We have this problem with some messages. They have two things in common: 1. HTML used for the text, or 2. picture attachment incorporated into the mail.
I haven't figured out what causes the problem yet, either.
You can set up a rule to do this in the person's mailbox, but you need to make sure that your Exchange system is configured to allow mail forwarded by a rule to outside addresses.
The setting was changed in one of the sp's (possibly the post sp3 update), so now the users have to have the "send as" permission in order to send as the other user. You can set this permission on the generic account in the Exchange General tab in Active Directory Users & Computers.
Delete all proxies and close Groupwise. When you go back in, there should be no proxies in the list. Add the proxies back the way they should be. This has worked for me in the past; I presume it works with GW 6.5, but I don't know.
Get her to archive everything, then blow her current account away. Create a new account and edit the FID on the archive with Novell's FID editor. Get her to log in and use it as she normally does for a few days, then if you are satisfied that it's working OK, unarchive her old mail.
There are firms that make GW archive to Outlook pst converters that aren't too costly; they may also have pst to archive converters.
If you can't find any of those, try sending the email from one account to the other (create a new GW account with a slightly different name so the employee can...
The mime file is caused by one of the gateways that links the two systems together. We get them, too, and will do until we stop using the gateway in question.
What happens to the attachments? Do they fail to attach, or do they attach and not go?
Save them as you have been. In the window at the top of the "save" screen, highlight the first one, shift key, highlight the last one, ensure that "prompt on duplicate name" is selected, clikc the save button.
This will save them all in a format that you can open in a text...
In my experience, the answer to your question is no, you can't look at all mailboxes at once. Groupwise isn't like Exchange, in that it treats each mailbox individually and doesn't grant rights to any one user/object to view all mailbox content.
I doubt that there is an easy way to find out if...
The second part of your question (about forwarding) is a known bug in Outlook/Exchange 2000 -- TID 2947160 on the Novell support site for the info specific to Groupwise.
In order to answer the first part, I need more detail -- is there an error message at the client or in the app log of the...
This is just a hunch, but see if you have lots of memory fragmentation messages in the app log on your Exchange server. This situation is similar to what happens to us when the Exchange server thinks that the free contiguous memory blocks are too small.
My only workaround so far has been a...
We are having the same problem, though intermittently. We have had it twice in about the last three weeks, but when it happens, it seems to affect multiple backups. We are using two tape libraries, managed by one server, and the backups that fail (usually three, one of which is running on the...
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