Outlook 2007 - Business Contact Manager Without Cached Mode [closed] - outlook

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Is it possible to employ Business Contact Manager 2007 without running Outlook in Cached mode?
According to all the reasearch I have done this is a prerequisite, and certainly upon installing and testing it seems to be the case, but keeping local copies of inboxes is simply too large a security hole for us, I find it difficult to believe that this is a requirement!
Thanks in advance for your responses!

The answer on the most basic level here is No.
But the security hole created by storing copies of Mailboxes on workstations can be worked around, it is as simple as moving the local mailbox storage file (.ost file) to a secure server then re wiring outlook to find it in its new location.
Hope this helps someone!

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My mom forgot her password, and she can’t log in to her laptop now. Is there a way for us to get our family pictures? That’s the only thing we really want to recover. I’m not a Windows user, so I’m clueless; any suggestions are more than welcome.
If the windows account is connected to a Microsoft account, the password can be reset through Microsoft directly (i.e outlook.com).
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A friend of mine has uninstalled Outlook 2007. It wasn't working for her but she kept it as an E-mail repository, a POP3 E-mail nonetheless that was going back years. The hosting guys are not keeping them.
I understand there is a chance to recover them by locating the Profile file/folders somewhere but I am not finding any concrete information out there.
I am not with her now so I can't give you the specifics but asking in advance in case someone can help.
The specs are:
Outlook 2007
Windows 10
Any help will be highly appreciated.
I installed Office 2019 and the E-mails were there. It turns out that uninstalling Office doesn't remove the PST files, which I couldn't find before (am a Mac user and didn't know the folder was hidden).
Anyhow, I hope this helps someone some day.

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Closed 7 years ago.
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I created a secondary account on my Windows Server 2008 R2 installation. So now I have the build-in Administrator account and my custom one. I included my custom account in all user groups, including Administrators, but I can't seem to replicate the build-in Administrator completely. There are many folders that I do not have permission to create files in through the File Explorer, and of what I can recall, opening it as administrator won't help. I want to be able to do just about anything, just like the built-in Administrator account, on my custom one. Thanks in advance.
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Closed 9 years ago.
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Is it 100% safe to move the pagefile.sys file from c: to another drive on Windows Server 2008? We are getting low on C: space and need to move it off, but not if there is any risk. This is a production web server and (other than a quick reboot) downtime is not acceptable, as you can imagine :)
I dont think this is a good place for such questions, its a programming related site,
I can give you a hint that this should be OK, It will even speed up you paging file, some reference below (I was actually reading it recently :) ):
http://lifehacker.com/5426041/understanding-the-windows-pagefile-and-why-you-shouldnt-disable-it
following part:
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Closed 9 years ago.
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Is it theoretically possible to register a new top-level domain (so I would have a page like page.mydomain)? If yes, then where is it possible and how much is it?
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