03 mayo 2006
No puedes mandar mails con tu BlackBerry?
Si de repente ha dejado de funcionar tu BlackBerry y no puedes mandar correos, o no eres capaz de enviar correos con un dispositivo móvil, te aconsejo que leas este artículo de Microsoft y cómo afecta a tu plataforma de Exchange.
La última revisión del artículo es del 2 de Mayo del 2006.
Aquí os dejo la información relevante:
A change has been made in how the "Send As" permission works in Microsoft Exchange. In the past, additional accounts could be granted the "Full Mailbox Access" permission to a mailbox and these accounts could then send mail as the mailbox owner. From now on, the "Send As" permission must be explicitly granted to additional accounts or they will not be able to send mail as the mailbox owner.
This change can affect add-on services that have relied on "Full Mailbox Access" alone for impersonating users to send messages on their behalf. For example, the user of a mobile email device may compose a message on the device. This message is transmitted to the mobile access service, which logs on to Exchange and sends the message as the user.
New rollups and service packs for both Exchange 2000 and Exchange 2003 will include this change, as will all updates and hotfixes for the Exchange Information Store service (store.exe).
The change was made several months ago and has been documented in Microsoft Knowledge Base Article 912918. However, many administrators have been caught by surprise after downloading an Exchange store update for a different issue. Therefore, the Knowledge Base article has been rewritten to more fully explain the change, and Microsoft will be publicizing the article widely, both internally and externally. A sample script has been added to the article that shows administrators how to quickly identify affected accounts and to correct their permissions, if necessary.
This change in permissions behavior will not keep Exchange mailbox owners from sending mail when logged on as themselves. But it may keep them from sending from a mobile device that impersonates them, or affect other applications or users who send mail as them. This change also does not affect "cross-forest," "resource forest" or mixed Exchange 5.5 and Exchange 2000/2003 installations.
Nonetheless, running the script right now is a good idea, both to get familiar with how it works, and to find out whether you have affected accounts you don't know about. You may have created resource or other shared mailboxes and forgotten to grant "Send As." Or you may be running scripts and applications that do not grant "Send As" when they should.
The script for finding affected accounts and granting them the right permissions is available from this link:
Microsoft KB Article 912918
Users cannot send e-mail messages from a mobile device or from a shared mailbox in Exchange 2000 Server and in Exchange Server 2003.
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/912918.
También os dejo la información que RIM da al respecto sobre esta incidencia:
http://eltate.net/pdf/RIM.pdf
La última revisión del artículo es del 2 de Mayo del 2006.
Aquí os dejo la información relevante:
A change has been made in how the "Send As" permission works in Microsoft Exchange. In the past, additional accounts could be granted the "Full Mailbox Access" permission to a mailbox and these accounts could then send mail as the mailbox owner. From now on, the "Send As" permission must be explicitly granted to additional accounts or they will not be able to send mail as the mailbox owner.
This change can affect add-on services that have relied on "Full Mailbox Access" alone for impersonating users to send messages on their behalf. For example, the user of a mobile email device may compose a message on the device. This message is transmitted to the mobile access service, which logs on to Exchange and sends the message as the user.
New rollups and service packs for both Exchange 2000 and Exchange 2003 will include this change, as will all updates and hotfixes for the Exchange Information Store service (store.exe).
The change was made several months ago and has been documented in Microsoft Knowledge Base Article 912918. However, many administrators have been caught by surprise after downloading an Exchange store update for a different issue. Therefore, the Knowledge Base article has been rewritten to more fully explain the change, and Microsoft will be publicizing the article widely, both internally and externally. A sample script has been added to the article that shows administrators how to quickly identify affected accounts and to correct their permissions, if necessary.
This change in permissions behavior will not keep Exchange mailbox owners from sending mail when logged on as themselves. But it may keep them from sending from a mobile device that impersonates them, or affect other applications or users who send mail as them. This change also does not affect "cross-forest," "resource forest" or mixed Exchange 5.5 and Exchange 2000/2003 installations.
Nonetheless, running the script right now is a good idea, both to get familiar with how it works, and to find out whether you have affected accounts you don't know about. You may have created resource or other shared mailboxes and forgotten to grant "Send As." Or you may be running scripts and applications that do not grant "Send As" when they should.
The script for finding affected accounts and granting them the right permissions is available from this link:
Microsoft KB Article 912918
Users cannot send e-mail messages from a mobile device or from a shared mailbox in Exchange 2000 Server and in Exchange Server 2003.
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/912918.
También os dejo la información que RIM da al respecto sobre esta incidencia:
http://eltate.net/pdf/RIM.pdf


