Open the Event Viewer utility in your Administrative Tools control panel and see if there are any helpful error/warning messages in your System and Application logs.
DMR
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Please give the information DMR asked for in his post and any other error message you see. It's otherwise very difficult to diagnose the problem.
JoetjeF
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Outlook express will crash because it a java based program that rely on the ram working correctly.
No offence meant here, butall programs use RAM and rely on the physical memory working correctly. This has nothing to do with Java in particular, and additionally, since ep2002 has indicated that the problem is only with OE, that would not point to a problem with RAM in general.
This might shed some light on the real root of the problem though:
The problems I have are w/ OE. If I search & find too many different e-mails, it starts to crash...If your problems really areonly with OE, and you're also asking OE to deal with a very large number of messages, the cause is almost certainly not due to bad or mismatched RAM, but rather the fact that Outlook Express has known limitations in terms of the maximum size of its folders (Inbox, etc.). Iif you have allowed a huge number of emails to pile up in your different OE folders, the program will crash because you've exceeded (or are approaching exceeding) the size limit of those folders. The size limit on OE's files/folders was 2Gig last I checked, and I don't think that has changed recently.
DMR
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1) A pretty definitive way to figure out if RAM in general is the root of the problem is to download and run the (free) memtest86 RAM-testing utility.
More info on from an earlier post of mine on the subject:
Download and run the free memtest86 RAM-testing utility. It runs from a bootable CD or floppy, and it will do a pretty thorough battery "stress tests" of your RAM and give you the results of any errors it finds. Let the test cycle run for a few hours or more for the best results.
Also- If you've got more than one RAM module installed, run the computer with only one of the modules installed at a time. If you find that the system only crashes when one particular RAM module is being used, replace that module.
2) Unfortunately, Outlook suffers from the same message/folder size limitations that Outlook Express does IIRC; if your problems lie in that area, a move to Outlook won't help. You said:I'm well over 11,000 e-mails in my inbox & that's not including all the e-mail in all the folders I have under "Local Folders".That could very well be what's doing you in; you need to be dilligent about deleting old/unwanted messages, or do periodic backups to some other location to get those old emails out of your "active" folders. I've had a few of my "real life" clients let the contents of their Outlook/OE folders grow too large, and the recovery processes werenot fun.
3) In terms of Thunderbird: while it definitely does not have all of the "bells and whistles" of the full version of Outlook, the latest version of TB at least has a 4G mailbox limit, which is twice that of Outlook/OE. I've sucessfully used TB as one component of the recovery process in cases where my clients have "blown up" their Outlook mailboxes by exceeding the size limitations of those programs.
DMR
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