Pages

Search

How to us an alias email address in Outlook 2003 - Microsoft Exchange

How to us an alias email address in Outlook 2003 - Microsoft Exchange


How to us an alias email address in Outlook 2003

Posted: 17 Nov 2004 10:10 AM PST

http://www.ivasoft.biz/choosefrom.shtml



On Wed, 17 Nov 2004 13:43:15 -0800, "you know who maybe"
<com> wrote:
 

public folder exchange 2000

Posted: 17 Nov 2004 07:01 AM PST

Because the user only gives rights to other user on the public folder
and deny rights for anonymous users I can't see this public folder.

Thats my problem. How can I make sure that I as an administrator can
though see which public folders have been created in my organisation.

Ramon

"Lanwench [MVP - Exchange]"
<donotsendme.unsolicitedmail.atyahoo.com> schreef in
bericht news:phx.gbl... 


Using Exchange2003 when the PDC is offline

Posted: 16 Nov 2004 09:33 PM PST

Mark Walsh wrote: 

There are no bdc or pdc's with Windows 2000 or 2003. There is a pdc
emulator role for backward compatibility. To access exchange from an
outlook client, the client and server need access to a valid domain
controller, a global catalog and dns server with the srv records
registered. There are other roles that may be handled by what you refer
to as the bdc (schema, rid master etc) but it is unlikely that they
would be necessary to continue to connect to the exchange server.


--
-------------------------
Paul Stewart
Lexnet Inc.
Email address is in ROT13

New User created get a weird email address

Posted: 16 Nov 2004 03:25 PM PST

Seems like my default recipient policy is fine. That was the first thing I
looked at.

G.


"Michael" <microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:com... 


Exchange Server 2003 - RPC Error

Posted: 16 Nov 2004 08:29 AM PST

Have you scanned the server with updated antivirus?
Blaster did that, IIRC.
(remember to exclude the exchange directories when you scan)

Here's another great source:

http://www.eventid.net/display.asp?eventid=7031&eventno=465&source=Servic e%20Control%20Manager&phase=1

"Paul" <microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:com... 


Is it included?

Posted: 16 Nov 2004 06:39 AM PST

Neil Hyndman wrote: 

No - not unless you buy SBS2003, either Premium or Standard (the former also
includes SQL and ISA). SBS is designed for small offices and supports up to
75 users - you have to install it as a domain controller (first DC in the
domain - must hold all FSMO roles) and you can't split off Exchange, etc.,
to other servers, although you can install other servers in the domain as
member servers or DCs.
 

No.
 

Depends on whether they're installed as device or user CALs - for all
licensing questions, best to call MS directly.
 

Install/configure SSL - open up port 443 to your server's internal IP
address, and use https://<publicIP>/exchange.
If you're going to host your own Internet mail as you should, whomever
handles your public DNS will already have set up an A record such as
mail.mydomain.com that points at the public IP address - so you can use
https://mail.mydomain.com/exchange
 


Outbound Queue

Posted: 16 Nov 2004 12:45 AM PST

I can resolve the name without any issues and telnet to the two domains in
question. I am using reverse DNS lookup and the DNS is configured to use
external forwarders but not recursion. Do I need to create an MX record in my
DNS and if so should that reflect my external FQDN (mail.mycompany.com.au) or
my internal server name (sbs2003)?

"Mark Arnold [MVP]" wrote:
 

Event sink for changing X-headers

Posted: 15 Nov 2004 10:38 AM PST

This rather seems to be malformed spam emails, these random words are
used to confuse Bayesian methods. Your problem might be that the actual
message is bad, i.e. the message does not contain an empty line after
the headers so these words are treated as header information.

To confirm this you should examine the full MIME message. This cannot
be done with outlook as it only shows partial header information, but
using another MUA - like outlook express - you can get the email in
question via POP3 or IMAP.

If this is the problem I do not think too much can be done - use some
kind of spam protection, if you have not done this already.

Gyula Karakas
orf support
www.vamsoft.com/orf

Boris Lokhvitsky wrote: 

How to set exchange 2000 up to allow users to login w/o typing dom

Posted: 15 Nov 2004 09:48 AM PST

maredith_davis wrote: 

Hi - you need to set the default domain in IIS...I can't find a KB article
right now, but that should get you started looking. :) 


OWA Log-in Screens

Posted: 14 Nov 2004 12:03 PM PST


2k does not have another login to use. exch 2k3 has a new forms based login
that is the same on all PC's. I have seen some chats saying you can use ISA
2004 reverse proxy server to make a forms based login for 2k owa but have not
tried this myself.

Hope this helps.
Chad

"Howard Kelley" wrote: