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From: Wreckah on 13 Mar 2010 00:14 "Brian Tillman [MVP - Outlook]" wrote: > "Gisele" <Gisele(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message > news:39DAFDFD-A114-43D4-8AFB-CC0CAB6152D0(a)microsoft.com... > > > Both machines are usually logged in at the same time and poll for new mail > > every minute. However, I am the only one using the machines (so it's not > > like > > both are active at the same time). Only one machine (running XP) has this > > problem. The other (vista) never gets that error message. > > Change the send/receive interval to a value no less than about ten minutes and > lengthen the server timout value on the Advanced tab of the account properties > to see if that helps. > -- > Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] > > Brian - I have tried this, but the same error popped up immediately. This behavior and error started yesterday - never had it before. Sometimes, I would get the little balloon telling me that one or the other of my servers was not available at that moment, but never this error. I suspect since this is a Microsoft error message, it is something else. It has happened on two machines, coincident with what appears to be an unrepairable Winsock problem. Since I do not believe in coincidences when it comes to computers, it is related. Ideas? Oh, yeah, I have tried every fix known to man and the Internet to repair the Winsock problem - ideas on that and how it might be related?
From: Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] on 15 Mar 2010 14:31 "Wreckah" <Wreckah(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:FBAB5260-3149-44CD-ABAC-6ECCBA5B37CF(a)microsoft.com... > Brian - I have tried this, but the same error popped up immediately. And what error is that? You posted your message as a new thread without enough context for me to guess what problem you're experiencing. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook]
From: Re: Your IMAP server wants to alert you. Re: Your IMAP server wants to alert on 3 Apr 2010 14:50 Same problem here. The box is titled "Microsoft Office Outlook" so it seems to be a Microsoft announcement about the problem that the IMAP server is having. In my case, it is with five specific messages that come up with the error everytime. It says: "Your IMAP server wants to alert you to the following: 24 (1032) That mail is not currently available. " The number 1032 appears in each message. The 24 changes and seems to me to be the number of the message in my box (I'm guessing at that.) Also, the message is part of the Synchronizing subscribed folders operation, which will not complete unless you OK through each message. "Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: > "Wreckah" <Wreckah(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message > news:FBAB5260-3149-44CD-ABAC-6ECCBA5B37CF(a)microsoft.com... > > > Brian - I have tried this, but the same error popped up immediately. > > And what error is that? You posted your message as a new thread without > enough context for me to guess what problem you're experiencing. > -- > Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] > > . >
From: Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] on 5 Apr 2010 09:08 "Re: Your IMAP server wants to alert you." <Re: Your IMAP server wants to alert you.(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:B1FAC3EB-E5A3-41E0-8F62-32A2BEB5AEED(a)microsoft.com... > Same problem here. The box is titled "Microsoft Office Outlook" so it seems > to be a Microsoft announcement about the problem that the IMAP server is > having. In my case, it is with five specific messages that come up with the > error everytime. It says: "Your IMAP server wants to alert you to the > following: 24 (1032) That mail is not currently available. " The number > 1032 appears in each message. The 24 changes and seems to me to be the > number of the message in my box (I'm guessing at that.) Also, the message > is > part of the Synchronizing subscribed folders operation, which will not > complete unless you OK through each message. Seems pretty clear to me. You have the headers and/or body of a message in your local cache and the corresponding message is no longer on the server. I can't tell you how this happened because Outlook should recognize messages deleted from the server or by way of another IMAP client on a different machine. If this were to happen to me, I'd simply delete the account, stop Outlook and make sure the PST for the account was gone, then start Outlook and re-add the account. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook]
From: Lauren Hemphill Lauren on 15 Apr 2010 20:07 I am having the same issue. I have two computers, one using Vista and one Windows 7. I have my AOL account set up with Outlook 2007 on both with the exact same settings. The one on the Vista laptop has no issues, the one on 7 continues to give me the "Your IMAP server wants to alert you of the following: ##(1032) is not currently available." However when I go to that message on either computer, AOL webmail OR through AOL itself, I have no problem accessing the mail. (The error occurs when both laptops are on and when only the Windows 7 laptop is on.) I have tried deleting the account in Outlook, deleting the PST file, restarting Outlook and adding the account again. I have also gone as far as uninstalling Outlook itself, removing ALL PST files and reinstalling Outlook and then adding the AOL account. Nothing seems to work. I would prefer to resolve this issue altogether, but I would be satisfied with just turning off the error messaging. Any suggestions? Thanks! "Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: > "Re: Your IMAP server wants to alert you." <Re: Your IMAP server wants to > alert you.(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message > news:B1FAC3EB-E5A3-41E0-8F62-32A2BEB5AEED(a)microsoft.com... > > > Same problem here. The box is titled "Microsoft Office Outlook" so it seems > > to be a Microsoft announcement about the problem that the IMAP server is > > having. In my case, it is with five specific messages that come up with the > > error everytime. It says: "Your IMAP server wants to alert you to the > > following: 24 (1032) That mail is not currently available. " The number > > 1032 appears in each message. The 24 changes and seems to me to be the > > number of the message in my box (I'm guessing at that.) Also, the message > > is > > part of the Synchronizing subscribed folders operation, which will not > > complete unless you OK through each message. > > Seems pretty clear to me. You have the headers and/or body of a message in > your local cache and the corresponding message is no longer on the server. I > can't tell you how this happened because Outlook should recognize messages > deleted from the server or by way of another IMAP client on a different > machine. If this were to happen to me, I'd simply delete the account, stop > Outlook and make sure the PST for the account was gone, then start Outlook and > re-add the account. > -- > Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] > > . >
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