pst file can also be corrupted over the network if not stored locally, it can have its header corrupted, or be corrupted while compacting the file to make it use disk space more efficiently. What are these other corruption issues? Outlook's. pst files damaged this way, along with fixing other corruption issues and retrieving deleted items (mail, contacts, etc). This problem became so widespread that a host of companies created products to fix the problem.įor example, there's Disk Doctors Outlook Mail Recovery that can repair. pst file reached 2GB in size, the file could spontaneously corrupt itself. In older Outlook versions (Outlook 97 through Outlook 2002), if a. pst files have been notorious for years for becoming corrupted. There are also issues with using Outlook 2007 to pick up POP3 mail, where Microsoft's handling of the AUTH command is incorrect, causing the POP3 mail checking process to take a painfully long time. Who has time to go through and hand purge items from a mailbox that's in the gigabytes? Microsoft also recommends to "Use an online mode profile instead of a cached mode profile." Unfortunately, turning off cached mode increases network traffic, messes with your junk mail filtering, and if you're off the network, good luck with being able to see your mail at all.
While there's an update that fixes this problem somewhat, some of the recommendations for reducing the trouble are themselves problematic. You can also run into this problem if you use Outlook 2007 for RSS feeds.
ost files (starting officially around 2GB and getting significantly worse as you top 4GB), Outlook happily freezes on you as you work with your mail. Outlook has never been the fastest kid on the block, but Outlook 2007 takes a new prize in being extra special slow.
Baylor Plano has denied having anything to do with its removal.For the opposite point of view, check out my colleague Lynn Greiner's 10 Reasons to Use Microsoft Outlook. The billboard showed a hand wearing a white surgical glove and holding a scalpel on a black background. (Wondery)Ĭlear Channel, which owns the billboard space, told podcast producer Wondery it was removed because the show was considered "adult content," which is not permitted within a certain radius of hospitals, schools or churches. The building appeared next to Baylor Scott & White in Plano, one of the hospitals where Christopher Duntch, who has been sentenced to life in prison, operated on patients. 13, but, company officials say, had been covered up within hours after appearing. The billboard appeared this way on Thursday, Sept. The billboard paid for Wondery to advertise its podcast, Dr. Death billboard near Baylor Plano removed
Days later, his license was temporarily suspended citing his treatment of Summers, Martin, Brown and Glidewell. In December 2013, his license was revoked and the medical board noted he violated the standard of care for six patients. University General suspended Duntsch's privileges. All but one of those cases have been closed. Three federal suits also named Baylor in connection with Duntsch's employment and the allegations against him. Glidewell later became one of the patients who sued Duntsch in Dallas County. He filed a complaint that called Dunstch a sociopath who, if not stopped, would "continue to maim and kill innocent patients." (KXAS-TV (NBC5))Ī doctor who had once watched in surprise while Duntsch performed a procedure at Baylor Plano examined Glidewell afterward.
That victim, Mary Efurd, was 74 in 2012 when she went under Duntsch's knife and lost a third of her blood and the full use of her legs. A jury has sentenced neurosurgeon Christopher Duntsch to life in prison for seriously injuring an elderly patient Monday February 20, 2014. When he found a large tissue mass in the patient's neck, he stopped the surgery but left a sponge inside Glidewell, who developed an infection. In May 2013, he performed a cervical fusion on Glidewell, 49. He admitted to making a "small error" because of the stress he was under, but it left Efurd with partial paralysis and constant pain.ĭuntsch lost his privileges but got new ones at University General Hospital despite efforts by at least one doctor to sound the alarm. Despite Brown's deteriorating condition, Duntsch continued the operation on Efurd and put a screw in the wrong spot.