Secrets of the Office Masters: Publishing a Calendar as a Web Page

If you don't have access to an Exchange Server and you don't want to publish your Free/Busy information to a Web server, you can still give other people access to calendar information by saving your Outlook Calendar folder in HTML format.

Tip from

This option is especially useful if you maintain an events calendar for an organization. Choose File, New, Folder and create a folder that contains Calendar items. Enter details of the organization's activities as appointments in this folder, and then publish the contents of the calendar periodically as a Web page.


Switch to the Calendar folder and choose File, Save as Web Page. Outlook opens the following dialog box.


Figure 13.7.


Choose the start and end dates you want to publish and specify whether you want to include details about each appointment from the Notes box. Give the calendar a title, specify a file location, and click Save. If you've set up a shortcut to a Web server in your My Network Places folder, you can publish the page directly to the server by using this technique. The result, as shown in the following figure, is a slick, frame-based page that lets you click individual dates in the month view at left and see details in the frame on the right.


Figure 13.8.


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