Time frame for deactivation of the OIFB service
The estimated date for deactivating the OIFB service is by the end of 2004. You will receive a notification that the OIFB service is being deactivated in one of the following ways:
- You will receive a notification on the following Microsoft Office Internet Free/Busy home page:
- You will receive an e-mail message if you are a current registered user of the OIFB service.
Both notifications will advise you that you can use the following workarounds or alternatives after the OIFB service is deactivated:
- You can publish free/busy information to any server where you have read and write permissions.
- If you have an MSN Premium account, you can share free/busy data by using the Microsoft Office Outlook Connector for MSN.
For additional information about the Outlook Connector for MSN, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
287604
How to Configure MSN to Work with Outlook 2002 and with Outlook 2003
User interface changes
After the OIFB service is deactivated, all the entry points for this feature will be removed or disabled in Microsoft Outlook. If you scheduled a meeting with someone on the Internet when you are not using the OIFB service, you no longer receive the following message in the
Microsoft Office Internet Free/Busy dialog box:Schedule information for some attendees may not be available. To view each other's free and busy times, you and your attendees can join the Microsoft Office Internet Free/Busy Service.
Additionally, the following options in the
Free/Busy Options dialog box in Outlook 2003 are removed after you install Office 2003 SP1:
- Publish and search using Microsoft Office Internet Free/Busy Service
- Request free/busy information in meeting invitations
After you install Office 2003 SP1, the
Free/Busy Options dialog box will still contain the
Publish at my location option. You can use this option to publish your Outlook free/busy information to an File Transfer Protocol (FTP) location where you have read and write permissions.
For additional information about using the Publish at my location option, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
827775
How to use the Internet Free/Busy feature in Outlook 2003
After the OIFB Service is deactivated
If you are using Microsoft Outlook 2002, or if you have not yet updated Outlook 2003 with Office 2003 SP1, you receive the following message when you try to use the OIFB service through the entry points that are still available in Outlook:The Microsoft Office Internet Free/Busy Service has been discontinued. Click Turn Off to stop using the service from Microsoft Office Outlook.
In the message, you have the
Turn Off option and the
Cancel option. If you click
Turn Off, the following registry data is configured on your client:
HKEY_Current_User\Software\Microsoft\Office\11.0\Outlook\Options\Calendar\Internet Free/BusyValue: NoService
Type: DWORD
Data: 1 (The OIFB service will be disabled on the client)
After this registry key is configured with the previously mentioned data, Outlook is essentially configured as if you installed Office 2003 SP1 (whether the OIFB service was still operational). The entry points for the OIFB service in Outlook are either unavailable (shaded) or non-existent because the OIFB service is no longer available in this situation. We recommend that you click
Turn Off when you receive this message.