Thus spake Michael Heironimus ([EMAIL PROTECTED]): > OK, I have a serious question here. I've heard the same type of comment > before. And I used to work at a company that used Outlook/Exchange > worldwide, including all the shared calendaring and a global address > book with the entire company in it (and yes, they got hit VERY hard by > the first few big Outlook mail worms). > > People used it for basic e-mail. People used the address book. But the > extent of the group calendaring was that some people would send "meeting > requests" out. I think one person had a public calendar, but most of us > hadn't bothered to learn how to access it. And most of the other groups > were less technical than the one I was in. > > Is this pretty typical? Or do other places actually make real use of the > group calendars? Or is it that the only people who really know how to > use all the features are the people who aren't doing real work (like the > phone system in some places)? >
From what I've seen, the BigWigs tend to use it to schedule all the meetings they like to live in. Most "normal" people though find it more of a nuesance than anything else. I tend to be one of those who will block out all but 2hrs of my day as busy so some butt nut doesn't decide to schedule meetings for me durring my lunch or after hours, etc. :wq! --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Robert L. Harris | PGP Key ID: FC96D405 DISCLAIMER: These are MY OPINIONS ALONE. I speak for no-one else. FYI: perl -e 'print $i=pack(c5,(41*2),sqrt(7056),(unpack(c,H)-2),oct(115),10);'
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