A
ACEkin
I have recently switched to Outlook 2007 from Thunderbird, out of
organizational necessity. When I start Outlook 2007 it asks for my
Exchange password, which I provide and continue to use the program as
long as I need it. When I close Outlook, there is still a very large
stub left in the memory, I cannot find a way to completely shut down
Outlook anywhere. I know it is not really shut down, when I start it
again it does not even ask for my password to connect to the Exchange
server.
I would like to be able to shut a program down, like all others I use,
on demand. It may be a nice feature for some so that they don't have
to enter their login credentials again, but not for me. I tried
terminating the program using the task manager, but the result is not
always clean. The next time I start Outlook, it has to go through and
check the data file integrity.
Is this behavior directly tied to Exchange connectivity? If so, will
normal behavior resume if I delete the account that connects to the
Exchange server? I can check that mail if I want to using a browser.
Is there a setting somewhere that I have not yet found that will allow
me to control this behavior?
Of course, I am not happy at all that Outlook 2007 does not render
standard HTML e-mail, but that's another story.
Cemal
organizational necessity. When I start Outlook 2007 it asks for my
Exchange password, which I provide and continue to use the program as
long as I need it. When I close Outlook, there is still a very large
stub left in the memory, I cannot find a way to completely shut down
Outlook anywhere. I know it is not really shut down, when I start it
again it does not even ask for my password to connect to the Exchange
server.
I would like to be able to shut a program down, like all others I use,
on demand. It may be a nice feature for some so that they don't have
to enter their login credentials again, but not for me. I tried
terminating the program using the task manager, but the result is not
always clean. The next time I start Outlook, it has to go through and
check the data file integrity.
Is this behavior directly tied to Exchange connectivity? If so, will
normal behavior resume if I delete the account that connects to the
Exchange server? I can check that mail if I want to using a browser.
Is there a setting somewhere that I have not yet found that will allow
me to control this behavior?
Of course, I am not happy at all that Outlook 2007 does not render
standard HTML e-mail, but that's another story.
Cemal