Thanks for the reply Ed.  Greg has explained it all in his reply.  My
confusion was because I was wondering if there was a way to do this without
all the manual manipulation that I am doing with excel now.  According to
Greg, they coded up a custom parsing program to manipulate the csv's.

Tom

-----Original Message-----
From: Ed Crowley [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Thursday, August 08, 2002 1:45 PM
To: Exchange Discussions
Subject: RE: Help with Seperate Organizations


Everything you say is correct.  "Update" mode will "Create" them if they
don't exist and "Modify" them if they do.  What else needs explaining?

Ed Crowley MCSE+Internet MVP kcCC+I
Tech Consultant
hp Services
Protecting the world from PSTs and Bricked Backups!


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Alverson, Tom
Sent: Thursday, August 08, 2002 10:40 AM
To: Exchange Discussions
Cc: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: Help with Seperate Organizations


I having a hard time figuring out how you would fully automate the exporting
and importing of addresses between two different organizations.  I am doing
this manually now and the "foreign" addresses are Obj-Class remote and the
Mode is set to create.  I must delete all of the recipients out of the
container before I import the new list so that deletions from the source
system go away and also if the user exists, the create mode won't work.  Are
there any tips or resources explaining this?  I have most of the Exchange
5.5 books and have not seen this covered in any of them (I'm running
exchange 5.5 on both ends).

Tom

-----Original Message-----
From: gdeckler [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Wednesday, August 07, 2002 10:09 AM
To: Exchange Discussions
Subject: Re: Help with Seperate Organizations


Yes and no. No, there is no way to have them share the Global Address List
but yes, there are work-a-rounds without moving them into the same
Organization.

1. You could use the CSV export and import features of the admin program to
export desired directory entries into a text file and then import these text
files into the appropriate directories. I have done this successfully for
clients looking for directory synchronization on-the-cheap. I am not going
to say that this is the best solution, but it works and is completely
automatable. The main issue is that it is not true synchronization. So you
are blasting the foreign entries and re-importing them each time, which
makes your directory grow. Anyway, there are lots more that I could say
about this solution but I'll try to keep this brief.

2. You could use some other third-party synchronization program.
Warning: shameless plug. My company actually has a beta 

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