I meant, of course, "the easier sharing mechanism in Outlook 2007."
--
Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP
Author of Microsoft Outlook 2007 Programming:
Jumpstart for Power Users and Administrators
http://www.outlookcode.com/article.aspx?id=54
"Sue Mosher [MVP]" wrote in message
...
Outlook 2003 users cannot take advantage of the easier sharing mechanism
in Outlook 2003. They will need to add your mailbox to their profile as a
secondary mailbox, as described in the KB article. And as the KB article
says, this means that you need to grant Folder Visible permission to the
mailbox root. What the article fails to say is that you also must grant
Folder Visible permissionto your Contacts folder and to any folders in the
hierarchy between the Contacts folder and the subfolder. That's in
addition to the permissions you've already granted on the subfolder
itself.
"Nick" wrote in message
...
Our company uses Exchange and a mixed group of Outlook 2003 and Outlook
2007
users.
How can I share a Contacts folder that is not my main Contacts folder?
If I create a subfolder and send a Share Invitation to an Outlook 2003
user
they are unable to open the Contacts folder regardless of what
permissions I
provide them (even Owner persmissions). They can see the folder but
cannot
see the contacts. See KB:
http://support.microsoft.com/default...b/237825/en-us
We followed the instructions to no avail.
So then I tried to create a shared contacts folder in Windows Sharepoint
Services 2.0. Well, it seems that I am unable to import contact into WSS
2.0. I can link to the contacts folder but I would have to enter all of
the
contacts manually.
So, my question is: What is the best way to share a contact list between
Outlook 2007 and Outlook 2003 users? A list where either type of user
can
view, add, modify etc.