Quote:
Originally Posted by jadesse
I think MS really dropped the ball on this one.
|
Oh, no, this is usefull if you travel. That is what the MS KB article has said since Outlook was first conceived and provided this 'feature'. Yes, it does it on the desktop/laptop too. Your appointments are shifted by the new time zone, showing you what time they would be happening if you weren't where you are. If you want to enter an appointment that occurs where you aren't, you need to figure out what time it will be where you are when the appointment happens where you will be. Got it?
What is happening is that appointments are stored based on universal time and displayed based on your TZ setting. This is great for cross-TZ communications. If I e-mail you an appointment for a conference call, it will show up at the correct time for you, accounting for any time zone difference. If you have conference calls, they will shift as you change TZs so you will always show the call at the right time for where you are.
Of course, if you enter a lunch date in NY and fly to California to have it, the calendar will say you will be having lunch shortly after breakfast.
You have a couple of options. One is to just change the clock, not the TZ (if you can). The other is to enter the appointment times with the offset built in. That CA lunch date would be entered at 3PM in NY. It''ll show up at Noon when you change to Pacific TZ. There are programs/addons that make that easier on a PPC, such as CityTime. In Outlook 2007, you can actually specify where the appointment takes place, by TZ, and it adjusts for you.
[Rant]We have been fighting this thing for years, but part of the problem is that some people understand and like what it does. We have lobbied for an option button, do or don't move the appointments. We got, at least in newer versions of Windows Mobile, a warning about it moving appointments when you change TZs.
I personally think there should be the option of having two types of appointments, fixed and relative. The fixed ones happen at a time, like lunch. I know lunch is at 12PM, and that's how I enter it, whether it happens in Frankfurt, KY or Frankfurt, GE. Don't move that one. The relative ones happen at a point in time, and when it happens for me depends on where I am, like a worldwide conference call. Let that one slide based on where I say I am. Let me select, fixed or relative Per appointment.[/Rant]