- Start your web browser on any workstation or the SBS server.
- Open: https://mysbsserver/public
- Logon as the domain admin
- Right click on Public Folders and click New Folder
Name it and select Appointment Items under the "This folder contains:" - Click OK
- Log off of OWA.
We move on to:
- Log onto the SBS server as domain admin.
- Under the Server Management Console:
- Advanced Management
- Right click on First Organization (Exchange) and click on Properties
- Put a tick beside both "Display ...."
- Click Apply and OK. (You may be warned to close the console)
- Close the Server Management Console.
- Open it again.
- Again, under Advanced Management:
- Expand the Exchange organization-->Administrative Groups-->first administrative group-->Folders
- Right Click on the above created folder and click on Properties.
- Click the Limits tab if you want to set limits to the folder.
- Click the Permissions tab.
- Click the Client permissions button.
- Add and set permissions for those users who need access to this folder.
The process is quite straight forward for adding the new folder to Outlook:
- Open Outlook.
- Click on the Folders View button.
- Navigate to Public Folders-->All Public Folders.
- Right click on the folder created above, and "Add to Favorites".
- Name the Favorite and click ADD.
- Click on the Calendar button in Outlook.
The user will be able to click on it and work with their own calendar and the shared calendar side by side.
Permissions on the folder can be quite granular. Be very careful about giving people Delete permissions on ALL items other than their own. Only a couple of key people who understand the process should have that permission.
It is also important to let the users know that updates to the shared calendar will not necessarily be reflected at the other workstations that are connected to it right away. It sometimes takes a bit of time before updates are shown across the organization.
This process is essentially the same for all types of Exchange Public Folders shared items.
For larger organizations, adding folders at the root may make sense for organizing their content.
Philip Elder
MPECS Inc.
Microsoft Small Business Specialists
*All Mac on SBS posts are posted on our in-house iMac via the Safari Web browser.
6 comments:
Thank you for sharing this information. It sure was easier to follow your step-by-step guide than to be forced to read reams of Microsoft-speak.
Do you have these same steps for an SBS 2008 server with Exchange 2007? I'm trying to follow them in order to create a shared Contacts Address Book, but it's not working out.
Thanks in advance....
A.,
Try going to https://remote.domain.com/owa and logging on as admin. You can then create the folder in PF.
Philip
The first parts easy & works. It's the second part that doesn't match up at all. I presume that when you say "Server Management Console" you mean "Exchange Management Console", once in there there is no option of "Advanced Management",and on and on and on. None of the steps match up.
I'm sure this is great for SBS 2003 & Exchange 2003, but I've got SBS 2008 and Exchange 2007.
Do you have the steps for those?
Thanks in advance...
Just installed SBS 2011, with Office 2010 and Windows 7 on the clients. I fail to see why we can't access our Public Folder contacts in OWA, even though there is a link to "Public Folders" in the "To" dialog. I'ved added the folder to Favorites and made it an Outlook Address Book, yet it fails to show up.
I will get to making up a How To for Exchange 2007/2010.
Public Folders in OWA should just work.
Philip
Post a Comment