Hello Stephan;

Interesting that it stores the OoO message as a hidden email, I would
have thought it would be a separate attribute for the user in Exchange.
Eh' but that would be way toooooo logical.

Since it is a standard message, you will have to grant 'mail read'
access to all mailboxes, and well, that is not good nor easy to maintain
as accounts are added. Neither is adding a FULL Exchange Administrator
account permissions...

I will ask my exchange team to see if it is possible to create a
sub-administrator type permissions only.

I do know that Microsoft Communicator does show the OoO message for
people which you have added as contacts, which now makes me go hhuumm..

** HOWEVER **
If you would not mind "sharing", it would be good to pass the script on,
because I've been looking for a method of not sending notifications to
support staff if they are OoO and forget (like they always do) to set
their Remedy notifications to "None"...

Last time I tried this, it was not "open" and required mailbox access
rights :( of course we were on a different version of exchange at that
time as well.
** THANKS **

Thanks-n-advance; 
HDT Platform Incident / Problem Manager & Architect 
Robert Molenda 
IT OS PA 
Tel: +1 408 503 2701 
Fax: +1 408 503 2912 
Mobile: +1 408 472 8097 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Quality begins with your actions.


-----Original Message-----
From: Action Request System discussion list(ARSList)
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Heider, Stephen
Sent: Friday, June 15, 2007 7:58 AM
To: arslist@ARSLIST.ORG
Subject: OT: Get Out-of-Office Message From Exchange

Exchange Server experts,

I created a .Net console app that returns 1 or 0 if a user has set their
Out of Office setting in Outlook (Exchange 2003). No special permission
needed for this.

I want to be able to display a user's Out of Office message in Remedy.
The OoO text is stored in each user's InBox as a hidden email.  In order
to read email in someone else's InBox you need permission.  

The network account that runs the Remedy NT service (Win 2003) and/or
SQL Server 2000 would need to be granted this permission.  However, for
obvious reasons the account should not be granted Exchange Administrator
permission (which allows for reading someone else's InBox).

Here's the question: 

Is it even possible to grant permission to an account so that it *only*
can read users' Out of Office messages?

 
Stephen

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