G
Gilley
Hello,
I found a post from 2005 that looked like it might address this problem, but
the replies wouldn't open. Please help...
At the suggestion of our Network Administrator, I recently turned on the
"Used Cached Exchange Mode" function in Outlook 2003. We are also running
Exchange Server 2003.
The reason for the change was to compensate for an extreme slow down in
response from my client to the server. I kept receiving the 'balloon'
regarding communication to the server.
Ever since this change to cached mode was made, my rules will not run
automatically. I receive the error "Rules in Error - The folder you are
trying to move or copy the message to can't be found. Make sure the rule
refers to a valid folder".
I have run the outlook.exe /cleanrules and it did delete all my rules. I
recreated them and they will run if I run them manually. Open the rules
dialog box and select them and say run rules now. I only receive the error
when a message comes in and the rule tries to engage.
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Regards,
Gilley
Welton USA
I found a post from 2005 that looked like it might address this problem, but
the replies wouldn't open. Please help...
At the suggestion of our Network Administrator, I recently turned on the
"Used Cached Exchange Mode" function in Outlook 2003. We are also running
Exchange Server 2003.
The reason for the change was to compensate for an extreme slow down in
response from my client to the server. I kept receiving the 'balloon'
regarding communication to the server.
Ever since this change to cached mode was made, my rules will not run
automatically. I receive the error "Rules in Error - The folder you are
trying to move or copy the message to can't be found. Make sure the rule
refers to a valid folder".
I have run the outlook.exe /cleanrules and it did delete all my rules. I
recreated them and they will run if I run them manually. Open the rules
dialog box and select them and say run rules now. I only receive the error
when a message comes in and the rule tries to engage.
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Regards,
Gilley
Welton USA