So, a behavioral limitation. Gotcha. Your plan sounds okay. Other choice (restore from backup) takes too long to do on a regular basis.
> On Feb 13, 2015, at 7:15, "Kennedy, Jim" <[email protected]> wrote: > > > “Why is this user performing this action?” > > We allow the public to use our facilities, since they are in effect their > facilities. So a girl scout troop calls this user and says I want to use the > gym at such and such a school on Feb 14th. This secretary records that event > in the calendar so there are no dups along with all the other arrangements > that need to be made. > > The end game is what I said it is. This person is somewhat mentally > challenged, she will mess up…she will overwrite appointments or somehow > totally blow up the caldandar. There are 15 calendars…one for each building. > > I need to bring back one specific calendar to how it was yesterday. > > > > From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] > On Behalf Of Daniel Chenault > Sent: Friday, February 13, 2015 9:57 AM > To: [email protected] > Subject: Re: [Exchange] Public folder calendar brick level. > > I'll say it for him: there are technological solutions for behavioral > problems. > > What is the desired end-game here? Why is this user performing this action? > > On Feb 13, 2015, at 6:21, "Kennedy, Jim" <[email protected]> wrote: > > While I miss Ed Crowley I am glad he isn’t reading this. > > Exchange 2010 > > So I just fired up 15 public calendars to schedule events at 15 buildings. > The secretary in charge of doing this will, on average every 30 days, copy > and paste a single appointment into a calendar several hundred times or so. > It is inevitable, and there is no training that will prevent this and this > responsibility will not be assigned to someone else. > > So I am thinking an automated export to PST each night. Then I can restore > the PST to my mailbox…then kill the bad calendar and replace with the PST > restored one. Any suggestions gang?
