You should be aware that Office products (Outlook in particular) do not like
custom fields when importing. Your proposal may not work the way you want
it to.
--
Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook]
Post all replies to the group to keep the discussion intact. Due to
the (insert latest virus name here) virus, all mail sent to my personal
account will be deleted without reading.
After furious head scratching, SSP asked:
| What I'm trying to do is to take my tasks, score them by several
| criteria in Excel to come up with a composite score for each in order
| to prioritize them; import the results into Access for simple
| sorting; and then drag the top-ranking tasks from the Outlook taskpad
| into the Outlook calendar. I then synchronize with my handheld for
| mobility.
|
| My situation does not allow for a fixed schedule; I need ultimate
| scheduling flexibility, but with effective prioritization.
|
| Thank you for your reply.
|
| "Judy Gleeson" wrote:
|
|| What outcome are you aiming for?? Maybe you can use Tasks in a more
|| sophisticated way but only if you don't tell us your solution - just
|| tell us what you want to achieve.
||
||
|| --
|| Judy Gleeson
|| Acorn Training and Consulting
|| Canberra, Australia
||
||
|| see what Outlook training can do to improve productivity:
||
www.acorntraining.com.au/pdfdocs/ProductivITwithOutlook.pps
||
||
www.acorntraining.com.au/productivit.htm
|| ||| I have Outlook 2002. I would upgrade, if necessary.
|||
||| Is there a way to drag and drop tasks from the task pad to the
||| calendar and have the appointment set the start time to follow the
||| preceding appointment, and then calculate the end time by the total
||| work assigned for the task?
|||
||| Thank you for any help you can offer.