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I'm trying to understand how offline folders work
in Outlook 2003 with an Exchange account. Can anyone confirm, deny, or correct my findings? I "think" this is the way it works: - Cached Exchange Mode is a layer built on top of offline files, designed to make them easier to use and manage - if you turn off Cached Exchange Mode, you still have offline files enabled, but only sync with Send/Receive - if you have a synced ost and disconnect from the net: - and have offline files enabled, you can read new messages that were already in your Inbox at last sync, regardless of the Cached Exchange Mode setting - but if you turn off Cached Exchange Mode AND you disable offline files, you cannot read messages in your Inbox (for example) Question: 1. Without offline files, can you even "see" your Inbox? 2. Is there any reason ever to enable offline files but disable Cached Exchange Mode? Thanks, Sandy |
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I am not sure the exact differences, but what I do know is that:
1. If you have Cached Exchange Mode, and while you are in Outlook, or goto start outlook and Exchange is unabailable (either the server is offline or it is busy) you still have full access to your emails (since the last sync). You can also send emails (they will be placed in a queue 2. WHile in Cached mode, emails don't seem to appear instantly like they do while in regular mode. While the second point sometimes causes issues (it is only a few seconds delay), a Send/Receive fixes the issue, the times it saves you when the exchange server is unavailable makes up for it. Not sure of technically why, but you may wish to check with your exchange administrator to see if its ok to use cached mode - as I am pretty sure it adds a lot of extra traffic to the network (I know we are warned to only use it for laptop computers - we have around 3000 exchange accounts). DOes this help? "Sandy Tipper" wrote in message ... I'm trying to understand how offline folders work in Outlook 2003 with an Exchange account. Can anyone confirm, deny, or correct my findings? I "think" this is the way it works: - Cached Exchange Mode is a layer built on top of offline files, designed to make them easier to use and manage - if you turn off Cached Exchange Mode, you still have offline files enabled, but only sync with Send/Receive - if you have a synced ost and disconnect from the net: - and have offline files enabled, you can read new messages that were already in your Inbox at last sync, regardless of the Cached Exchange Mode setting - but if you turn off Cached Exchange Mode AND you disable offline files, you cannot read messages in your Inbox (for example) Question: 1. Without offline files, can you even "see" your Inbox? 2. Is there any reason ever to enable offline files but disable Cached Exchange Mode? Thanks, Sandy |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
SBS 2003 exchange question - Outlook problem | dimon | Outlook - General Queries | 1 | January 11th 06 04:11 AM |