Hi Mitch,
this questions is a very difficult question:
are there any performance gains or other significant reasons why migrating
Outlook.pst from ANSI to Unicode
some peolpe/users say, the newest software version must be better then the
"old" ones.
The general meaning about "old" Outlook PST files is: The are not safe, they
often go corrupted and the maximum size is not 2 GB, the make problems after
1.6GB.
I can not confirm this. We work with 15 central "old" shared PST files with
arround 1.5 - 1.8GB (for every PST) since three and a half years without any
problems.
The benefit of an Unicode PST is of course the higher capacity (20GB) and it
is a unicode PST , so a lot of users hope that this format is more stable
then the old PST format. It is easier to handle one PST file then 3,4 or 5
and it is easier to save one file then addditional files, but the
performance is the same. I prefere to use Outlook 2003 with Unicode PST
files, because this version was developed for Unicode PST files.
This is my personal meaning. All other users round the world could have
another meaning. ;-)
--
Oliver Vukovics
Share Outlook without Exchange: Public ShareFolder
Share your contacts, calendars or e-mails
http://www.publicshareware.com
"Mitch Tulloch" schrieb im Newsbeitrag
...
Thanks! One final question--are there any performance gains or other
significant reasons why migrating Outlook.pst from ANSI to Unicode would
be preferred over simply creating multiple Archive.pst files as needed to
keep ANSI Outlook.pst under the 2GB limit?
--
Cheers,
Mitch Tulloch
[MVP--Windows Server]
http://www.mtit.com
"Oliver Vukovics" wrote in message
...
Further information are also on this site:
"Convert a non-Unicode data file (.pst) to a Unicode data file (.pst)"
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/ou...383511033.aspx
--
Oliver Vukovics
Share Outlook without Exchange: Public ShareFolder
Synchronize Outlook between Laptop and PC: Public SyncTool
http://www.publicshareware.com
"Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook]"
schrieb im Newsbeitrag
...
Create a new .pst file in the unicode format (file-new-outlook data
file-personal folders file) and then drag and drop items from the old to
the new. Once everything is moved over, close the old one.
--
Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook]
Post all replies to the group to keep the discussion intact. All
unsolicited mail sent to my personal account will be deleted without
reading.
After furious head scratching, Mitch Tulloch asked:
| This particular user was migrated from Outlook 2000 to Outlook 2003
| simply by copying the Outlook.pst file from the old machine to the
| new one, so I'm assuming the Outlook.pst file is still ANSI. Is there
| any way to migrate the PST file to Unicode format to take advantage
| of the larger PST file support Unicode offers?
|
|
| "neo [mvp outlook]" wrote in message
| ...
|| Correct.
||
|| "Mitch Tulloch" wrote in message
|| ...
||| So if needed you could create additional archive files and Outlook
||| would still work and not choke as long as each file is under the
||| 2GB limit?
|||
||| --
||| Cheers,
||| Mitch Tulloch
||| [MVP--Windows Server]
||| http://www.mtit.com
|||
|||
|||
||| "Oliver Vukovics" wrote in message
||| ...
|||| Hi Mitch,
||||
|||| every PST file (Outlook 97-2002) can have 2GB.
||||
|||| If you have 2 PST file (Outlook.PST and an archive.pst) every
|||| single PST file could have 2 GB.
||||
|||| Outlook.PST = 2 GB
|||| archive.pst = 2GB
||||
|||| Combined = 4 GB
||||
|||| --
|||| Oliver Vukovics
|||| Share Outlook without Exchange: Public ShareFolder
|||| Synchronize your Outlook: Public SyncTool
|||| http://www.publicshareware.com
||||
|||| "Mitch Tulloch" schrieb im Newsbeitrag
|||| ...
||||| Does the 2 GB ANSI limit for Outlook PST apply only to the size
||||| of the Outlook.pst file, or to the combined size of the
||||| Outlook.pst and Archive.pst files?
|||||
||||| --
||||| Cheers,
||||| Mitch Tulloch
||||| [MVP--Windows Server]
||||| http://www.mtit.com