Interesting. There was a post in an mcse forum abd pub groups that was almost verbatim but by a different person named Matjaz with the same message number....
http://www.mcse.ms/archive76-2005-3-1501769.html "Error 0x7da occurred while rendering message 0001-0000000076cb for download for user [EMAIL PROTECTED] This error is repeating every minute when the user has his email client (Outlook Express 6) opened and this goes on since 14 days ago. It is always the 0001-0000000076cb message. Can I delete that message somehow? How? What does the number 0001-0000000076cb mean and how can I access the specific message? Thank you very much for your answer." Possibly touch base with that person and see if you can find similarities... Alternatively check out http://techrepublic.com.com/5100-6345-5108373.html ---- If your clients use POP3 to retrieve mail from an Exchange 2000 or Exchange 2003 server, you may receive an error message that's similar to the following: Event ID: 1023 Event Source: POP3SVC Event Type: Error Event Category: Content Engine Description: Error 0x7d6 occurred while rendering message 0001-0000007d063a for download for user [EMAIL PROTECTED] A configuration problem on the client's computer is the cause of this error message. Outlook clients configured with both the Internet E-mail and Microsoft Exchange Server services in their profile generate such errors. The client computer pulls mail down using POP3. If the Exchange service attempts to access a message that the user has already deleted via POP3, the server generates the 1023 error message. While this error isn't harmful, 1023 events can fill the application log quickly, making troubleshooting other problems more difficult. To get rid of 1023 errors, configure the Outlook client to use only one service in the profile. If a user needs both services, configure a separate profile for each service. Once the client uses only one service per profile, the annoying 1023 error messages will go away. ---- -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of John Parker Sent: Friday, May 06, 2005 11:25 AM To: [email protected] Subject: [ActiveDir] Odd exchange error Hey all I have an issue with Microsoft Exchange Server 2000 Enterprise running on a Win2K AD box. In the event viewer I keep getting this error message: Error 0x7da occurred while rendering message 0001-0000000076cb for download for user [EMAIL PROTECTED] This error is repeating every few seconds when the user has his email client (Outlook Express 6) opened and this goes on since a few ago. It is always the 0001-0000000076cb message. Can I delete that message somehow? How? What does the number 0001-0000000076cb mean and how can I access the specific message? Thank you very much for your answer. John Parker, MCSE IS Admin. Senior Technical Specialist Alpha Display Systems. Alpha Video NOTICE OF CONFIDENTIALITY This document and its attachments are intended for the named addressee(s) only. They contain information which may be Confidential, privileged and/or exempt from disclosure. Unless you are the named addressee (or authorized to receive this document and/or its attachment(s) or its contents on behalf of the addressee,) you may not read, copy, use, or disclose the document and/or its attachment(s) or its contents. The unauthorized use, copying or disclosure of this document and/or its attachment(s) or its contents is strictly prohibited and may be unlawful. Alpha Video and Audio inc. disclaims any responsibility in relation to the information in this e-mail message. No rights can be derived from this message. Messages and attachments are not scanned for all known viruses. If you have received this document and/or its attachment(s) by mistake, please notify the sender by telephone immediately at 952-896-9898 or by e-mail at [EMAIL PROTECTED] and destroy immediately all physical and/or electronic copies of the document and its attachment(s). List info : http://www.activedir.org/List.aspx List FAQ : http://www.activedir.org/ListFAQ.aspx List archive: http://www.mail-archive.com/activedir%40mail.activedir.org/ List info : http://www.activedir.org/List.aspx List FAQ : http://www.activedir.org/ListFAQ.aspx List archive: http://www.mail-archive.com/activedir%40mail.activedir.org/
