==== 2. Announcements ==== (from Windows & .NET Magazine and its partners)
Get Windows 2003 Active Directory Answers in a New eBook! The first chapter of Windows & .NET Magazine's latest eBook, "Windows 2003: Active Directory Administration Essentials," is now available at no charge! Chapter 1 delves into Windows Server 2003 and focuses on what's new and improved with Active Directory. Expert Jeremy Moskowitz discusses which AD features might be important to you (and why). Download it now! http://list.winnetmag.com/cgi-bin3/DM/y/eQ5H0HVYYl0CBg0BALs0AZ
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==== 3. Resources ====
Tip: Emailing an Outlook Calendar by Sue Mosher, olupdate@slipstick.com
Q: Can I send my Outlook Calendar to someone by email?
A: To let someone within your Exchange Server environment access your Calendar, you can simply grant access on the folder's Properties dialog box. However, you might need to get your Calendar information to someone who doesn't connect directly to your Exchange server--either to a colleague who always works offline against his or her Exchange mailbox or to someone outside your organization. Outlook doesn't have any built-in method to send a Calendar as an email message. However, you can use one of several Microsoft Word templates to pull Outlook data into a Word document, then send that document as an attachment to an email message. Microsoft offers the Outlook Calendar template for Word for download at http://office.microsoft.com/downloads/9798/olcalndr.aspx. However, I prefer the more versatile My Outlook Calendar (http://www.slipstick.com/files/myolcal.zip) or Outcal (http://www.slipstick.com/files/outcal.zip) templates, which support color-coding of categories. Alternatively, you can generate a Web page from an Outlook Calendar by using the File, Save as Web Page command introduced in Outlook 2002, but I think a Word document makes a better attachment. Still another technique is to use a third-party tool. Ivitar Software's ClipForm uses templates to export Outlook data--a whole folder or selected items--to the Windows clipboard, a text file, or an HTML email message.
See the Exchange & Outlook Administrator Web site for more great tips from Sue Mosher. http://www.exchangeadmin.com
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