Where do temporary e-mail attachments go? Thread poster: Reed James
| Reed James Chile Local time: 17:07 Member (2005) Spanish to English
Hello. I would like to know if, when I delete an e-mail with an attachment, the attached file is automatically deleted or if it sits on the hard drive forever in those folders with funny numbers and letters. Thanks. Reed | | | Natalie Poland Local time: 23:07 Member (2002) English to Russian + ... Moderator of this forum SITE LOCALIZER
It would be useful to know which email client do you use | | | Reed James Chile Local time: 17:07 Member (2005) Spanish to English TOPIC STARTER Outlook Express | Dec 7, 2006 |
Natalie wrote: It would be useful to know which email client do you use Hi Natalie. I use good ol' Outlook Express. Reed | | |
...looks almost like a Canadian postal code Local Disk> Documents and settings>Owner>Local settings> Temporary internet files> OLK6A hope this helps j. | |
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Natalie Poland Local time: 23:07 Member (2002) English to Russian + ... Moderator of this forum SITE LOCALIZER I myself don't use OE | Dec 7, 2006 |
but here is some information for you. Outlook never opens a file attachment directly but always saves it to disk first. The Microsoft article "OL2002: Opened Attachments Are Saved in a Subdirectory in Your Temporary Internet Files Directory" ( http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=296115 ) explains that Outlook generates a random folder name for these temporary attachment copies for ea... See more but here is some information for you. Outlook never opens a file attachment directly but always saves it to disk first. The Microsoft article "OL2002: Opened Attachments Are Saved in a Subdirectory in Your Temporary Internet Files Directory" ( http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=296115 ) explains that Outlook generates a random folder name for these temporary attachment copies for each user. The folder path is stored in a Windows registry string value named OutlookSecureTempFolder in the HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Office\10.0\Outlook\Security subkey (for Outlook 2002; change 10.0 to 11.0 for Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 or to 9.0 for Outlook 2000). ▲ Collapse | | | Natalie Poland Local time: 23:07 Member (2002) English to Russian + ... Moderator of this forum SITE LOCALIZER
OLK6A is your folder name, but another user's folder name might be OLKC320. | | | Textklick Local time: 22:07 German to English + ... In memoriam OL flew out of my Windows when Thunderbird flew in | Dec 7, 2006 |
Natalie wrote: OLK6A is your folder name, but another user's folder name might be OLKC320. Local Disk> Documents and settings>Owner>Local settings> Temporary internet files> That's the cookie jar, right? If anyone could tell me where Thunderbird stashes this stuff, I'd be grateful. Cheers Chris | | | Natalie Poland Local time: 23:07 Member (2002) English to Russian + ... Moderator of this forum SITE LOCALIZER Thunderbird is what I use :) | Dec 8, 2006 |
Thunderbird handles attachments differently than Eudora and some other e-mail clients. With Thunderbird the attachment data is stored as part of the message until you explicitly choose to save it. This matters to you, because it means that if you delete a message, you are also deleting that message's attachments, unless you have saved them! P.S. There is a way to restore even a deleted message, though.
[Edited at 2006-12-08 00:16] | |
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If you have opened the attachment, it may still be on your hard disk. | Dec 8, 2006 |
My Outlook Express stores the files in one of the Content.IE5\ folders. Below is the path: C:\Documents and Settings\USER'S NAME (it may be your name, if you have indicated your name as the user)\Local Settings\Temporary Internet Files\Content.IE5\ You can also find it this way: 1. Open any attachment in Outlook Express; 2. Hit “Save As” and see where it stores the files. | | | Reed James Chile Local time: 17:07 Member (2005) Spanish to English TOPIC STARTER What makes Thunderbird different | Dec 8, 2006 |
Natalie wrote: Thunderbird handles attachments differently than Eudora and some other e-mail clients. With Thunderbird the attachment data is stored as part of the message until you explicitly choose to save it. This matters to you, because it means that if you delete a message, you are also deleting that message's attachments, unless you have saved them! P.S. There is a way to restore even a deleted message, though.
[Edited at 2006-12-08 00:16] I have to admit that I have heard that OE is not the best e-mail client out there. I once tried PocoMail, and really liked some of its advanced features. However, I found that it had some glitches in it and was not worth buying. What makes Thunderbird a good choice? I am curious. Thanks. Reed | | | Natalie Poland Local time: 23:07 Member (2002) English to Russian + ... Moderator of this forum SITE LOCALIZER
Reed D. James wrote: What makes Thunderbird a good choice? I am curious. 1) Thunderbird is free. 2) It is customizable and has lots of advanced options, settings etc. 3) It has advanced filtering options and effective tools for detecting junk mail. 4) It has advanced encoding options (as compared with a free version of Eudora, for example). 5) It is much more safe and stable as compared to Outlook. | | | Textklick Local time: 22:07 German to English + ... In memoriam Clean and crisp | Dec 8, 2006 |
[quote]Reed D. James wrote: Natalie wrote: What makes Thunderbird a good choice? I am curious. Thanks. Reed Hi Reed, Apart from the very useful information Natalie has provided, take a look at my stumblebum efforts to change to it, which were swiftly remedied, thanks to helpful colleagues. http://www.proz.com/post/434744#434744 It's worth it, if only for the sake of the intelligent spam cruncher (apart from the other benefits that Natalie mentions). I have no regrets. HTH Chris
[Edited at 2006-12-08 23:40] | |
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Textklick Local time: 22:07 German to English + ... In memoriam Suck it and see | Dec 9, 2006 |
Hi again Reed, Natalie has now helped me to correct the minor fonts niggle I had with Thunderbird (see the string at the URL in my post above). Consider her well-reasoned recommendation, download it and import your address book and mail. Make it your default E-mail client, play around with it and see what you think. If you don't like it, reopen OE and make that your default. Hope you find it as good as I do. Best, Chr... See more Hi again Reed, Natalie has now helped me to correct the minor fonts niggle I had with Thunderbird (see the string at the URL in my post above). Consider her well-reasoned recommendation, download it and import your address book and mail. Make it your default E-mail client, play around with it and see what you think. If you don't like it, reopen OE and make that your default. Hope you find it as good as I do. Best, Chris ▲ Collapse | | | To report site rules violations or get help, contact a site moderator: You can also contact site staff by submitting a support request » Where do temporary e-mail attachments go? Trados Business Manager Lite | Create customer quotes and invoices from within Trados Studio
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