![]() ![]() ![]() As described at the Online/Offline mode, you can select folders to be fully synchronized for off-line viewing. The KOC (Kerio Outlook Connector - this is the free Outlook plugin that basically makes Outlook think it is talking to an Exchange server) has the needed features. I don't think anything before Outlook 2007 can do that (please correct me if I am wrong). If that can't be done, IMAP would be another choice, though you do need a version of Outlook that will allow full download of messages, not just headers AND allow you to select you want that to apply to. To avoid interfering with other usage, you'd want to be sure to set POP to leave mail on the server. The only way you could do that with POP is to make sure everything was left in the INBOX at least long enough for Outlook to download it and apply rules to move messages somewhere else. You can't do that with POP, because POP only handles one folder - the INBOX. Ralph has never drawn a paycheck (though he never has done any work, either, so I suppose that's fair). He's often had email accounts, though they usually are quickly deleted soon after their creation. Poor Ralph has been associated with my company for a long, long time. I used Kerio Webmail to create a MyArchive folder and moved messages to that before creating the accounts. I tested all this using a fake "ralph" account with various clients. Mail clients vary in their capabilities in that area. What this requires is full folder synchronization - that is, downloading everything locally, not just header information. I presume that the reason for this is to allow local access and possibly search. ![]() PST file (local to a user's computer) that would contain the emails of a particular mailbox folder - in this case, emails relating to a specific construction project. ![]() I wasn't sure of exactly what was wanted, and perhaps that is why no one else had answered, but I took a shot and pointed him at my mailbox split-up script for Kerio. While browsing the Kerio Forum I came across an odd request that had been ignored for almost a week. Synchronizing Kerio Connect mail folders for off-line use ![]()
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