J
JCW
Two Closely Related Questions:
1) Using a given laptop, I occasionally access the same POP3 e-mail account
on the same remote server via two different routes: When at home, I use a
high-speed Internet connection (Comcast). When traveling I often have to use
a dial-up Internet connection through a different ISP (Cyber Mesa).
Sometimes I forget to (or don't want to) clear all messages off the server
before departure, in which case I get duplicate copies of any messages that
still remain there. I'd like to know why Outlook (2003 and 2007 behave
similarly on different laptops, e-mail-only version -- no local Exchange
server, under Windows XP) cannot recognize that these messages have already
been downloaded so as not to download duplicates. Short of deleting them
from the server in advance, is there any way to avoid this.
Possible Cause of Problem 1?: Since I want to limit the size of messages
that can be downloaded via dial-up, I have created two separate local e-mail
accounts within Outlook for accessing the same remote POP3 account -- one for
the high-speed, and one for the dial-up, Internet connection. (Although I
remember seeing a way in Outlook 2007 to set up a single local account to use
LAN access when it was available and dial up access when not, there was some
reason that I cannot recall why I didn't want to do this -- different POP3
access rules on the server for access via the native and the non-native ISP,
or some such. In any case, there appears to be no such feature in Outlook
2003.) Any explanation or solution would be most welcome.
2) Often, when I'm traveling, a message download via the dial-up connection
will be blocked by my intentional size limit (see above). In that case, I
download the complete message via the high-speed connection when I get home.
Since this complete version does not replace the "phantom entry" created in
my Inbox by the blocked download, however, I want to delete this phantom
entry; but I can find no way to do so. Telling Outlook to delete the entry
just "marks it as deleted," but it never goes away. Again, this problem
occurs under both Outlook 2003 and 2007. (I suppose that marking the phantom
entry for full download, dialing up through the traveling account from home,
and downloading the entire message again -- possibly taking a very long time
-- might allow me to get rid of it, although I haven't actually tried that
cumbersome approach.) Probably a solution to Problem 1 would also eliminate
Problem 2. Otherwise, is there any practical way to get rid of these
annoying phantom entries?
Again thanks in advance for any suggestions -- JCW
1) Using a given laptop, I occasionally access the same POP3 e-mail account
on the same remote server via two different routes: When at home, I use a
high-speed Internet connection (Comcast). When traveling I often have to use
a dial-up Internet connection through a different ISP (Cyber Mesa).
Sometimes I forget to (or don't want to) clear all messages off the server
before departure, in which case I get duplicate copies of any messages that
still remain there. I'd like to know why Outlook (2003 and 2007 behave
similarly on different laptops, e-mail-only version -- no local Exchange
server, under Windows XP) cannot recognize that these messages have already
been downloaded so as not to download duplicates. Short of deleting them
from the server in advance, is there any way to avoid this.
Possible Cause of Problem 1?: Since I want to limit the size of messages
that can be downloaded via dial-up, I have created two separate local e-mail
accounts within Outlook for accessing the same remote POP3 account -- one for
the high-speed, and one for the dial-up, Internet connection. (Although I
remember seeing a way in Outlook 2007 to set up a single local account to use
LAN access when it was available and dial up access when not, there was some
reason that I cannot recall why I didn't want to do this -- different POP3
access rules on the server for access via the native and the non-native ISP,
or some such. In any case, there appears to be no such feature in Outlook
2003.) Any explanation or solution would be most welcome.
2) Often, when I'm traveling, a message download via the dial-up connection
will be blocked by my intentional size limit (see above). In that case, I
download the complete message via the high-speed connection when I get home.
Since this complete version does not replace the "phantom entry" created in
my Inbox by the blocked download, however, I want to delete this phantom
entry; but I can find no way to do so. Telling Outlook to delete the entry
just "marks it as deleted," but it never goes away. Again, this problem
occurs under both Outlook 2003 and 2007. (I suppose that marking the phantom
entry for full download, dialing up through the traveling account from home,
and downloading the entire message again -- possibly taking a very long time
-- might allow me to get rid of it, although I haven't actually tried that
cumbersome approach.) Probably a solution to Problem 1 would also eliminate
Problem 2. Otherwise, is there any practical way to get rid of these
annoying phantom entries?
Again thanks in advance for any suggestions -- JCW