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Occasionally, when you launch Outlook, the Favorites you have created may disappear. Why does this happen? Well, your guess is as good as mine and may be more than Microsoft knows. But how do you fix it? Here's how:
That's it.
Microsoft Office Outlook 2007 and Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 supports both American National Standards Institute (ANSI) and UNICODE personal folders (.pst) and offline folder (.ost) files. This article describes how to use the following four registry entries to limit the size of both the .pst and the .ost files:
Note The WarnLargeFileSize and WarnFileSize registry entries do not enable Outlook to warn you before the file size limit is reached.Back to the top
The MaxFileSize registry entry determines the absolute maximum size that both the .pst and the .ost files can grow to. After this maximum size is reached, Outlook does not permit the size of the file to grow beyond this size. Back to the top
The WarnFileSize registry entry determines the maximum data that both the .pst and the .ost files can have. After this maximum data is reached, neither the .pst nor the .ost files are permitted to add any more data. However, the size of the physical file may still increase because of internal processes.
In the following table, the MaxLargeFileSize registry entry and the WarnLargeFileSize registry entry refer to a UNICODE formatted (new Large format) file, and the MaxFileSize registry entry and the WarnFileSize registry entry refer to an ANSI formatted (an earlier Microsoft Outlook format) file. The UNICODE values are set in megabyte (MB) increments, while the ANSI values are set in byte increments.Collapse this tableExpand this table
Name | Type | Valid Data Range | Default |
MaxLargeFileSize | REG_DWORD | 0x00000001 - 0x00005000 | 0x00005000 20,480 (20 GB) |
WarnLargeFileSize | REG_DWORD | 0x00000000 - 0x00005000 | 0x00004C00 19,456 (19 GB) |
MaxFileSize | REG_DWORD | 0x001F4400 - 0x7C004400 | 0x7BB04400 2,075,149,312 (1.933 GB) |
WarnFileSize | REG_DWORD | 0x00042400 - 0x7C004400 | 0x74404400 1,950,368,768 (1.816 GB) |
The policy location for the registry entries is located in the following path in Registry Editor.
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Policies\Microsoft\Office\12.0\Outlook\PST The user preference location for the registry entries is located in the following path in Registry Editor:HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Office\12.0\Outlook\PST
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Policies\Microsoft\Office\11.0\Outlook\PST The user preference location for the registry entries is located in the following path in Registry Editor:HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Office\11.0\Outlook\PST
The 200/2010 Microsoft Office system introduces a new file format that is based on XML. It is called Open XML Formats and applies to Microsoft Office Word 2007/2010, Microsoft Office Excel 2007/2010, and Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007/2010. This article summarizes key benefits of the new format, describes what the new file name extensions are, and discusses how you can share the 2007/2010 Office release files with people who are using earlier versions of Office.
If you send one of these files to someone with an earlier version of, let's say, Word, then they will need the following on installed on their computer from Microsoft. It's a free utility that allows opening these new document formats on an older verion.
http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=3
The above link is the page on Microsoft's site with more information and the utlity.