This forces Outlook to not create an OST at startup. So, the only way I have found to get around this is to create a new mail profile from scratch and add the registry key NoOST (taken from ). We frequently get errors about 'Outlook did not close down properly and is checking files for errors'. I really need to stop Outlook connecting to the existing OST as they are huge and easily corruptible. It creates a new smaller OST files (containing presumably just the Calendar). This is confirmed if I close Outlook, delete the OST file, then start Outlook. From Googling this, it appears Outlook continues to cache the calendar (and possibly contacts). I have changed the GPO to disable cached mode, but the effect is not what we desire.Īlthough the two cached settings within the mail profile are no longer ticked, Outlook is still referencing the OST file when running. Due to issues with large OSTs I wish to revert back to non-cached. I have a site which uses Outlook 2003 in cached mode, this was enforced via Group Policy.
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