On the other hand, if you just google for "14.02.5004.000" you will find any number of .ics files with content
That is exactly what I have found, yet I also am finding them in email headers from a case I am working on. It is baffling me to say the least. I'm not sure what to do, it doesn't have a lot of relevance to this project, but it would be nice to be able to explain it if it comes up.
On the other hand, if you just google for "14.02.5004.000" you will find any number of .ics files with content
That is exactly what I have found, yet I also am finding them in email headers from a case I am working on. It is baffling me to say the least. I'm not sure what to do, it doesn't have a lot of relevance to this project, but it would be nice to be able to explain it if it comes up.
Well, if you check one of the results, this one as an example
http//
it seems like the "generating app" is actually Microsoft Outlook (14.0)
BEGINVCALENDAR
PRODID-//Microsoft Corporation//Outlook 14.0 MIMEDIR//EN
and the "14.02.5004.000" is just in the "x-ALT-DESC"
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//E
N">\n<HTML>\n<HEAD>\n<META NAME="Generator" CONTENT="MS Exchange Server ve
rsion 14.02.5004.000">\n<TITLE></TITLE>\n</HEAD>\n<BODY>\n<!– Converted f
rom text/rtf format –>\n\n<P DIR=LTR><SPAN LANG="en-gb"></SPAN></P>\n\n</
BODY>\n</HTML>
It sounds like (since I doubt that "all the world" has an Exchange Server installed, that the whole thingy is generated by Outlook only and -somehow- uses that queer MS Exchange ID.
You should be able to reproduce the behaviour on a machine running OUTLOOK not connected to *any* Exchange Server…..
Outlook "14.0 should be "Office 2010" …
jaclaz