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SYMPTOMSIn Microsoft Outlook, some anniversaries, birthdays, and other recurring all-day events such as holidays, may appear in the Calendar on two consecutive days. CAUSE
Outlook treats anniversaries and birthdays as all-day events. If you change
the Windows time zone after you create an all-day event, the event may span
two days instead of one. If you change the time zone back to the one in
effect when the anniversary or birthday was created, the all-day event
reverts to the correct time and spans one complete day.
RESOLUTION
To work around this problem, either correct each item for the current time
zone setting, or change the time zone in Windows back to the one used when
the items were created.
Correcting Each Item for the Current Time ZoneTo change each birthday or anniversary back to a single day, follow these steps:
Changing the Time ZoneTo change the time zone in Windows back to the one used when the items were created, follow these steps.
Additional query words: OL2K
Keywords : kbdta GnlCal |
Last Reviewed: May 14, 1999 © 2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use. |