D
Diane Poremsky
set junk email to high for starters.
Roady said:"which opinion is correct"
LOL
I can assure you you've got some facts wrong. For instance rules
processing
occurs at server level even in Cached Mode so there can't be a performance
hit from there. The only real performance hit is when you set up the
initial
cache while you have a large mailbox. And even then the true performance
hit
is at server level.
--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003
-----
Once again, we can agree to disagree.
Cached mode will choke Outlook performance as the local cache is
synchronized. If you rarely receive any mail, or rarely make any changes
to
your folder structure, I guess it won't be an issue, but if you have a
complex file structure with lots of incoming messages and rule processing,
you will see a performance hit.
For anyone wondering which opinion is correct, just try turning cached
mode
on and off for yourself to see the difference.
--
Dab
Cut off: yourhead to respond
Brian Tillman said:I'd disagree with this, in general. Cached Exchange mode enhances the
*apparent* performance of the User Interface because it can comminicate
with the Exchange server at a different rate that the user manipulates
messages. Messages in the cache already don't need to be otained from the
server so performance is improved. However, the OP didn't name his type
of account, so Cached Exchange mode may not even be applicable.
Here's a thought, if it hasn't been suggested yet.
To my knowledge Outlook is basically a database file, similar to Access
in some respects. After a while, databases need to be "compacted" to
free up wasted space and to improve speed.
First delete all spam and old garbage messages - basically a cleanup.
Then, in Outlook 2003, select:
File-->Data File Management-->Settings-->Compat Now
This will basically compact/compress the Outlook.pst file.
Don't know if this helps, but worth a try.
ship said:This sounds promising - please tell me more!
How exactly do I turn "cached mode" on and off?
Tools>E-mail Accounts>Next. Select your Exchange account and click Change.
Check or uncheck the box labeled "Use Cached Exchange Mode".
You only have the caching option if you're connected to an Exchange server.
ship said:But I'm using POP3 and not msExchange !
ship said:OR do you think that this wont work - because it will have to
load the whole (??) of "last 6 month" file - i.e. 1GB and that would
then slow up Outlook...!
Brian said:I'd be really surprised if Outlook loads the whole PST into memory, so even
if the 1GB PST is the only PST, I doubt it would slow Outlook 2003
significantly if it;s a Unicode PST.