> So glad to find this! I'm having exactly the same problem. I'm using
> Windows Vista Ultimate, Outlook 2007 and iTunes 7.7 and syncing from
> an iPhone 3G. For what it's worth, here's what I've been able to
> reproduce every time today:
>
> - Create a regular, non-repeating, non-all-day event on the iPhone
> (e.g. a simple 1-hour meeting from 9am to 10am tomorrow)
> - With Outlook open and in the Day/Week/Month view, connect the iPhone
> and sync in iTunes
> - Initially, the event appears correctly in Outlook
> - Now switch away from the calendar view in Outlook (say, to Mail or
> Contacts) and back again. It's gone!
> - Switch to any other calendar view (e.g. Active Appointments) and
> you'll see it's still there. It's also still on the iPhone.
> - On the iPhone, set the event as repeating daily, but starting and
> ending on the same day (as suggested already on this thread).
> - Sync again. Ta-da! It's re-appeared!
> - Remove the recurrence information (on iPhone or Outlook) and sync
> again. It vanishes again from Day/Week/Month view but is still there
> in other views and of course, still on the iPhone.
>
> Haven't tried downgrading to iTunes 7.5 yet. Has anyone had any
> success with that?
>
> If I find anything else useful I'll post it here.
>
> Cheers,
> Mark
>
>
> On Jul 24, 4:04 pm, "Diane Poremsky {MVP}" msn.com> wrote:
>>> Tried resetting the reminder on a past appointment which disappeared,
>>> it did not reappear.
>>
>>> Here's the scenario from yesterday: I had three types of appointments
>>> on my calendar: some created by me with no attendees, some created by
>>> me with attendees, and some received by me from another person. These
>>> were all synced to the iPhone (v2.0 with iTunes 7.7). During the day
>>> yesterday, as the reminders popped up, I dismissed them & attended the
>>> meetings. At the end of the day, all of these no longer showed in the
>>> day/week view of Outlook, however they all still show correctly in the
>>> iPhone. If I search in Outlook for a specific appointment, I can find
>>> it, so it does still exist.
>