There was a thread several moons ago about using the light bersion of outlook web and 365. I returned to work this past week and I found a tech guy who made the changes that a person recommended I do. I'm sorry, but I don't remember who it was. Using the keyboard, I couldn't get to where I needed to be, and if/when I did get there, my computer froze. Anyways, like I said, he got everything up and running, so I'm a happy camper and am able to check my work email from home now. Here's my calendar question. How can I share my calendar with my boss, so I don't have to send excel documents of my summaries daily to her. I found these instructions on the web but lol, I'm stuck on step 1. You can share your calendar with people in your organization.
list of 6 items 1. Sign in to Outlook Web App. If you're using Office 365, sign in to the Office 365 portal. Click Calendar > Share. Share button at top of calendar window (I searched for the word share, link, button no share was found) 2. Type the name or email address of the person you want to share your calendar with in the Share with box. This box works like the To box in an email message. You can add more than one person to share your calendar with. Send button to share your calendar in Outlook Web App. 3. After you add who you want to share your calendar with, choose how much information you want them to see. Full details show the time, subject, location, and other details of all items in your calendar. Limited details show the time, subject, and location, but no other information. Availability only shows the time of items on your calendar and no other details. You can also give someone permission to edit your calendar by choosing Editor or Delegate. An editor can edit your calendar. A delegate can edit your calendar, and can send and respond to meeting requests on your behalf. For more information about editor and delegate access, see Calendar Delegation in Outlook Web App. 4. You can edit the Subject if you want. 5. By default, your primary calendar is shared. If you created other calendars, you can select one of them to share instead. 6. After you finish adding people to share with, setting their access levels, and choosing which calendar to share with them, choose Send. If you decide not to share your calendar right now, choose Discard. list end Note If you share a calendar—such as a project calendar that you added to your account—other than your primary calendar you can give permission only for Full details or Editor access to that calendar. Each person in your organization that you share your calendar with is sent an invitation in an email message telling them that you've shared your calendar. The invitation has two buttons-one to add your calendar to the recipient's calendar view, and one for the recipient to share their calendar with you. Your email message. The invitation also includes a URL that can be used to access the calendar. Add Calendar button when you receive calendar sharing invitation. The calendar displays under People's calendars. Calendars shared with you display under People's Calendars. Note Calendar items marked Private are protected. Most people you share your calendar with see only the time of items marked Private, and not the subject, location, or other details. The only exception to this is that you can give a delegate permission to see the details of items marked Private. Thoughts? _______________________________________________ Jfw mailing list Jfw@lists.the-jdh.com http://lists.the-jdh.com/mailman/listinfo/jfw_lists.the-jdh.com