
You can share calendar information with other people by using Microsoft Office Outlook 2007 in many ways.
In Calendar, in the Navigation Pane (Navigation Pane: A column that provides access to folders used to organize your information. Click a folder to show the items it contains. It also includes the Favorite Folders section and buttons to switch between Mail, Calendar, Tasks and other views.), there are several links to help you get started quickly with calendar sharing.
This article describes the
ways
to share calendar information by using the links in the Calendar Navigation Pane.
The links that you see will vary, depending on the accounts that are configured in your Outlook profile. For example, this illustration is what a person with a Microsoft Exchange account will see.
- Open a Shared Calendar When you use an Exchange account, you can open another person's default Exchange Calendar if the person has granted you permission to do so.
If the other person whose Calendar you want to open has not granted you permission to view it, Outlook prompts you to ask the person for the permission you need. If you click Yes, a sharing request e-mail message opens automatically. The message requests the person to share his or her Calendar with you and also provides the option to share your default Calendar with him or her.
After you access a shared Calendar for the first time, the Calendar is added to the Navigation Pane. The next time you want to view the shared Calendar, you can click it in the Navigation Pane. For more information, see Share calendar information quickly with Navigation Pane links.
- Share My Calendar When you use an Exchange account, you can share your default Exchange Calendar with someone. This person receives an e-mail notification that you have shared your Calendar. You can also request that the recipient share his or her Exchange Calendar with you. For more information, see Share calendar information quickly with Navigation Pane links.
Tip If you want to share a calendar that you created that is
not your default Calendar, in the Navigation Pane, right-click the calendar name, and then click Share calendar name.
- Send a Calendar via E-mail You can send any of the calendars you own to another person in an e-mail message. This is a type of Internet Calendar called a Calendar Snapshot. The calendar appears within the body of an e-mail message. However, an
Office Outlook 2007
user who receives the Calendar Snapshot can choose to open the calendar as an Outlook calendar. Doing so can display
the Calendar Snapshot and the current calendar in side-by-side mode or calendar overlay mode.
Recipients of Calendar Snapshots do not receive the changes that you make to your calendar unless you send them a new Calendar Snapshot. For more information, see Share calendar information quickly with Navigation Pane links.
For calendars that recipients can subscribe to and keep
up-to-date with changes that you make, consider using Internet calendar publishing. For more information, see the next section, Publish My Calendar.
- Publish My Calendar You can publish your default Office Outlook 2007
Calendar to Office Online and control who can access your calendar on Office Online. Publishing an Internet Calendar
requires
neither the publisher nor the user to use an Exchange account. For more information, see Share your calendar on Office Online.
Tip If you have access to a Web server that supports the World Wide Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV) protocol, you can choose to publish calendars to that server instead. However, publishing to Office Online provides improved control over who can access your calendar. For more information, see Share your calendar on a Web server.
- Add a New Group By default, in the Navigation Pane, Office Outlook 2007 organizes your calendars into three groups — My Calendars, People's Calendars, and Other Calendars. You can rename these groups or create additional calendar groups to organize the calendars in a way that fits your work style better.
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