As an Exchange user, the very LAST thing I'd ever want to do while out of
the office is setup a POP3 account for it. First, POP3 only supports email,
not calendars, contacts, tasks, and just about every other feature an
Exchange Server offers. Second, setting up a POP account in the same
profile as an Exchange Server account with BOTH pointed at the SAME Exchange
Server is an almost foolproof way to get multiple copies of most email and
to lose many of others. No, what he wants to do is talk to his IT folks
about either setting him up to RPC over HTTP, or providing him a VPN tunnel
to use.
Hal
--
Hal Hostetler, CPBE --
Senior Engineer/MIS -- MS MVP-Print/Imaging -- WA7BGX
http://www.kvoa.com -- "When News breaks, we fix it!"
KVOA Television, Tucson, AZ. NBC Channel 4
Still Cadillacin' -
www.badnewsbluesband.com
"DaShard" surfin@thebeach wrote in message
...
Hopefully you can just setup a new POP account in outlook where the
inbound
mail server is something like mail.yourcompany.com (try whatever's before
the /exchange in OWA) and the outbound mail server is your Comcast, or
qwest
or EarthLink or whoever you use at home.
your login name will be domain\username\alias and don't forget to tick the
'advanced' tab on the pop email setup where it says "leave a copy of mail
on
server"
As long as your IT folks have pop turned on or, as long as they've
forgotten
to turn it off, you should be good to go.
POP can be activated on a per-user basis 
hope that helps.
--
What could possibly go wrong?
Michaele ba mcse
http://www.northcoastcomputerservices.com
"PerryRaptor" wrote in message
...
My company has OWA and it is working fine from my laptop. It is setup
to
use
HTTPS and I have the security certificate installed on the laptop.
Is there any way I can configure Outlook 2003 that is installed on the
Laptop to access my company email outside the LAN?