Arguably the best feature introduced in Outlook 2010 was support for multiple Exchange mailboxes within a single Outlook profile.
Before we begin discussing that feature, letâs introduce a couple of concepts. The first is called "message fidelity". Itâs fun to say. :) The basic concept is that a message created by Outlook can have many attributes associated with it: custom forms, importance, rights management, categories, follow-up flags, voting buttons â the list goes on and on. These attributes are not, strictly speaking, part of the message â they are part of the envelope (carrying on with the metaphor of a postal message). In order for a message to have full fidelity, it must be created by Outlook, sent via MAPI, processed by Exchange, received via MAPI, and displayed by Outlook. If anything non-Microsoft gets in the way, there will likely be a reduction in message fidelity. That is, âsomethingâ may get lost.
Note that message fidelity is a pretty technical topic and is dependent on many variables. There are things that can be done in order to improve message fidelity when using non-Microsoft solutions. That being said, they are not configured by default and your average user will probably not be aware of those options.
The next concept is the idea of a âprimary mailboxâ. Traditionally, Outlook treated one mailbox connection as the primary connection. It was through the primary connection that all calendar reminder and task reminder notifications occur. It was also through the primary mailbox that all new mail notifications occur. This means that if you had multiple mailboxes being accessed through your profile, only one of them would receive notifications for new mail, calendar reminders, and task reminders.
In versions of Outlook prior to Outlook 2010, any Outlook profile was restricted to having only a single Exchange (MAPI) mailbox entry. And, if you had an Exchange mailbox entry in the profile, it was always considered the primary mailbox entry.
Now, Outlook did (and it still retains these features) have a couple of other features that allowed you to âwork aroundâ this limitation. First, it was possible to open additional connections to your Exchange server(s) using either IMAP or POP3. This was possible within the same profile. However, there were serious limitations associated with this. IMAP and POP3 donât retrieve messages in full fidelity. These additional connections were also not treated as primary mailboxes. Also, IMAP and POP3 only support email â therefore calendars, tasks, contacts, etc. have to be in local storage (a PST file) and canât be accessed from anywhere else.
Secondly, Outlook does allow a profile to specify to âopen additional mailboxesâ. These are mailboxes that the opening user has âfull controlâ permissions to. However, these are not primary mailboxes. Therefore calendar reminders, task reminders, and new mail notifications do not occur.
Now, Outlook 2010 provides you with full capability to open multiple Exchange mailboxes. All of the mailboxes have full message fidelity and you have access to all of the content in all of those mailboxes (that is, you donât need a PST for calendars, tasks, contacts, etc.). All of the Exchange mailboxes are treated as primary mailboxes, so you get all your reminders and notifications. All of the Exchange mailboxes can also be cached locally into an OST for speedy offline access.
So, if you have not yet considered an upgrade to Outlook 2010 â I recommend it. This one feature makes it worth the money. Plus, there are lots of other changes to Outlook 2010 that help improve the value proposition even more. You can download a timelocked demo from microsoft.com/office.
Ok strange, it does seem to work automatically when I file them but the recipient address does not show up when they come into my inbox. Since the sorting of my emails in my file, not inbox, is the main issue, this will work perfectly. Thank you so much. I am hope other people find this post because I have read about a lot of people online trying to figure out a way to do this.
Thank you. This works but only for outgoing email. Is there a way to make this automatic for both incoming and outgoing email?
Correct, watches for outgoing email. If you added the CFG, that will show you the sender address.
Is it possible for you to create and email to me in a zip file? I will try that. I am not sure what else to do. If you can, can you please make the adjustment so that only the addresses in the To field are displayed? Thanks again.
This file contains a text file and an OTM file /files/To-field-sent-messages-VbaProject.zip/ If you don't have any other macros, replace the VBAProject.OTM with the one in the zip. It's located at %appdata%\Microsoft\outlook. if you have other macros, paste the contents of the text file in ThisOutlookSession.
How come I can access this under the Recipient Table in OutlookSpy. If it is there, it would seem there is some way to extract it from there.
This is in the sent folder? Dmitry is the one who told me (a long time ago) that you couldn't get the email address from the message. :) I take another look at it.
Success! I used a hint from this macro to get the address from the recipients collection. The only limitation is if there are multiple addresses, it's a long string of addresses or Exchange server, it's the x500 address. Give me a few hours and I'll create a new page for the macro.
The vba code is here - Display the Recipient Email Address in the Sent Items folder
That would be excellent and much appreciated. Please let me know.
Thanks.
SCott
I don't know what I was thinking - if the CFG can't access the property, neither can VBA. :( The recipient email address isn't exposed in the email properties in the Sent folder - if you look at the message using MFCMAPI or OutlookSpy, the display name is shown but not the address.
Is there some other way to achieve this without custom forms? Seems almost impossible to believe a program like Outlook, devoted to email, does not have a way to just display the email address without the display name. Are there any third party add-ins or anything else? Please advise. Thanks.
I think i have a macro here that adds a custom field with the email address as the value - I'll see if i can find it.
This worked great for showing the sender email address. I want to do this for the recipient address and used your instructions on creating/modifying the CFG file. Please see below script. This did not work. Can you please assist?
;**********The CFG file**********
[Description]
MessageClass=IPM.Note.ToEmailAddress
CLSID={00020D31-0000-0000-C000-000000000046}
DisplayName=To Email Address
Category=Standard
Subcategory=Form
Comment=This forms allows the Recipients E-mail address to be viewed as a
column
LargeIcon=IPML.ico
SmallIcon=IPMS.ico
Version=1.0
Locale=enu
Hidden=1
Owner=Neostorm Systems
Contact=Neo
[Platforms]
Platform1=Win16
Platform2=NTx86
Platform9=Win95
[Platform.Win16]
CPU=ix86
OSVersion=Win3.1
[Platform.NTx86]
CPU=ix86
OSVersion=WinNT3.5
[Platform.Win95]
CPU=ix86
OSVersion=Win95
[Properties]
Property02=ToEmailAddress
[Property.ToEmailAddress]
Type=30
NmidInteger=0x3003
DisplayName=To E-mail Address
[Verbs]
Verb1=1
[Verb.1]
DisplayName=&Open
Code=0
Flags=0
Attribs=2
[Extensions]
Extensions1=1
[Extension.1]
Type=30
NmidPropset={00020D0C-0000-0000-C000-000000000046}
NmidInteger=1
Value=1000000000000000
;**********END CFG
The To field in the Sent folder is not supported because of the way outlook resolves the address (and its a multivalue field), the To field in the Inbox is not supported because its a multivalue field.
Is there a way to have a single "View" of multiple Exchange Inboxes? iPhone & Android(s) provide an aggregate view of multiple Exchange Inboxes.
No, sorry, that is not possible in current versions.