figure would allow operation without any password at all, I can't create
> a
> Domain user in the DOMAIN because I get the error that the password, which
> is
> blank, does not meet the complexity requirement etc that I had previously
> set
> to be nonexistent.
>
> Can you point me in the direction of some simple directions on how to get
> this up and running. IBM I'm not and I simply don't know why Microsoft
> doesn't have a simple way to share calendars and send e-mail
> intra-organization.
>
> Thanks for any help you may provide.


.



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