On Fri, Dec 13, 2002 at 07:15:25PM -0600, Michael Heironimus wrote:

> 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? 

Probably.

> Or do other places actually make real use of the group calendars? 

There are places that do.  The company I work for is one of them.  Not
to say that another calendaring system wouldn't work for them, but they
do use most of the features of Exchanges calendaring/scheduling.

> 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)?

That tends to be a very subjective item.  Some would say I don't "work".
Plus, is it "work" if you have fun?

-- 
Jamin W. Collins


-- 
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to