J
jim
Once again I find myself at the threshold of one of life's greatest
mysteries - namely a freezing in Outlook 2003 when downloading files to the
inbox.
This mystery has befallen me before, on various occassions. And, although I
think I may have found what is causing it, I cannot seem to find out why.
Microsoft admits no liability concerning this malady. Why should they?
After all, they've already sold you their product and its not like their
email is being impacted by your problem.
Brinkster (the email host) admits no liability and (according to Ronald at
Brinkster's technical "support") has no way of helping a customer with this
issue. (BTW, again according to Ronald, they also have no way of posting a
status page to tell their customers when they are experiencing any of
various outages either - which I see as quite odd for a web hosting company.
(And, we won't even get into the fiasco of hacking that lead Brinkster to
force most (or all) of its customer base to change their passwords with no
explanation as to *what* actually happened, *how* our website passwords were
compromised or *what* (if anything) Brinkster is doing to make sure that the
hack doesn't compromise its customers in the future.)
So, it falls right back into my lap (as usual) to find out what the real
problem is, why it has happened and how to prevent it (or at least mitigate
its damage) in the future.
Let's begin with what we can control....
The Outlook Client - first I stopped all automated mail retrieval and
increased the server timeout value to its maximum (10 minutes). Then I
tried to get mail again - thinking that an unusually large email may have
taken more time than the time between email retrievals or more time than in
the timeout field.
No luck. Outlook starts gettings all emails again (duplication is always
fun in Outlook), and promptly fails - freezing before finishing the email
retrieval again.
Thinking there may be a problem with the size of the Outlook PST, I deleted
all emails from spam folders and the deleted email folder and compacted the
Outlook PST file to about 1/2 its original size.
I re-ran Send/Recieve with the same results as before.
Thinking this may be a larger problem with the PST file, I deleted it
entirely, created a new PST file and assigned it to Outlook for the email
default location.
I re-ran Send/Recieve with the same results as before.
In desperation, I began by logging into the webmail provided by Brinkster.
I created a "testing freeze" folder on the email server and moved the most
recent 100 emails into this folder (he had 309 in his inbox). Then, I
restarted Outlook and tried to execute the Send/Recieve in the client's
Outlook program again.
All 209 emails were retrieved successfully - no freezing.
Using Brinkster's webmail, I then placed the 25 oldest of the 100 emails
from the "testing freeze" folder back into the inbox and re-ran Send/Recieve
on the client's PC.
Outlook froze on message 19 of 25.
Using Brinkster's webmail, I then placed the 14 newest emails from the inbox
back into the "testing freeze" folder, restarted Outlook and re-ran
Send/Recieve on the client's PC. (I chose the top 14, of the 25 I had added
back to the inbox from "testing freeze", simply because they were the most
recent in the inbox and all were on the same day.)
Outlook ran with no problems. (I was closing in on my prey....)
Using Brinkster's webmail, I then placed the 7 oldest of the 100 emails from
the "testing freeze" folder back into the inbox and re-ran Send/Recieve on
the client's PC.
Outlook ran with no problems.
Using Brinkster's webmail, I then placed the 4 (leaving 3 from our original
"testing freeze" batch that caused Outlook to freeze) oldest of the 100
emails from the "testing freeze" folder back into the inbox and re-ran
Send/Recieve on the client's PC.
Outlook foze retrieving 2 of 4.
Using Brinkster's webmail, I then placed the 2 newest emails from the inbox
back into the "testing freeze" folder, restarted Outlook and re-ran
Send/Recieve on the client's PC.
Outlook foze retrieving 2 of 2.
Using Brinkster's webmail, I then placed the 1 newest email from the inbox
back into the "testing freeze" folder, restarted Outlook and re-ran
Send/Recieve on the client's PC. If Outlook freezes, the newest mail in the
inbox is the culprit. If not, the email moved to the "testing freeze" box
is the culprit.
Outlook froze again. So, now I had found the cuplrit freezing Outlook. To
verify this, I moved this one email (only 852 kb in size - which is small
for this client) from the inbox to a special folder of its own and moved all
remaining "testing freeze" emails back into the inbox, restarted Outlook and
re-ran Send/Recieve.
It worked like a champ.
So, what did we learn today?
1) emails can freeze Outlook. At this time, I do not know if the email was
maliciously crafted or simply improperly formatted.
2) Outlook is pathetically unable to recognize or skip (delete) emails that
cause it to freeze.
3) Outlook is incapable of recognizing and eliminating duplicate emails.
(How pitiful is this?)
4) Brinkster tech support is pathetic.
5) Brinkster adopts a code of silence concerning outages and successful
hacking of its customers' account passwords. (This just makes me all warm
and fuzzy as a Brinkster customer.)
6) Brinkster tech "support" is unable to help a customer locate a bad email.
(Just thinking about how inept Brinkster tech "support" is makes me glow.)
So, I am off to write a simple (SIMPLE) email client that can handle today's
email without the 150+ settings in Outlook 2007.
150 settings! Wow! It's just a damned email people!
jim
mysteries - namely a freezing in Outlook 2003 when downloading files to the
inbox.
This mystery has befallen me before, on various occassions. And, although I
think I may have found what is causing it, I cannot seem to find out why.
Microsoft admits no liability concerning this malady. Why should they?
After all, they've already sold you their product and its not like their
email is being impacted by your problem.
Brinkster (the email host) admits no liability and (according to Ronald at
Brinkster's technical "support") has no way of helping a customer with this
issue. (BTW, again according to Ronald, they also have no way of posting a
status page to tell their customers when they are experiencing any of
various outages either - which I see as quite odd for a web hosting company.
(And, we won't even get into the fiasco of hacking that lead Brinkster to
force most (or all) of its customer base to change their passwords with no
explanation as to *what* actually happened, *how* our website passwords were
compromised or *what* (if anything) Brinkster is doing to make sure that the
hack doesn't compromise its customers in the future.)
So, it falls right back into my lap (as usual) to find out what the real
problem is, why it has happened and how to prevent it (or at least mitigate
its damage) in the future.
Let's begin with what we can control....
The Outlook Client - first I stopped all automated mail retrieval and
increased the server timeout value to its maximum (10 minutes). Then I
tried to get mail again - thinking that an unusually large email may have
taken more time than the time between email retrievals or more time than in
the timeout field.
No luck. Outlook starts gettings all emails again (duplication is always
fun in Outlook), and promptly fails - freezing before finishing the email
retrieval again.
Thinking there may be a problem with the size of the Outlook PST, I deleted
all emails from spam folders and the deleted email folder and compacted the
Outlook PST file to about 1/2 its original size.
I re-ran Send/Recieve with the same results as before.
Thinking this may be a larger problem with the PST file, I deleted it
entirely, created a new PST file and assigned it to Outlook for the email
default location.
I re-ran Send/Recieve with the same results as before.
In desperation, I began by logging into the webmail provided by Brinkster.
I created a "testing freeze" folder on the email server and moved the most
recent 100 emails into this folder (he had 309 in his inbox). Then, I
restarted Outlook and tried to execute the Send/Recieve in the client's
Outlook program again.
All 209 emails were retrieved successfully - no freezing.
Using Brinkster's webmail, I then placed the 25 oldest of the 100 emails
from the "testing freeze" folder back into the inbox and re-ran Send/Recieve
on the client's PC.
Outlook froze on message 19 of 25.
Using Brinkster's webmail, I then placed the 14 newest emails from the inbox
back into the "testing freeze" folder, restarted Outlook and re-ran
Send/Recieve on the client's PC. (I chose the top 14, of the 25 I had added
back to the inbox from "testing freeze", simply because they were the most
recent in the inbox and all were on the same day.)
Outlook ran with no problems. (I was closing in on my prey....)
Using Brinkster's webmail, I then placed the 7 oldest of the 100 emails from
the "testing freeze" folder back into the inbox and re-ran Send/Recieve on
the client's PC.
Outlook ran with no problems.
Using Brinkster's webmail, I then placed the 4 (leaving 3 from our original
"testing freeze" batch that caused Outlook to freeze) oldest of the 100
emails from the "testing freeze" folder back into the inbox and re-ran
Send/Recieve on the client's PC.
Outlook foze retrieving 2 of 4.
Using Brinkster's webmail, I then placed the 2 newest emails from the inbox
back into the "testing freeze" folder, restarted Outlook and re-ran
Send/Recieve on the client's PC.
Outlook foze retrieving 2 of 2.
Using Brinkster's webmail, I then placed the 1 newest email from the inbox
back into the "testing freeze" folder, restarted Outlook and re-ran
Send/Recieve on the client's PC. If Outlook freezes, the newest mail in the
inbox is the culprit. If not, the email moved to the "testing freeze" box
is the culprit.
Outlook froze again. So, now I had found the cuplrit freezing Outlook. To
verify this, I moved this one email (only 852 kb in size - which is small
for this client) from the inbox to a special folder of its own and moved all
remaining "testing freeze" emails back into the inbox, restarted Outlook and
re-ran Send/Recieve.
It worked like a champ.
So, what did we learn today?
1) emails can freeze Outlook. At this time, I do not know if the email was
maliciously crafted or simply improperly formatted.
2) Outlook is pathetically unable to recognize or skip (delete) emails that
cause it to freeze.
3) Outlook is incapable of recognizing and eliminating duplicate emails.
(How pitiful is this?)
4) Brinkster tech support is pathetic.
5) Brinkster adopts a code of silence concerning outages and successful
hacking of its customers' account passwords. (This just makes me all warm
and fuzzy as a Brinkster customer.)
6) Brinkster tech "support" is unable to help a customer locate a bad email.
(Just thinking about how inept Brinkster tech "support" is makes me glow.)
So, I am off to write a simple (SIMPLE) email client that can handle today's
email without the 150+ settings in Outlook 2007.
150 settings! Wow! It's just a damned email people!
jim