Outlook 2003 free/busy no information
James, thank you for the document ...so many people would benefit from that
well-written doc.
Unfortunately, my situation is that everything was working fine on this one
PC but now suddenly it's not. My settings have been working for a year now
and they reflect what your document says, it's just that on PC stopped
READING .VFB files (it posts OK. The settings are a no-brainer for us; we've
been round and round on the settings - it's just that one PC simply will not
read VFB files and the others do (with identical settings).
I formatted the hard drive of the one PC and reloaded XP AND Office 2003 and
it STILL doesn't read them so it must have somethign to do with the .pst file
itself since that's the only thing in common with the previous install that
also didn't read VFB files. Funny thing, it did in the past, it just stopped
recently.
-Tony
"Jim Miller" wrote:
Yes, we had those problems too, until we had really good instructions. You
can email me at Jim_Miller @ CSSus .com for the pretty word doc with
screen shots. But here is the text:
Outlook Calendar – Free/Busy Setup
------------------------------------------
When setting up a work schedule for yourself and team members, you need to
know when each team member is available. After all, to schedule a meeting,
you need to know when everyone is available.
What free/busy status looks like in Outlook 2003
In Microsoft Office Outlook 2003, free/busy status information refers to the
status of a block of time in someone's schedule. Different color coding and
shading indicate Busy, Tentative, Open, or Out of Office. When you click on
File – New – Meeting, there is a legend at the bottom of the Meeting dialog
box, showing the color coding.
Setup Outlook 2003 to publish and retrieve free/busy information
----------------------
We use a special folder on our internet web server, to store free/busy
information. Only free/busy status is stored there. No personal information
about your appointments is stored here. (These are simple small text files
that you can open with notepad and see that only blocks of time are stored
there.) Follow these steps:
1. In Outlook click Tools, E-mail Accounts, View/Change, Next, select your
business email account, click Change. Ensure that your E-mail Address box
has your first and last name capitalized. Ex.
(This is the only text box that Free/Busy uses for file naming.)
2. Click Tools, Options, Preferences tab, Calendar Options, Free/Busy Options:
3. Set to Publish at least 6 months and at most every 15 minutes.
4. Click Publish at my location, and in the box, copy (or type) this exact
FTP URL:
** Ensure that you do not have any spaces at the beginning or end of these
URL’s. The %name% variable permits Outlook 2003 to use the first part of the
e-mail address as the file name. For example, for , the
file name would be Fred_Flinstone.vfb.
5. In the Search location box, copy (or type) this same FTP URL. This is
how Outlook 2003 knows where to look for other users' free/busy information.
If the free/busy information is stored elsewhere for specific contacts, you
can designate the location for those contacts. (See more information below.)
6. Click OK in the three dialog boxes.
To test the connection between Outlook 2003 and your server
---------------------
On the Tools menu, point to Send/Receive and click Free/Busy Information.
Outlook 2003 informs you whether the free/busy information was published
successfully. If you an error message appears, check the URL and test the
connection again. Use your browser to see your .vfb file by going to:
ftp://userid Ensure that it has capital
letters in the format of Fred_Flinstone.vfb If not, right click it and
deleted it and start over at the beginning.
To specify a free/busy location for specific contacts
---------------------------
1. For contacts with an ABC email address, you do not need to do this. Open
the Contacts folder, and open the contact. Click the Details tab to specify
(or “override”) the free/busy search folder for this contact.
2. In the Internet Free/Busy area, in the Address box, type the URL for the
contact's free/busy information. Do not use the wildcard %name%.vfb. Click
Save and Close. For example:
ftp://ftp.XYZclientInc.com/schedules/Barney_Rubble.vfb
Using free/busy in Outlook 2003 to schedule group meetings
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Now you are ready to start using Outlook 2003 to schedule meetings. Click
on File – New – Meeting, then the Scheduling tab to begin. Add attendees by
typing in their first and last name. Click on Tools – Check Names, to see
everyone’s free/busy timeslots. Note the AutoPick Next button at the bottom.
----
James D. Miller
Chief Technology Officer
CSS International, Inc.
(800)814-7705
"Tony17112acst" wrote:
James ...good work!
Were any of your users able to post .vfb files successfully, but no read
them? This is the problem I have!
For us, everyone can post perfectly fine but on of the PC's cannot read
anyone's VFB files (even though the same PC can post them).
I even reformatted the hard drive and installed a fresh copy of XP and
Office 2003. But the PC STILL does not read VFB files but can post them. I'm
thinking it must have something to do with the .pst file since XP and Office
were fresh installs.
What makes things worse is that this is my fiance's machine and all I do is
work on this problem day and night ...I am getting tired! KB has no info on
this and
I've been here many many times. Sigh.
-Tony
"Jim Miller" wrote:
The calendars already had several events, and just to be sure, we scheduled
test meetings too.
We did find the culprit and solve the problem. The issue is in Outlook.
When you click on - Tools - Options - Calendar Options - Free/Busy Options -
Check Publish - and fill in the location boxes, you must not have a space at
the end! Each user had copied and pasted the URL and it had a space at the
end of it. The URL format they used for both boxes was:
But they had a space at the end, and that is why the ftp log files had .vfb+
on the problem files. The ftp server thought there was an extra strange
character on the file extension. But if you tried to open, read, rename, or
update the file, it could not access it. This needs to go in a Microsoft KB
article and get addressed in an Outlook code fix. Outlook should ignore or
strip out starting or ending (trailing) spaces. Obviously it stumped us all!
It took us 8 weeks to figure this out.
Thanks for your support, and hopefully getting the word out and a code fix.
Jim
--
James D. Miller
Chief Technology Officer
CSS International, Inc.
(800)814-7705
"DougS" wrote:
I have been looking into this issue at work and found a posting that
stated that if a user has a virgin calendar (they have never scheduled
an appointment...even with themselves) then other users will see "No
infromation" when scheduling a meeting with that person.
This worked for me:
I found a user who was showing no infomation. It so happened that the
user had no appointments (ever) in their calendar. I had the user
schedule a meeting with himself for a future date/time (save and close)
and waited the 15 minute default time to update free/busy. Then I tried
to schedule a meeting with that person and I was able to see free/busy.
I had also tried to schedule a meeting with the person and have them
Accept, but this did not appear to resolve the problem.
Hope this helps...
Jim Miller wrote:
It may NOT be server side. We are having this issue with Free/Busy and we
don't use Exchange Server. We all have Outlook 2003 SP2 and publish
Free/Busy to our FTP server. 90% of the users work with no problems. 10%
have their .vfb file either not being written properly, saved or closed
properly. If you look at the file's icon it looks different than the others,
and it cannot be openned with notepad like the others can. It is always the
same people. We'ved also tried the /cleanfreebusy switch on their Outlook.
Any other clues would be helpful.
--
James D. Miller
Chief Technology Officer
CSS International, Inc.
(800)814-7705
"lldan" wrote:
I'm not sure if this is the issue, but maybe. There is a k article that
describes this issue a bit when using delegates.
http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=309185
I don't think this is it because not all of the troubled users have
delegates setup. This also appears to be happening on some of our mac
machines using Entorage. This leads me to believe it's a server thing. I
have tried running the /cleanfreebusy switch which worked for a couple of
users for a day or so an then reverted back to the slashes (///////) "No
Information", very strange
Our environment is also running Exchange 2003 SP2 not SP1. I was incorrect
in my last post.
So.......right now the 20 or so users having the issue the slashes appear
from June 1st on. This will change to July 1st once March is over. I have
verified that the GPO is set on those machines, both GUI and registry. I'm
still very stumped. Anyone have any thoughts? Ideas? or even a fix?
Thanks
" wrote:
I am experiencing the same thing. The frustrating part is that it is
not all users, as you state, it's sporadic. Our environment is close
to yours, except for the 6 months, we are 3. I have tried to start
Outlook with the /cleanfreebusy switch, but it doesn't do anything.
If someone is aware of a fix, please let us know!
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