Use Proxy to manage another user’s Mailbox and Calendar. Proxy lets you perform various actions, such as reading, accepting, and declining items on behalf of another user, within the restrictions the other user sets.
IMPORTANT:You can proxy for a user in a different post office or domain, as long as that person is in the same GroupWise system. You cannot proxy for a user in a different GroupWise system.
This section contains the following topics:
Two steps must be completed before you can act as someone’s proxy. First, the person for whom you plan to act as proxy must grant you rights in the Access List in Options. Second, you must add that user’s name to your Proxy List so you can access his or her Mailbox or Calendar.
When these two steps are complete, you can open your Proxy List and click the name of the person you’re proxying for whenever you need to manage his or her Mailbox or Calendar.
Use the Access List in Security Options to give other users rights to proxy for you. You can assign each user different rights to your calendaring and messaging information. If you want to let users view specific information about your appointments when they do a Busy Search on your Calendar, give them Read access for appointments. The following table describes the rights you can grant to users:
Table 6-9 User Rights
Click
> .or
On a Macintosh, click
> .Click
, then click the tab.To add a user to the list, type the name in the Name box, then when the full name appears, click
.Click a user in the Access List.
Select the rights you want to give to the user.
Repeat Steps 4-5 to assign rights to each user in the Access List.
You can select All User Access in the Access List and assign rights to all users in the Address Book. For example, if you want all users to have rights to read your mail, you would assign Read rights to All User Access.
To delete a user from the Access List, click the user, then click
.Click
.Before you can act as a proxy for someone, that person must give you proxy rights in his or her Access List in Options. The amount of access you have depends on the rights you have been given.
If you haven’t already done so, add the username of the person to your Proxy List.
In the Main Window, click the folder header drop-down list, then click
.Click the name of the person whose Mailbox you want to access.
When you have finished your work in the other person’s Mailbox, click the folder header drop-down list, then click your own name to return to your Mailbox.
You can work with several Mailboxes open at one time by opening a new Main Window for each Mailbox (click
> , then switch to the Mailbox you want.) You can tell the Mailboxes apart by looking for the Mailbox owner’s name, which appears as the root folder label for each Mailbox.Before you can act as a proxy for someone, that person must give you proxy rights in his or her Access List in Options, and you must add that person’s name to your Proxy List. The amount of access you have depends on the rights you have been given.
In the Main Window, click the folder header drop-down list, then click
.or
Click the folder list header drop-down list (above the Folder List; it probably displays
or to indicate what mode of GroupWise you are running in), then click .To remove a user, click the name, then click
.To add a user, type the name in the
field, then click .The user’s Mailbox is opened. The name of the person for whom you are acting as proxy is displayed at the top of the Folder List.
If the user has not yet given you proxy rights in his or her Access List, the name is added to the Proxy List but the user’s Mailbox is not opened.
To return to your own Mailbox, click the folder list header drop-down list, then click your name.
You can work with several Mailboxes open at one time by opening a new Main Window for each Mailbox (click
> , then switch to the Mailbox you want.) You can tell the Mailboxes apart by looking for the Mailbox owner’s name, which appears as the root folder label for each Mailbox.Removing a user from your Proxy List does not remove your rights to act as proxy for that user. The user whose Mailbox you access must change your rights in his or her Access List.