

That this user had absolutely no server-side rules, then I followed this KB article: I was able to see the body of the messages and both of these were the correct, legitimate Out of Office messages. When I got to Step # 10 from your instructions, there were two .Microsoft messages. Obviously it is a bit comical to receive such a message in 2015. This rule was from 2011, with a message stating they would be back in the office in September 2011. Suddenly everyone who e-mailed them was receiving 2 replies one legitimate Automatic reply from the Out Of Office assistant,īut also one reply from a corrupt/invisible server-side rule on the mailbox. In my case, a user enabled their Out of Office assistant for internal+external automatic replies for a specified date range. Thanks Tony this put me on the right track for a similar issue. Inspect the properties of the message to see if the message type is .Microsoft In the top pane, scroll right until the "Message Class" field comes into viewġ0. Right-click Inbox and select Open Associated Contents Tableĩ. Expand IPM_SUBTREE(Top of Information Store)Ĩ. Double-click your mailbox in the top pane.ħ. When prompted, select your Cached mode profile.ĥ. If you bought a retail version of Microsoft Office, you'll need to link the 25-digit product key included on the receipt or product card to your Microsoft account first. To change mode of Outlook, Click Tools- Account settings- collect the Profile and Click change- Uncheck the Use Cached Exchange Mode- restart OutlookĤ. If you have an Office 365 subscription, you won't need to activate Officejust sign in with the Microsoft account you used to subscribe.

Note: Please run this tool in Outlook online mode.
#ACTIVATE MICROSOFT OUTLOOK OUT OF OFFICE DOWNLOAD#
Please download MFCMapi and delete the OOF rule direcly: Your mailbox rule - Out of Office seems not to remove completely.
