Prev: Reminders can't be cleared in Outlook 2007
Next: "Conflicts with another appointment" not being displayed
From: Dan_Solo on 9 Sep 2009 10:38 Several staff members receive the error message 'The expiration date and time for this message have passed.' when trying to update an existing meeting in a calendar. It can be a one-off meeting or a series of meetings. PA's are mainly the affected group of users (I suppose they have a lot of meetings to arrange) and, as most here will know, that means we get to hear about it, and our current lack of a solution, quite a lot! I can't see any mention of a reason for this on the microsoft sites so far and am at a loss to explain why a meeting which hasn't even occured yet could have expired and cause issues for the userbase. Please can anyone help? Thanks
From: Amit on 8 Oct 2009 14:22
Possible Causes ============ 3rd party addins in Outlook, Any CDO application interacting with Meetings. Resolution We followed these steps to resolve the issue. ============================== Go to Tools|Options|Other|Advanced Options|Show Developer tab in the ribbon. Check that box. Open that meeting. Go to "Developer" tab. Click on Design this Form We get all fields to edit that Form. Click on the "All Fields" tab In the drop down box select "All Mail Fields" Find the "Expires" Field and found the date next to it. Remove the date from there and type None. Click on the Save button on the top of the page. After testing we will be able to make changes/updates to the meeting. ============================================ Hope this assists you. This resolution will fix current meetings only. It is really difficult to find the root cause of the issue because the meetings will be already stamped with the expiration date. "Dan_Solo" wrote: > Several staff members receive the error message 'The expiration date and time > for this message have passed.' when trying to update an existing meeting in a > calendar. It can be a one-off meeting or a series of meetings. > > PA's are mainly the affected group of users (I suppose they have a lot of > meetings to arrange) and, as most here will know, that means we get to hear > about it, and our current lack of a solution, quite a lot! > > I can't see any mention of a reason for this on the microsoft sites so far > and am at a loss to explain why a meeting which hasn't even occured yet could > have expired and cause issues for the userbase. > > Please can anyone help? > > Thanks > |