exit option functioning. You would have to do something more to sync your
calendars.
>I need seperate PST files so when I sync to my work laptop, my personal
> e-mail isn't on it. Also, I like to keep my work and personal seperate.
> I
> limit my PST archive files to ~2GB (yes, I perform monthly maintenance on
> the
> files to eliminate the extra crap and reduce the size) and break them down
> into years. Then, they get backed up and filed by year.
>
> What is also nice is that work goes to the work folder and personal goes
> to
> the personal folder. But, they both share the same calendar ... which
> syncs
> to my phone. So, my desktop and laptop sync and then backup to seperate
> folders on my backup drives (yes, 2 backups on 2 drives - incase 1 goes
> down)
> and then my desktop syncs to my phone. If something goes down (which it
> has), I'm Definately covered (and I was)! lol
>
> Not only am I extremely well organized, I also have a great backup
> schedule
> / system. Everything syncs 2x/day and backs up in the middle of the night
> (some things backup 2x/day). I am also a part time IT guy.
>
> "Gordon" wrote:
>
>> "Tyler G." <TylerG@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
>> news:AB792D19-DE63-4523-A97F-D1D2B43520AF@microsoft.com...
>> > Gordon - yes, this is exactly what I'm finding out.
>> > I have tried and tried to resolve this issue and can't find a
>> > satisfactory
>> > solution.
>> >
>> >
>> Why do you need separate pst files for each account?
>>
>>