T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
941.1 | | VMSNET::S_VORE | Smile - Mickey's Watching! | Tue Mar 18 1997 14:08 | 5 |
| Right-click on your inbox & select properites. You probably have
servies of both "Exchange Server" and "Personal Folders" selected.
There's nothing "wrong" with this; some prefer this sort of setup. If
not, remove one or the other.
|
941.2 | | BBRDGE::LOVELL | � l'eau; c'est l'heure | Tue Mar 18 1997 17:38 | 12 |
| In addition to what Stephen has told you, there is another little
"peculiarity" of the default installation in that your client
will probably be configured to deliver new mail to the personal
folder.
If you have a truly mobile laptop, this is probably what you want but
if you are mixing and matching with access from other fixed clients or
if you just want to keep your mail on the secure server then you will
need to configure your client not to deliver new mail to the personal
folders.
/Chris/
|
941.3 | I still have Two Mail Folders | KYOSS1::DUNAY | | Tue Mar 18 1997 22:52 | 45 |
| re. 1 and .2
Thanks for your quick response.
Regarding my original issue I right-clicked on the Inbox and selected
properties. Under the MS Exchange Settings Properties I have the
following Information Services:
Mailbox - Brian Dunay
Microsoft Exchange Server
Personal Addresss Book
While in Microsoft Exchange I have the following folders:
Mailbox - Brian Dunay
CCS *owner created
CLF *owner created
Deleted Items *system created
Dunay *owner created
Inbox *system created
Liptot *owner created
Networks *owner created
Outbox *system created
Sent Items *system created
Mailbox - Brian Dunay
Deleted Items *system created
Inbox *system created
Outbox *system created
Sent Items *system created
Public Folders
Favorites *system created
All Public Folders*system created
Please note that there are two Deleted Items, two Inbox, two Outbox and
two Sent Items. This strikes me as not being right. If this is
correct I will leave well enough alone.
Right-click on your inbox & select properites. You probably have
servies of both "Exchange Server" and "Personal Folders" selected.
There's nothing "wrong" with this; some prefer this sort of setup.
If
not, remove one or the other.
|
941.4 | | FLASK2::SYSTEM | Nigel Bridport @REO | Wed Mar 19 1997 08:21 | 14 |
|
If you are saying that you have 2 IS's called "Mailbox - Brain Dunay"
you will probably find that one is a PST file whilst the other is
your actual server mailbox.
The duplication of Inbox/Outbox/etc. is quite necessary if you want
to be able to deliver to your local .PST. If you don't ever envisage
a time when you will want this functionality then you can remove the
PST file. (After making sure that there is no mail in it of course)
Be aware, you have limited server space so you should still use PST's
to store messages but these don't need to be on your PC.
Nige.
|
941.5 | I also have duplicate mailboxes | ogodhcp-123-40-60.ogo.dec.com::Hutchinson | | Fri Mar 21 1997 20:42 | 9 |
| I have a similar or the same problem. I have two Mailbox Sam Hutchinson folders. I was able
to rename one, but when I deleted a folder in that mailbox, it was also delieted in the
original Mailbox Sam Hutchinson.
I am running with the Outlook client and not the 95 Exchange client.
Is there some way to clear this duplication from the client ?
Under properties, both mailxoes have Location: Microsoft Outlook.
|
941.6 | mail delivery to laptop | SLOAN::HOM | | Fri Mar 28 1997 19:24 | 8 |
| RE: .3, how do I stop the exchange server from delivering mail
to the laptop. All my mail is now on the C drive.
Obviously when I am accessing from my fix desktop pc, I can't
see those files.
Gim
|
941.7 | | BUSY::SLAB | A Momentary Lapse of Reason | Fri Mar 28 1997 20:03 | 4 |
|
Change the location of your .PST file to a network drive here at
work instead of on your laptop's C drive.
|
941.8 | Change the delivery option to use the server inbox not the personal folder | tunsrv2-tunnel.imc.das.dec.com::foster | Stan Foster - [email protected] | Fri Mar 28 1997 23:52 | 18 |
| Re .6, the default configuration for the mobile installations seems
to be to take delivery on the laptop. If you use your desktop system
mostly and your laptop system occasionally you should modify the
profile on the laptop to take delivery on the server. If you are like
me and are 50-50 split between laptop and desktop, configure the
laptop with an offline store and then synch some or all folders and
the GAL (using the offline address book).
There is no advantage to taking delivery on the laptop unless that is
your only client. In that case use the local pst or if disk space is
an issue you can use a server based pst as described in .7
Look in Tools.. Services... Delivery.. and make sure is is set to
something like "Mailbox - Fred Smith" and not "Personal Folders".
If it has alrady uploaded all of your inbox, just drag it all back
after you have updated your profile.
|
941.9 | | BUSY::SLAB | A thousand pints of lite | Sat Mar 29 1997 00:35 | 8 |
|
Yeah, I meant to ask about "Shawn Labounty" vs "Personal" in the
in-box. When I first connect to Exchange and see that I do have
messages in the in-box ["Shawn Labounty", I believe], why does Ex-
change move them, one at a time, to the "Personal" in-box?
Seems rather pointless.
|
941.10 | | BUSY::SLAB | A thousand pints of lite | Sat Mar 29 1997 02:14 | 11 |
|
Answer: because I apparently told it to, that's why. So I went
in and changed it.
And now that I have nothing in "Personal folders", what happens
if I delete the set of "Personal folders" [in/out/sent/del] and
delete my .pst file? Plague/pestilence/floods, or no problem
and everyone [well, OK, just me] is happy?
Thanks for any info.
|
941.11 | Delivery to the personal store is an optional feature | tunsrv2-tunnel.imc.das.dec.com::foster | Stan Foster - [email protected] | Sat Mar 29 1997 02:17 | 36 |
| > Why does Exchange move them, one at a time, to the "Personal"
> in-box?
Thats what I tried to explain in .8.. Exchange lets you configure the
client to take delivery either on the server or on the client. Lets
say you are a sales person with only a laptop. In this case you might
want to take delivery on the laptop and have all your mail only in a
.pst (personal store) so you have it with you all the time.
Many people use more than one PC however and dont want all their mail
downloaded to the laptop or home system. This is where you need to go
to the profile and direct the delivery to the server based store and
not the laptop personal store.
This feature surprises many people. They dial in for the first time
and are surprised that the mail in their inbox seems to disappear one
at a time as the laptop client takes local delivery. Some people
think all of theor mail has been lost because they dont see the
folder hierarchy under the personal folders with their unread mail in
the inbox.
So by turning feature this off by directing delivery to your server
mailbox, all your mail will stay resident on the server unless you
move it or synch it with an offline store.
These are really great features because you get a lot of options. Its
just that the defaults are not always obvious and the process to
change them are not that intutive.
While I'm on the topic.. Another common way to shoot yourself in the
foot is to use the watebasket as a place to store read mail. I'm
amazed how many people do this. They are ok while using the PC's they
have configured but the first time they configure a profile on
someone else's PC they forget to turn off the "dont purge on exit"
feature, and guess what happens when they exit the client..
|
941.12 | Just remove it. | tunsrv2-tunnel.imc.das.dec.com::foster | Stan Foster - [email protected] | Sat Mar 29 1997 02:22 | 12 |
|
> And now that I have nothing in "Personal folders", what happens
> if I delete the set of "Personal folders" [in/out/sent/del] and
> delete my .pst file? Plague/pestilence/floods, or no problem
> and everyone [well, OK, just me] is happy?
Just remove the personal store from your profile if you dont plan to
use it. I dont see any harm in leaving it there now you have fixed
the delivery thing. You may find it useful for keeping personal
messages that you would prefer not to keep on the server for example.
|
941.13 | | BUSY::SLAB | A thousand pints of lite | Sat Mar 29 1997 03:57 | 23 |
|
OK, it makes more sense now that I read it again.
You might have read about my previous woes in moving the .pst
file from \desktop to \windows and then having Exchange tell
me that it couldn't find the file, so I was leery of trying to
do something as "final" as deleting the .pst file entirely if
it wasn't the right thing to do.
So if I DO decide to delete .pst I'll probably just move it to
a different location and remove "Personal folders" from my set-
up and then try it to make sure it doesn't affect anything. But
it makes sense that all would be well and I'd be worrying for
nothing.
But I do want to move my .pab file to the server, so that it can
be accessed from here and there [as soon as they upgrade my PC
there, that is].
Thanks. I'm getting there. Once I understand what all this
stuff is doing it'll be much easier to figure out what happens
when I try something new.
|