OL97: Configuring IMEP to Automatically Dial Your ISP
ID: Q170384
|
The information in this article applies to:
SUMMARY
The Microsoft Outlook 97 Internet Mail Enhancement Patch (IMEP), does not
automatically call your Internet Service Provider (ISP) using dial-up
networking to check for new mail. This article describes how to set up
IMEP to connect automatically to your ISP at a regular interval to check
for new mail. The Imepread.txt file that ships with IMEP also documents
these steps; however, the steps in that text are written for IE4 users.
The steps in this article describe the dialogs and settings for IE 3.02
users.
The IMEP can be downloaded from the Microsoft Web site at:
http://officeupdate.microsoft.com/updates/updOutlook.htm
It is also available in Microsoft Office 97 Service Release 1 Patch (SR-1
Patch) and Microsoft Office 97 Service Release 1 Enterprise Update (SR-1
Ent Upd).
MORE INFORMATION
WARNING: This issue should not arise when using Microsoft Windows NT.
These steps do not work if you are using Outlook with the Windows NT
operating system. The Microsoft Dial-Up Networking 1.3 Upgrade described
in this article is designed for Windows 95 and not Windows NT. These steps
do not work if you are using Outlook with the Windows NT operating system,
and may cause damage to your dial-up networking if you perform them in
Windows NT.
The steps described in this article will set up Outlook and IMEP to do the
following:
- When you start Outlook it immediately dials your ISP and checks mail.
- After a three minute idle time your dial-up connection disconnects.
- At an interval you set, Outlook automatically dials your ISP and checks
mail.
- If Outlook is not connected to your ISP and you send a mail message,
Outlook immediately connects to your ISP and sends the message.
Setting up IMEP to connect automatically to your ISP at a regular interval
is a five part process.
- Install the Microsoft Dial-Up Networking 1.3 Upgrade
- Set your e-mail connection type to LAN
- Configure your connection to disconnect if idle
- Configure your Dial-Up connection
- Set the Dial-Up interval
Install the Microsoft Dial-Up Networking 1.3 Upgrade
NOTE: You do not have to install the Microsoft Dial-Up Networking 1.3 Upgrade if you have Windows 95 OSR2 that is an OEM version of Windows and only available with a new personal computer. In addition, the Dial-up Networking version included with Windows 98 is 1.3, making this upgrade unnecessary.
To make Outlook automatically call your ISP you must install the Microsoft
Dial-Up Networking 1.3 Upgrade.
For additional information about the Microsoft
Dial-Up Networking 1.3 Upgrade, click the article number below
to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Q191494 Dial-Up Networking 1.3 Upgrade Available
After you install the Microsoft Dial-Up Networking 1.3 Upgrade, follow
these steps to setup Outlook to check your ISP e-mail account at regular
intervals.
Set Your E-mail Connection Type to LAN
Set the connection type to LAN for all accounts that you want to have
automatically check for new mail. To set the connection type in Outlook
follow these steps:
- Start Outlook.
- On the Tools menu, click Services.
- Click to select your Internet E-mail service and then click Properties.
- Click the Connection tab and click to check "I use a LAN connection."
- Click OK to close the Internet Mail Properties dialog.
- Click OK to confirm the message that changes will take effect when you restart Outlook and then click OK to close the Services dialog box.
- Exit Outlook.
If you have configured multiple accounts, you need to repeat the above
steps for each account that you want to have automatically check for new
mail.
Set Your Connection to Disconnect If Idle
NOTE: The steps in this section apply to Microsoft Internet Explorer
version 3.02 and 4.0x. If you use a different Web browser, the steps may be
different.
To set the disconnect timeout for Internet Explorer version 3.02, follow
these steps:
- On the Windows Taskbar, click Start, point to Settings and click Control Panel.
- In the Control Panel double-click the Internet icon.
- Click the Connection tab.
- Click to select "Connect to the Internet as needed" and in the "Use the following Dial-Up Networking connection" box, click to select your ISP's Dial-Up Networking connection.
- Click to check "Disconnect if idle for" and set the timeout to three
minutes. (Three minutes is the minimum allowable setting.)Click OK to
close the dialog box.
To set the disconnect timeout for Internet Explorer version 4.0x, follow
these steps:
- On the View menu click Internet Options. Click the Connection tab and then click "Connect to the Internet using a modem."
- Click Settings and then click to place a check mark at "Disconnect if idle for <x> minutes", where "x" is the number of minutes you wish the connection to remain active before it disconnects.
- Click OK, Apply and then OK again to save the settings.
Configure Your Dial-Up Connection
- On the Windows Desktop, double-click My Computer and then double-click Dial-Up Networking.
- Double-click the Dial-Up Networking connection you specified in Step 5 of the section, "Set Your Connection to Disconnect If Idle." Type your username and password and check the "Save Password" checkbox. Click Connect and wait for the connection. Once connected to your ISP, click Disconnect.
- On the Connection menu, click Settings and then click to un-check "Prompt for information before dialing." Click OK to close all dialog boxes.
Set the Dial-Up Interval
- Start Outlook.
- On the Tools menu, click Options.
- Click the Internet E-mail tab.
- Click to select "Check for new messages every X minutes," where X is the number of minutes for your connection interval. Make sure this number
is greater than three (such as 15 or 20) or Outlook will stay connected constantly.
- Click OK to close the Options dialog box.
Additional query words:
schedule ISDN DUN automatic check email
Keywords : GnrlIMEP
Version : :
Platform : WINDOWS
Issue type : kbinfo
|