R
rslessor
I'd been thinking I'd need finally (and reluctantly) to lose my long-
established and nicely brief AOL address, because of AOL's continuing
failure to offer two really useful features available in Outlook:
- automatic storage of incoming messages on the local hard disk. (AOL
makes you do it manually - or transfer them explicitly to online
storage - which means you can lose important messages if you don't get
round to archiving them within the month or so they are normally
available on the AOL server. That can easily happen at busy times,
especially when travelling.)
- ability to set reminders for important messages.
However, I've recently realised that AOL is now sufficiently
compatible with Outlook to enable access to the former from the
latter. That seems like a better way of achieving what I want.
I've therefore today set up an AOL account in Outlook. There are a few
minor oddities (for example, Outlook doesn't delete unwanted messages
from the Inbox, but just puts a line through them and apparently
leaves the deletion to AOL!), but in general it seems to be working
well. IMAP means the messages are still available for Web access on
the usual AOL basis (not for ever, of course!), but meanwhile I can
manipulate them in Outlook in more or less the usual way.
I just had a nasty thought, though!
*Is* Outlook automatically storing incoming and outgoing messages
in .pst folders on my hard disk, or is it just accessing them on the
AOL server as needed - so that I would still lose them after a month
or so?
Can anyone reassure me? I can't find any reference to this particular
point online.
Richard
established and nicely brief AOL address, because of AOL's continuing
failure to offer two really useful features available in Outlook:
- automatic storage of incoming messages on the local hard disk. (AOL
makes you do it manually - or transfer them explicitly to online
storage - which means you can lose important messages if you don't get
round to archiving them within the month or so they are normally
available on the AOL server. That can easily happen at busy times,
especially when travelling.)
- ability to set reminders for important messages.
However, I've recently realised that AOL is now sufficiently
compatible with Outlook to enable access to the former from the
latter. That seems like a better way of achieving what I want.
I've therefore today set up an AOL account in Outlook. There are a few
minor oddities (for example, Outlook doesn't delete unwanted messages
from the Inbox, but just puts a line through them and apparently
leaves the deletion to AOL!), but in general it seems to be working
well. IMAP means the messages are still available for Web access on
the usual AOL basis (not for ever, of course!), but meanwhile I can
manipulate them in Outlook in more or less the usual way.
I just had a nasty thought, though!
*Is* Outlook automatically storing incoming and outgoing messages
in .pst folders on my hard disk, or is it just accessing them on the
AOL server as needed - so that I would still lose them after a month
or so?
Can anyone reassure me? I can't find any reference to this particular
point online.
Richard