Calendar Without Net Access?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Charlie Tame
  • Start date Start date
C

Charlie Tame

A friend uses Outlook 2003 and wonders if there is a way to stop the
calendar from trying to access the Internet. IOW he simply wants it to
be content working standalone.

Yes the firewall will block it, but then apparently that affects boot
times etc, it is not so much wanting to block access as wanting to stop
the request from taking place.

Can this be done maybe during initial install, or by selecting remove /
modify from add / remove programs etc?

Thanks for your time, did look in the group but did not find a reference.

Charlie
 
Charlie Tame said:
A friend uses Outlook 2003 and wonders if there is a way to stop the
calendar from trying to access the Internet. IOW he simply wants it to be
content working standalone.

Yes the firewall will block it, but then apparently that affects boot
times etc, it is not so much wanting to block access as wanting to stop
the request from taking place.

Can this be done maybe during initial install, or by selecting remove /
modify from add / remove programs etc?

Thanks for your time, did look in the group but did not find a reference.

Charlie


I don't know what your friend means by the "calendar accessing the
internet"......the default install of Outlook does NOT include an "internet
calendar". I think you need to go back and find out a lot more
information...
 
Gordon said:
I don't know what your friend means by the "calendar accessing the
internet"......the default install of Outlook does NOT include an
"internet calendar". I think you need to go back and find out a lot more
information...


Sorry, I have not used Outlook much but it was my understanding that
appointments and such could be shared, thus implying some communication
between the calendar (maybe via Outlook) and others in a team. I know he
has a business and therefore probably has the highest version of
whatever he could get at the time. As you suspect there has probably
been a misunderstanding somewhere so thanks for the reply, I will
suggest he post here with more detail if he really wants to find answers.

Charlie
 
Charlie Tame said:
Sorry, I have not used Outlook much but it was my understanding that
appointments and such could be shared, thus implying some
communication between the calendar (maybe via Outlook) and others in
a team.

This is true, but how does that imply "internet" to you? If you have a
backend for the sharing, it will occur over the local area network. See
this: http://www.slipstick.com/outlook/share.asp

Outlook 2007 has the ability to publish a calendar to the Internet, but it's
read-only. Recent versions can save the calendar as a web page which you
can publish to a web site of your own.
 
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