A customer has asked me what level of free storage triggers the Low Storage
popup on WM5 - just so they can be sure to keep above it. I've advised them
to keep plenty of free storage for performance reasons, but what's the answer
to this anyway?

Is it a registry setting, or a fixed percentage?

Re: What level of free storage triggers the 'Low Storage Memory' warni by wolfe719

wolfe719
Thu Aug 16 10:01:37 CDT 2007

On Aug 9, 5:38 am, Andy Wigley (MVP) <a...@discussions.microsoft.com>
wrote:
> A customer has asked me what level of free storage triggers the Low Storage
> popup on WM5 - just so they can be sure to keep above it. I've advised them
> to keep plenty of free storage for performance reasons, but what's the answer
> to this anyway?
>
> Is it a registry setting, or a fixed percentage?

Check out the following URL:

http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms832319.aspx

It will tell you what you need to know for the PPCPE (excuse me, the
Professional devices), and the same mechanism is in place in the
Smartphone (excuse me, the Classic devices).

Good luck,

John Wolfe
Lobo Consulting
wolfe719@gmail.com


Re: What level of free storage triggers the 'Low Storage Memory' w by andy

andy
Thu Aug 16 19:53:24 CDT 2007

Thanks for your response - but I think I wasn't accurate with my question. Or
more precisely, this thread title should have been clearer that I'm asking
about Free Storage, not free program memory.

I need to know what level of Storage free space i.e free space in Flash,
triggers the 'Low storage' warning. Of course we're talking WM5, WM6 or
SP2003 here.

That link refers to Low Memory situations - meaning low program memory. I
need to know about Low storage warnings. Anyone know?

- Andy

"wolfe719@gmail.com" wrote:

> On Aug 9, 5:38 am, Andy Wigley (MVP) <a...@discussions.microsoft.com>
> wrote:
> > A customer has asked me what level of free storage triggers the Low Storage
> > popup on WM5 - just so they can be sure to keep above it. I've advised them
> > to keep plenty of free storage for performance reasons, but what's the answer
> > to this anyway?
> >
> > Is it a registry setting, or a fixed percentage?
>
> Check out the following URL:
>
> http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms832319.aspx
>
> It will tell you what you need to know for the PPCPE (excuse me, the
> Professional devices), and the same mechanism is in place in the
> Smartphone (excuse me, the Classic devices).
>
> Good luck,
>
> John Wolfe
> Lobo Consulting
> wolfe719@gmail.com
>
>