[THIN] Re: Exchange 2007 and Citrix

  • From: Nick Smith <nick@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "thin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx" <thin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 17 May 2007 18:26:57 +0100

Am at the cricket so cannot check but fairly sure we are *not* using cached in 
our TS environement

________________________________
From: Peterson David <DPETERSO@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: 17 May 2007 16:07
To: thin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <thin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [THIN] Exchange 2007 and Citrix

I'm not the Exchange administrator, but am trying to get a handle on this from 
a Citrix perspective. Our Exchange admin has told me that cached mode is 
required for Exchange 2007 and the next version of Outlook. I of course have 
disabled cached mode on my Citrix boxes. Several consultants have told our 
admin this, but no one can explain how this works in a Terminal Services/Citrix 
environment. I want to still provide Outlook on Citrix, but do not want 
everyone's mailbox cached on the server. We are finally moving to an archived 
solution to get a handle on mailbox sizes (many are in the gig+ range, some 
upwards of 8-10 gig) but it still will be a problem just in terms of hard drive 
space.

Is there a solution for this?

Thanks


NOTICE: This electronic mail transmission from the law firm of Dinsmore & Shohl 
may constitute an attorney-client communication that is privileged at law. It 
is not intended for transmission to, or receipt by, any unauthorized persons. 
If you have received this electronic mail transmission in error, please delete 
it from your system without copying it, and notify the sender by reply e-mail, 
so that our address record can be corrected.

This e-mail is confidential and is intended only for the attention of the 
addressee.
If you are not the intended recipient, this e-mail should not be disclosed to 
any other person.
Please notify the sender immediately and delete this e-mail from your computer 
system.
Although this e-mail has been checked for viruses and other defects, 
no responsibility can be accepted for any loss or damage arising from its 
receipt or use. 


Other related posts: