Ditto here.
Outlook 2003 (some cached, some [Citrix Users] not), average mailbox
200-300 MB.
Plus... tons of calendar/contact sharing, and 60 Blackberry users.
 
 
 
 

________________________________

From: Sherry Abercrombie [mailto:saber...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Thursday, March 11, 2010 3:26 PM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Re: "OUTLOOK IS RETREIVING DATA" MESSAGE


In my opinion, no Outlook 2007 would not reap any significant
performance gains for you.  I neglected to mention that I am on O2K7,
but all my users are on O2K3.  I have the little message pop-up all the
time.


On Thu, Mar 11, 2010 at 2:16 PM, Harry Singh <hbo...@gmail.com> wrote:


        I've recently noticed that slight pause when users attempt
sorting or navigating through sub-folders inside their Inbox. I did
recently put the databses on network storage via iSCSI. During real busy
times of the day i see AVG disk/sec write and AVG disk/sec read spike
but overall performance has been ok.  The hiccups aren't very long,
milliseconds if that, but obviously noticeable enough that Helpdesk gets
a few calls, the president being one of course. 

        Similar environment as yours: EXCH2k3 SP2 but on WIN2k SP4 OS
and OLK2K3 clients. There are a few intangibles missing from your setup
which i'm sure would help:

        how many mailboxes ?
        BES? if yes, how many users ?
        How many mbx servers?
        local storage?

        In my case i have ~600 mailboxes with roughly 60 BES users and
25 Goodlink users with one mailbox server. I've read about the increase
in RPC requests with BES users and real-time synch, but am unsure what
more i could do since my environment isn't really large or unique,

        I've been meaning to ask the list if Outlook 2007 would reap any
noticeable performance gains over Outlook 2003.



        On Thu, Mar 11, 2010 at 3:02 PM, Sherry Abercrombie
<saber...@gmail.com> wrote:
        

                I have that happen all the time to me.  No not in cached
mode.  Usually happens when I try to open the calendars (I connect to 3
other calendars besides mine.).  Network throughput..... 


                On Thu, Mar 11, 2010 at 2:00 PM, Steve Ens
<stevey...@gmail.com> wrote:
                

                        Hi Murray
                        Are the users in cached mode?
                        
                        
                        On Thu, Mar 11, 2010 at 1:59 PM, Murray Freeman
<mfree...@alanet.org> wrote:
                        

                                First, we're running Exchange Server 2K3
on Windows Server 2K3 and using Outlook 2K3 as the client. Several of my
users are getting the "Outlook is retreiving data" message along with
slowness and occassionally a white screen. Any ideas as to the cause? It
hasn't happened to me, but it has happened to another administrator. The
rest of our users are restricted users.
                                 

                                

                                Murray Freeman

                                IT Manager

                                 

                                Association of Legal Administrators

                                75 Tri-State International

                                Suite 222

                                Lincolnshire, IL  60069-4435

                                847.267.1252 TEL

                                847.267.1329 FAX

                                847.267.1367 DIRECT

                                mfree...@alanet.org

                                www.alanet.org <http://www.alanet.org/> 

                                 

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                                                to knowledge, resources
and networking

                                 





                -- 
                Sherry Abercrombie
                
                "Any sufficiently advanced technology is
indistinguishable from magic." 
                Arthur C. Clarke
                





-- 
Sherry Abercrombie

"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." 
Arthur C. Clarke


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