on Thu, Dec 12, 2002 at 09:46:54AM -0500, Robert L. Harris ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote:
>
>
>
> Well, the CEO is doing the old hot and heavy for calendaring. Despite
> the fact he only schedules meetings with the other CXO's and no-one else
> cares about the (dis-)function everyone needs it no
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On Saturday 14 December 2002 1:15 am, Michael Heironimus wrote:
> On Fri, Dec 13, 2002 at 01:58:55PM -0600, Kent West wrote:
> > >You knowfrom my humble experience in the IT worldthe ONE thing
> > >that would really help Linux get in with small
Paul Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Well, there are Web-based group calendaring solutions like
> phpgroupware. But I don't think there's anything tightly integrated
> with mail.
?! korganizer? evolution? As Outlook (in standalone-mode
without Exchange) they rely on e-mail to send their
messa
Andy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have several clients ready to upgrade their old
> Netware and NT environments. I can't find something
> that would work similar to the Groupwise or Exchange calendar's.
>
> Someone mentioned that the new Mozilla calendar is a candidate.
> I know Suse has some
Robert L. Harris wrote:
Thus spake Michael Heironimus ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
OK, I have a serious question here [about Outlook/Exchange].
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" ou
On Fri, Dec 13, 2002 at 07:15:25PM -0600, Michael Heironimus wrote:
> OK, I have a serious question here. I've heard the same type of comment
> before. And I used to work at a company that used Outlook/Exchange
> worldwide, including all the shared calendaring and a global address
> book with the
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
Thus spake Michael Heironimus ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> OK, I have a serious question here. I've heard the same type of comment
> before. And I used to work at a company that used Outlook/Exchange
> worldwide, including all the shared calendaring and a global address
> book with the entire company i
On Fri, Dec 13, 2002 at 01:58:55PM -0600, Kent West wrote:
> >You knowfrom my humble experience in the IT worldthe ONE thing
> >that would really help Linux get in with small to medium sized business
> >is a nice group calendar. This would be HUGE.
> >
>
> Amen!
OK, I have a serious ques
Thus spake Debian Support (Gary) ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
>The best offense is a great defense.
.
.
>
>Its hard to argue with numbers.
>
.
They don't argue, they just ignore or disbelive.
.
:wq!
---
Robert L. Harr
On Fri, Dec 13, 2002 at 09:28:44AM +0100, Holger Rauch wrote:
> On Thu, 12 Dec 2002, Robert L. Harris wrote:
>
> > Not an option, the CEO is doing the "exchange is the only true calendar
> > app!" thing. I'd rather not come back with a "but linux doesn't work
> > nicely with that proprietary, blo
The best offense is a great defense.
Next time you run into this situation, just ask them how many times
they've gotten
the Klez, Code Red, Nimda (etc.) virus. These buggers are spread only
by using
Outlook and IIS all M$ technology.
Then ask them how many dollars were spent on preventi
On Fri, Dec 13, 2002 at 09:28:44AM +0100, Holger Rauch wrote:
> On Thu, 12 Dec 2002, Robert L. Harris wrote:
>
> > Not an option, the CEO is doing the "exchange is the only true calendar
> > app!" thing. I'd rather not come back with a "but linux doesn't work
> > nicely with that proprietary, blo
Andy wrote:
He's not all that bad. So far this is the only thing he's stuck into
and he's not forcing windows down everyone's throat, just the calendar.
If I can get a linux based functionality we're golden.
You knowfrom my humble experience in the IT worldthe ONE thing
that woul
On Fri, Dec 13, 2002 at 12:51:52PM -0500, Paul Smith wrote:
> Ximian sells a "connector" product that will let Evolution talk to an
> Exchange 2000 server and act as a fully-featured Exchange client.
Last I checked, it wasn't truly "complete". Sure, their selling it to
people and it will connect
Well, there are Web-based group calendaring solutions like
phpgroupware. But I don't think there's anything tightly integrated
with mail.
I agree that this is a big missing piece in the Evolution etc. story.
Ximian sells a "connector" product that will let Evolution talk to an
Exchange 2000 serv
hnology doesn't make you less stupid; it just makes you stupid faster."
Jerry Gregoire - Former CIO at Dell
-Original Message-
From: Robert L. Harris [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, December 13, 2002 6:31 AM
To: Ludwig
Cc: Debian User List
Subject: Re: Exchange Calend
> He's not all that bad. So far this is the only thing he's stuck into
> and he's not forcing windows down everyone's throat, just the calendar.
> If I can get a linux based functionality we're golden.
You knowfrom my humble experience in the IT worldthe ONE thing
that would really help
Hi all,
> Unfortunately I can not remember the
> specific names but one was a product issued by Samsung.
It's Samsung Contact, I believe:
http://www.samsungcontact.com/en/
More info can also be found here:
http://newsforge.com/newsforge/02/08/07/2225239.shtml?tid=30
HTH... Nico
--
To UNSUBS
Quoting Johann Spies <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> On Fri, Dec 13, 2002 at 08:49:07AM -0500, Robert L. Harris wrote:
> >
> >
> > Did it. It was as effective as throwing a roll of bounty paper towels
> > in the ocean. Remember, he's the CEO, I'm a tech peon, he knows all, I
> > don't.
>
> I did some
On Fri, Dec 13, 2002 at 08:49:07AM -0500, Robert L. Harris wrote:
>
>
> Did it. It was as effective as throwing a roll of bounty paper towels
> in the ocean. Remember, he's the CEO, I'm a tech peon, he knows all, I
> don't.
I did some research a few months ago and found two other products
be
Been there, works great for me but not my wife and 2 kids.
He's not all that bad. So far this is the only thing he's stuck into
and he's not forcing windows down everyone's throat, just the callendar.
If I can get a linux based functionality we're golden. He's also done
some pretty good things
On Fri, 2002-12-13 at 08:49, Robert L. Harris wrote:
> Did it. It was as effective as throwing a roll of bounty paper towels
> in the ocean. Remember, he's the CEO, I'm a tech peon, he knows all, I
> don't.
Well no wonder he's earning all that money!
As long as he's going to be doing other
Did it. It was as effective as throwing a roll of bounty paper towels
in the ocean. Remember, he's the CEO, I'm a tech peon, he knows all, I
don't.
Thus spake Holger Rauch ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> On Thu, 12 Dec 2002, Robert L. Harris wrote:
>
> > Not an option, the CEO is doing the "excha
On Thu, 12 Dec 2002, Robert L. Harris wrote:
> Not an option, the CEO is doing the "exchange is the only true calendar
> app!" thing. I'd rather not come back with a "but linux doesn't work
> nicely with that proprietary, bloated PoS" as he'd only hear "linux
> doesn't work"...
Then tell your CE
Not an option, the CEO is doing the "exchange is the only true calendar
app!" thing. I'd rather not come back with a "but linux doesn't work
nicely with that proprietary, bloated PoS" as he'd only hear "linux
doesn't work"...
Thus spake Steve ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> On 12/12/2002 9:46 AM, Robe
Well, the CEO is doing the old hot and heavy for calendaring. Despite
the fact he only schedules meetings with the other CXO's and no-one else
cares about the (dis-)function everyone needs it now. I'm on the hunt
for a non-M$ installation option. We're currently looking at Citrix and
Codewe
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