> We often have to calendar out 90/120 days, for example. Is there an
> easy way with Outlook to find out that date without having assistants
> count individual dates?
How cool is that!!! Here is a challenge, then. We have a pretrial date in
the future. Prior to the pre-trial, we have a series of deadlines (30 days
before - subpeonas, 45 days before - expert disclosures, 60 days before -
discovery cut-off). Is there a way to put in a date and work backward from
it?
> > We often have to calendar out 90/120 days, for example. Is there an
> > easy way with Outlook to find out that date without having assistants
> > count individual dates?
>
> Open any Calendar folder and click Go>Go to Date. In the Date field, enter
> 90d or 120d and press OK.
Taylor - 11 Aug 2006 20:24 GMT
> How cool is that!!! Here is a challenge, then. We have a pretrial date
> in
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
>> enter
>> 90d or 120d and press OK.
There is a free legal docketing utility for Outlook that does that:
http://www.docketingsolutions.com/
Brian Tillman - 11 Aug 2006 22:12 GMT
> How cool is that!!! Here is a challenge, then. We have a pretrial
> date in the future. Prior to the pre-trial, we have a series of
> deadlines (30 days before - subpeonas, 45 days before - expert
> disclosures, 60 days before - discovery cut-off). Is there a way to
> put in a date and work backward from it?
Suppose the pretrial date is December 12. You could enter "45 days before
December 12".

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Brian Tillman