A Microsoft Office (Excel, Word) forum. OfficeFrustration

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Home » OfficeFrustration forum » Microsoft Outlook » Installation & Setup
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read  

Moving from dead computer to new one



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old January 9th, 2005, 07:41 PM
Elbert
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Moving from dead computer to new one

My old computer is dead but the C-drive disk is OK, now connected to my new
computer via a USB adapter. I installed Outlook 2003 onto the new computer
from CD, and wanted to copy all stored emails etc. from the old disk.

I found that installation from CD put new outlook.pst and some other OL
files in c:\documents and settings\Elbert\local settings\application
data\microsoft\outlook. I deleted them and then copied the files from the
same place on the old disk drive.

It almost worked, except:

(1) when I try to compose a new email and click on the TO button, it says
"The address list could not be displayed. The contacts list associated with
this address list could not be opened; it may have been moved or deleted..."
But if I click on Contacts in the navigation bar, I see my contacts, and if I
right click on a contact, I can select "New Message to Contact";

(2) When I click on Personal Folders in the navigation bar, I see columns
with my calendar, tasks, and counts of messages of messages, just as I used
to, except that the tasks are shown reverse chronological order. If I
display tasks by clicking tasks in the navigation bar, I see them in
chronological order, but I can't figure out how to see them that way in
Personal Folders view.

(3) Something I read gave me the impression that I should have imported the
old outlook.pst into outlook.pst that was newly created when I installed OL.
I moved all OL related files I could find to a temporary folder, then
uninstalled OL and reinstalled it, figuring it would create a nice clean
outlook.pst and I'd try importing to it; this would give me the new file
structure, too, in place of the OL2002 structure. But no dice: When I try to
run the newly intsalled OL, it says it cannot find outlook.pst (it did not
create a new one) and it refuses to run.

I have a feeling that all of these are due to the simple-minded approach I
took to trying to move the old data. If anybody can tell me how to start
over and do it right, or how to fix things without starting over, I'd sure
appreciate it.

Elbert

  #2  
Old January 10th, 2005, 12:03 AM
Jocelyn Fiorello [MVP - Outlook]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

In ,
Elbert wrote:

My old computer is dead but the C-drive disk is OK, now connected to
my new computer via a USB adapter. I installed Outlook 2003 onto the
new computer from CD, and wanted to copy all stored emails etc. from
the old disk.

I found that installation from CD put new outlook.pst and some other
OL files in c:\documents and settings\Elbert\local
settings\application data\microsoft\outlook. I deleted them and then
copied the files from the same place on the old disk drive.

It almost worked, except:

(1) when I try to compose a new email and click on the TO button, it
says "The address list could not be displayed. The contacts list
associated with this address list could not be opened; it may have
been moved or deleted..." But if I click on Contacts in the
navigation bar, I see my contacts, and if I right click on a contact,
I can select "New Message to Contact";


This is a common occurrence when moving things around -- the association
between the Contacts folder and the Outlook Address Book gets broken. To
fix it, go to Tools | E-mail accounts, select "View or change existing
directories or address books", and click Next. If you don't see the OAB in
the Directories and Address Books list, click the Back button, then select
"Add a new directory or address book", then "Additional Address Books", and
add the OAB. Then keep clicking Back until you get back to the first dialog
box, and go back to the Directories and Address Books list as you did
earlier.

Once the OAB appears in the list, select it and then click Change to make
sure the Contacts folder(s) you want to display are listed. If any of them
aren't listed, you'll need to enable those Contacts folders as Outlook
Address Books by right clicking the folder, selecting Properties, clicking
the Outlook Address Book tab, and checking the "Show this folder as an
E-mail address book" box. Make sure you restart Outlook after making these
changes.

(2) When I click on Personal Folders in the navigation bar, I see
columns with my calendar, tasks, and counts of messages of messages,
just as I used to, except that the tasks are shown reverse
chronological order. If I display tasks by clicking tasks in the
navigation bar, I see them in chronological order, but I can't figure
out how to see them that way in Personal Folders view.


On the Outlook Today page, click Customize Outlook Today. You can change
the sort order of your tasks in Outlook Today there.

(3) Something I read gave me the impression that I should have
imported the old outlook.pst into outlook.pst that was newly created
when I installed OL. I moved all OL related files I could find to a
temporary folder, then uninstalled OL and reinstalled it, figuring it
would create a nice clean outlook.pst and I'd try importing to it;
this would give me the new file structure, too, in place of the
OL2002 structure. But no dice: When I try to run the newly intsalled
OL, it says it cannot find outlook.pst (it did not create a new one)
and it refuses to run.


The only thing I can see that you did "wrong" is to overwrite the new .PST
file with your old one, as you describe in the second paragraph of your
post. Doing this confuses Outlook. .PST files can be located anywhere on
your hard drive, so never overwrite one .PST with another -- just put your
desired .PST file where you want it and then point Outlook to it. If you
were using Outlook 2002 before and your old .PST file is in that format, you
probably do want to create a new .PST in the Outlook 2003 Unicode format,
open your old .PST in Outlook using File | Open | Outlook Data File, and
drag items from your old file to the new one. That way you get the benefits
of the new Unicode file format but you still have your old data. Don't
import and export, either -- that breaks things too.

I have a feeling that all of these are due to the simple-minded
approach I took to trying to move the old data. If anybody can tell
me how to start over and do it right, or how to fix things without
starting over, I'd sure appreciate it.

Elbert


--
Jocelyn Fiorello
MVP - Outlook

*** Messages sent to my e-mail address will NOT be answered -- please
reply only to the newsgroup to preserve the message thread. ***


  #3  
Old January 10th, 2005, 01:01 PM
Elbert
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Many thanks for your reply. Please see what I wrote after items (1), (2),
and (3).

Elbert

"Jocelyn Fiorello [MVP - Outlook]" wrote:

In ,
Elbert wrote:

My old computer is dead but the C-drive disk is OK, now connected to
my new computer via a USB adapter. I installed Outlook 2003 onto the
new computer from CD, and wanted to copy all stored emails etc. from
the old disk.

I found that installation from CD put new outlook.pst and some other
OL files in c:\documents and settings\Elbert\local
settings\application data\microsoft\outlook. I deleted them and then
copied the files from the same place on the old disk drive.

It almost worked, except:

(1) when I try to compose a new email and click on the TO button, it
says "The address list could not be displayed. The contacts list
associated with this address list could not be opened; it may have
been moved or deleted..." But if I click on Contacts in the
navigation bar, I see my contacts, and if I right click on a contact,
I can select "New Message to Contact";


This is a common occurrence when moving things around -- the association
between the Contacts folder and the Outlook Address Book gets broken. To
fix it, go to Tools | E-mail accounts, select "View or change existing
directories or address books", and click Next. If you don't see the OAB in
the Directories and Address Books list, click the Back button, then select
"Add a new directory or address book", then "Additional Address Books", and
add the OAB. Then keep clicking Back until you get back to the first dialog
box, and go back to the Directories and Address Books list as you did
earlier.

Once the OAB appears in the list, select it and then click Change to make
sure the Contacts folder(s) you want to display are listed. If any of them
aren't listed, you'll need to enable those Contacts folders as Outlook
Address Books by right clicking the folder, selecting Properties, clicking
the Outlook Address Book tab, and checking the "Show this folder as an
E-mail address book" box. Make sure you restart Outlook after making these
changes.


In the folders list, the personal folders tree appears twice. If I go to
properties|OL address book after right-clicking either instance of Contacts
in the tree, I find that "Show this folder as an E-mail address book" is
already checked. If I uncheck it using one instance of Contacts, it is then
shown as unchecked if I use the other instance of Contacts, so I figure the
same entry appears twice in the tree, not two separate personal folders. I
check "Show this folder..." again, click Apply, and OK.

I go to Tools | E-mail accounts, select "View or change existing directories
or address books", and click Next. OAB does appear in the list, so I select
it and click Change. Contacts: personal folders appears twice in the list of
Outlook address books. The only available options are to change the sort
order of the address book, or to remove it. I do neither and close the
window. I'm stumped at this point and stop before I make things worse. Any
further ideas you can give me will be appreciated.


(2) When I click on Personal Folders in the navigation bar, I see
columns with my calendar, tasks, and counts of messages of messages,
just as I used to, except that the tasks are shown reverse
chronological order. If I display tasks by clicking tasks in the
navigation bar, I see them in chronological order, but I can't figure
out how to see them that way in Personal Folders view.


On the Outlook Today page, click Customize Outlook Today. You can change
the sort order of your tasks in Outlook Today there.


Duh. Thanks.


(3) Something I read gave me the impression that I should have
imported the old outlook.pst into outlook.pst that was newly created
when I installed OL. I moved all OL related files I could find to a
temporary folder, then uninstalled OL and reinstalled it, figuring it
would create a nice clean outlook.pst and I'd try importing to it;
this would give me the new file structure, too, in place of the
OL2002 structure. But no dice: When I try to run the newly intsalled
OL, it says it cannot find outlook.pst (it did not create a new one)
and it refuses to run.


The only thing I can see that you did "wrong" is to overwrite the new .PST
file with your old one, as you describe in the second paragraph of your
post. Doing this confuses Outlook. .PST files can be located anywhere on
your hard drive, so never overwrite one .PST with another -- just put your
desired .PST file where you want it and then point Outlook to it. If you
were using Outlook 2002 before and your old .PST file is in that format, you
probably do want to create a new .PST in the Outlook 2003 Unicode format,
open your old .PST in Outlook using File | Open | Outlook Data File, and
drag items from your old file to the new one. That way you get the benefits
of the new Unicode file format but you still have your old data. Don't
import and export, either -- that breaks things too.


I'll try that after I figure out how to fix number (1)--I'd like to have
things in good order before trying anything new. Thanks for warning me about
importing--I was going to try that.


I have a feeling that all of these are due to the simple-minded
approach I took to trying to move the old data. If anybody can tell
me how to start over and do it right, or how to fix things without
starting over, I'd sure appreciate it.

Elbert


--
Jocelyn Fiorello
MVP - Outlook

*** Messages sent to my e-mail address will NOT be answered -- please
reply only to the newsgroup to preserve the message thread. ***



  #4  
Old January 10th, 2005, 04:55 PM
Mike
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

I have had some of these problems, as well as the problem that I can't see
the data file from Outlook (my Personal Folders is not listed as a data file
on the list under data file management) so I can't compact it or change the
name - in fact I can't even hit the Advanced button after clicking Properties
- I get an error that the Object could not be found. When I look for the
data file using Windows explorer, I can see that it is there, and all of the
folders, calendar, etc are present when I open Outlook. (WinXP, Outlook
2003). Any suggestions?

I also have the error that OL can't see my contacts, but when I check (as
suggested below), the folder is there ( in fact 2 of them are there, I have
no idea where the other one is). Help!

"Elbert" wrote:

Many thanks for your reply. Please see what I wrote after items (1), (2),
and (3).

Elbert

"Jocelyn Fiorello [MVP - Outlook]" wrote:

In ,
Elbert wrote:

My old computer is dead but the C-drive disk is OK, now connected to
my new computer via a USB adapter. I installed Outlook 2003 onto the
new computer from CD, and wanted to copy all stored emails etc. from
the old disk.

I found that installation from CD put new outlook.pst and some other
OL files in c:\documents and settings\Elbert\local
settings\application data\microsoft\outlook. I deleted them and then
copied the files from the same place on the old disk drive.

It almost worked, except:

(1) when I try to compose a new email and click on the TO button, it
says "The address list could not be displayed. The contacts list
associated with this address list could not be opened; it may have
been moved or deleted..." But if I click on Contacts in the
navigation bar, I see my contacts, and if I right click on a contact,
I can select "New Message to Contact";


This is a common occurrence when moving things around -- the association
between the Contacts folder and the Outlook Address Book gets broken. To
fix it, go to Tools | E-mail accounts, select "View or change existing
directories or address books", and click Next. If you don't see the OAB in
the Directories and Address Books list, click the Back button, then select
"Add a new directory or address book", then "Additional Address Books", and
add the OAB. Then keep clicking Back until you get back to the first dialog
box, and go back to the Directories and Address Books list as you did
earlier.

Once the OAB appears in the list, select it and then click Change to make
sure the Contacts folder(s) you want to display are listed. If any of them
aren't listed, you'll need to enable those Contacts folders as Outlook
Address Books by right clicking the folder, selecting Properties, clicking
the Outlook Address Book tab, and checking the "Show this folder as an
E-mail address book" box. Make sure you restart Outlook after making these
changes.


In the folders list, the personal folders tree appears twice. If I go to
properties|OL address book after right-clicking either instance of Contacts
in the tree, I find that "Show this folder as an E-mail address book" is
already checked. If I uncheck it using one instance of Contacts, it is then
shown as unchecked if I use the other instance of Contacts, so I figure the
same entry appears twice in the tree, not two separate personal folders. I
check "Show this folder..." again, click Apply, and OK.

I go to Tools | E-mail accounts, select "View or change existing directories
or address books", and click Next. OAB does appear in the list, so I select
it and click Change. Contacts: personal folders appears twice in the list of
Outlook address books. The only available options are to change the sort
order of the address book, or to remove it. I do neither and close the
window. I'm stumped at this point and stop before I make things worse. Any
further ideas you can give me will be appreciated.


(2) When I click on Personal Folders in the navigation bar, I see
columns with my calendar, tasks, and counts of messages of messages,
just as I used to, except that the tasks are shown reverse
chronological order. If I display tasks by clicking tasks in the
navigation bar, I see them in chronological order, but I can't figure
out how to see them that way in Personal Folders view.


On the Outlook Today page, click Customize Outlook Today. You can change
the sort order of your tasks in Outlook Today there.


Duh. Thanks.


(3) Something I read gave me the impression that I should have
imported the old outlook.pst into outlook.pst that was newly created
when I installed OL. I moved all OL related files I could find to a
temporary folder, then uninstalled OL and reinstalled it, figuring it
would create a nice clean outlook.pst and I'd try importing to it;
this would give me the new file structure, too, in place of the
OL2002 structure. But no dice: When I try to run the newly intsalled
OL, it says it cannot find outlook.pst (it did not create a new one)
and it refuses to run.


The only thing I can see that you did "wrong" is to overwrite the new .PST
file with your old one, as you describe in the second paragraph of your
post. Doing this confuses Outlook. .PST files can be located anywhere on
your hard drive, so never overwrite one .PST with another -- just put your
desired .PST file where you want it and then point Outlook to it. If you
were using Outlook 2002 before and your old .PST file is in that format, you
probably do want to create a new .PST in the Outlook 2003 Unicode format,
open your old .PST in Outlook using File | Open | Outlook Data File, and
drag items from your old file to the new one. That way you get the benefits
of the new Unicode file format but you still have your old data. Don't
import and export, either -- that breaks things too.


I'll try that after I figure out how to fix number (1)--I'd like to have
things in good order before trying anything new. Thanks for warning me about
importing--I was going to try that.


I have a feeling that all of these are due to the simple-minded
approach I took to trying to move the old data. If anybody can tell
me how to start over and do it right, or how to fix things without
starting over, I'd sure appreciate it.

Elbert


--
Jocelyn Fiorello
MVP - Outlook

*** Messages sent to my e-mail address will NOT be answered -- please
reply only to the newsgroup to preserve the message thread. ***



  #5  
Old January 12th, 2005, 02:44 AM
Jocelyn Fiorello [MVP - Outlook]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

I think you will have an easier time of it if you try (3) first and then go
back to (1). That way you'll only have one set of Personal Folders to worry
about. As long as you have that ghost .PST hanging around you really don't
have things in good order.

--
Jocelyn Fiorello
MVP - Outlook

*** Messages sent to my e-mail address will NOT be answered -- please
reply only to the newsgroup to preserve the message thread. ***


In ,
Elbert wrote:

Many thanks for your reply. Please see what I wrote after items (1),
(2), and (3).

Elbert

"Jocelyn Fiorello [MVP - Outlook]" wrote:

In ,
Elbert wrote:

My old computer is dead but the C-drive disk is OK, now connected to
my new computer via a USB adapter. I installed Outlook 2003 onto
the new computer from CD, and wanted to copy all stored emails etc.
from the old disk.

I found that installation from CD put new outlook.pst and some other
OL files in c:\documents and settings\Elbert\local
settings\application data\microsoft\outlook. I deleted them and
then copied the files from the same place on the old disk drive.

It almost worked, except:

(1) when I try to compose a new email and click on the TO button, it
says "The address list could not be displayed. The contacts list
associated with this address list could not be opened; it may have
been moved or deleted..." But if I click on Contacts in the
navigation bar, I see my contacts, and if I right click on a
contact, I can select "New Message to Contact";


This is a common occurrence when moving things around -- the
association between the Contacts folder and the Outlook Address Book
gets broken. To fix it, go to Tools | E-mail accounts, select "View
or change existing directories or address books", and click Next.
If you don't see the OAB in the Directories and Address Books list,
click the Back button, then select "Add a new directory or address
book", then "Additional Address Books", and add the OAB. Then keep
clicking Back until you get back to the first dialog box, and go
back to the Directories and Address Books list as you did earlier.

Once the OAB appears in the list, select it and then click Change to
make sure the Contacts folder(s) you want to display are listed. If
any of them aren't listed, you'll need to enable those Contacts
folders as Outlook Address Books by right clicking the folder,
selecting Properties, clicking the Outlook Address Book tab, and
checking the "Show this folder as an E-mail address book" box. Make
sure you restart Outlook after making these changes.


In the folders list, the personal folders tree appears twice. If I
go to properties|OL address book after right-clicking either instance
of Contacts in the tree, I find that "Show this folder as an E-mail
address book" is already checked. If I uncheck it using one instance
of Contacts, it is then shown as unchecked if I use the other
instance of Contacts, so I figure the same entry appears twice in the
tree, not two separate personal folders. I check "Show this
folder..." again, click Apply, and OK.

I go to Tools | E-mail accounts, select "View or change existing
directories or address books", and click Next. OAB does appear in
the list, so I select it and click Change. Contacts: personal
folders appears twice in the list of Outlook address books. The only
available options are to change the sort order of the address book,
or to remove it. I do neither and close the window. I'm stumped at
this point and stop before I make things worse. Any further ideas
you can give me will be appreciated.


(2) When I click on Personal Folders in the navigation bar, I see
columns with my calendar, tasks, and counts of messages of messages,
just as I used to, except that the tasks are shown reverse
chronological order. If I display tasks by clicking tasks in the
navigation bar, I see them in chronological order, but I can't
figure out how to see them that way in Personal Folders view.


On the Outlook Today page, click Customize Outlook Today. You can
change the sort order of your tasks in Outlook Today there.


Duh. Thanks.


(3) Something I read gave me the impression that I should have
imported the old outlook.pst into outlook.pst that was newly created
when I installed OL. I moved all OL related files I could find to a
temporary folder, then uninstalled OL and reinstalled it, figuring
it would create a nice clean outlook.pst and I'd try importing to
it; this would give me the new file structure, too, in place of the
OL2002 structure. But no dice: When I try to run the newly
intsalled OL, it says it cannot find outlook.pst (it did not create
a new one) and it refuses to run.


The only thing I can see that you did "wrong" is to overwrite the
new .PST file with your old one, as you describe in the second
paragraph of your post. Doing this confuses Outlook. .PST files
can be located anywhere on your hard drive, so never overwrite one
.PST with another -- just put your desired .PST file where you want
it and then point Outlook to it. If you were using Outlook 2002
before and your old .PST file is in that format, you probably do
want to create a new .PST in the Outlook 2003 Unicode format, open
your old .PST in Outlook using File | Open | Outlook Data File, and
drag items from your old file to the new one. That way you get the
benefits of the new Unicode file format but you still have your old
data. Don't import and export, either -- that breaks things too.


I'll try that after I figure out how to fix number (1)--I'd like to
have things in good order before trying anything new. Thanks for
warning me about importing--I was going to try that.


I have a feeling that all of these are due to the simple-minded
approach I took to trying to move the old data. If anybody can tell
me how to start over and do it right, or how to fix things without
starting over, I'd sure appreciate it.

Elbert


--
Jocelyn Fiorello
MVP - Outlook

*** Messages sent to my e-mail address will NOT be answered -- please
reply only to the newsgroup to preserve the message thread. ***



  #6  
Old January 12th, 2005, 02:44 AM
Jocelyn Fiorello [MVP - Outlook]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Have you tried creating a new profile as I suggested to Elbert?

--
Jocelyn Fiorello
MVP - Outlook

*** Messages sent to my e-mail address will NOT be answered -- please
reply only to the newsgroup to preserve the message thread. ***


In ,
Mike wrote:

I have had some of these problems, as well as the problem that I
can't see the data file from Outlook (my Personal Folders is not
listed as a data file on the list under data file management) so I
can't compact it or change the name - in fact I can't even hit the
Advanced button after clicking Properties - I get an error that the
Object could not be found. When I look for the data file using
Windows explorer, I can see that it is there, and all of the folders,
calendar, etc are present when I open Outlook. (WinXP, Outlook
2003). Any suggestions?

I also have the error that OL can't see my contacts, but when I check
(as suggested below), the folder is there ( in fact 2 of them are
there, I have no idea where the other one is). Help!

"Elbert" wrote:

Many thanks for your reply. Please see what I wrote after items
(1), (2), and (3).

Elbert

"Jocelyn Fiorello [MVP - Outlook]" wrote:

In ,
Elbert wrote:

My old computer is dead but the C-drive disk is OK, now connected
to my new computer via a USB adapter. I installed Outlook 2003
onto the new computer from CD, and wanted to copy all stored
emails etc. from the old disk.

I found that installation from CD put new outlook.pst and some
other OL files in c:\documents and settings\Elbert\local
settings\application data\microsoft\outlook. I deleted them and
then copied the files from the same place on the old disk drive.

It almost worked, except:

(1) when I try to compose a new email and click on the TO button,
it says "The address list could not be displayed. The contacts
list associated with this address list could not be opened; it may
have been moved or deleted..." But if I click on Contacts in the
navigation bar, I see my contacts, and if I right click on a
contact, I can select "New Message to Contact";

This is a common occurrence when moving things around -- the
association between the Contacts folder and the Outlook Address
Book gets broken. To fix it, go to Tools | E-mail accounts, select
"View or change existing directories or address books", and click
Next. If you don't see the OAB in the Directories and Address
Books list, click the Back button, then select "Add a new directory
or address book", then "Additional Address Books", and add the OAB.
Then keep clicking Back until you get back to the first dialog box,
and go back to the Directories and Address Books list as you did
earlier.

Once the OAB appears in the list, select it and then click Change
to make sure the Contacts folder(s) you want to display are listed.
If any of them aren't listed, you'll need to enable those Contacts
folders as Outlook Address Books by right clicking the folder,
selecting Properties, clicking the Outlook Address Book tab, and
checking the "Show this folder as an E-mail address book" box.
Make sure you restart Outlook after making these changes.


In the folders list, the personal folders tree appears twice. If I
go to properties|OL address book after right-clicking either
instance of Contacts in the tree, I find that "Show this folder as
an E-mail address book" is already checked. If I uncheck it using
one instance of Contacts, it is then shown as unchecked if I use the
other instance of Contacts, so I figure the same entry appears twice
in the tree, not two separate personal folders. I check "Show this
folder..." again, click Apply, and OK.

I go to Tools | E-mail accounts, select "View or change existing
directories or address books", and click Next. OAB does appear in
the list, so I select it and click Change. Contacts: personal
folders appears twice in the list of Outlook address books. The
only available options are to change the sort order of the address
book, or to remove it. I do neither and close the window. I'm
stumped at this point and stop before I make things worse. Any
further ideas you can give me will be appreciated.


(2) When I click on Personal Folders in the navigation bar, I see
columns with my calendar, tasks, and counts of messages of
messages, just as I used to, except that the tasks are shown
reverse chronological order. If I display tasks by clicking tasks
in the navigation bar, I see them in chronological order, but I
can't figure out how to see them that way in Personal Folders view.

On the Outlook Today page, click Customize Outlook Today. You can
change the sort order of your tasks in Outlook Today there.


Duh. Thanks.


(3) Something I read gave me the impression that I should have
imported the old outlook.pst into outlook.pst that was newly
created when I installed OL. I moved all OL related files I could
find to a temporary folder, then uninstalled OL and reinstalled
it, figuring it would create a nice clean outlook.pst and I'd try
importing to it; this would give me the new file structure, too,
in place of the OL2002 structure. But no dice: When I try to run
the newly intsalled OL, it says it cannot find outlook.pst (it did
not create a new one) and it refuses to run.

The only thing I can see that you did "wrong" is to overwrite the
new .PST file with your old one, as you describe in the second
paragraph of your post. Doing this confuses Outlook. .PST files
can be located anywhere on your hard drive, so never overwrite one
.PST with another -- just put your desired .PST file where you want
it and then point Outlook to it. If you were using Outlook 2002
before and your old .PST file is in that format, you probably do
want to create a new .PST in the Outlook 2003 Unicode format, open
your old .PST in Outlook using File | Open | Outlook Data File, and
drag items from your old file to the new one. That way you get the
benefits of the new Unicode file format but you still have your old
data. Don't import and export, either -- that breaks things too.


I'll try that after I figure out how to fix number (1)--I'd like to
have things in good order before trying anything new. Thanks for
warning me about importing--I was going to try that.


I have a feeling that all of these are due to the simple-minded
approach I took to trying to move the old data. If anybody can
tell me how to start over and do it right, or how to fix things
without starting over, I'd sure appreciate it.

Elbert

--
Jocelyn Fiorello
MVP - Outlook

*** Messages sent to my e-mail address will NOT be answered --
please
reply only to the newsgroup to preserve the message thread. ***



  #7  
Old January 12th, 2005, 03:09 PM
Mike
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

I did, and things work great now. Thanks!
Mike

"Jocelyn Fiorello [MVP - Outlook]" wrote:

Have you tried creating a new profile as I suggested to Elbert?

--
Jocelyn Fiorello
MVP - Outlook

*** Messages sent to my e-mail address will NOT be answered -- please
reply only to the newsgroup to preserve the message thread. ***


In ,
Mike wrote:

I have had some of these problems, as well as the problem that I
can't see the data file from Outlook (my Personal Folders is not
listed as a data file on the list under data file management) so I
can't compact it or change the name - in fact I can't even hit the
Advanced button after clicking Properties - I get an error that the
Object could not be found. When I look for the data file using
Windows explorer, I can see that it is there, and all of the folders,
calendar, etc are present when I open Outlook. (WinXP, Outlook
2003). Any suggestions?

I also have the error that OL can't see my contacts, but when I check
(as suggested below), the folder is there ( in fact 2 of them are
there, I have no idea where the other one is). Help!

"Elbert" wrote:

Many thanks for your reply. Please see what I wrote after items
(1), (2), and (3).

Elbert

"Jocelyn Fiorello [MVP - Outlook]" wrote:

In ,
Elbert wrote:

My old computer is dead but the C-drive disk is OK, now connected
to my new computer via a USB adapter. I installed Outlook 2003
onto the new computer from CD, and wanted to copy all stored
emails etc. from the old disk.

I found that installation from CD put new outlook.pst and some
other OL files in c:\documents and settings\Elbert\local
settings\application data\microsoft\outlook. I deleted them and
then copied the files from the same place on the old disk drive.

It almost worked, except:

(1) when I try to compose a new email and click on the TO button,
it says "The address list could not be displayed. The contacts
list associated with this address list could not be opened; it may
have been moved or deleted..." But if I click on Contacts in the
navigation bar, I see my contacts, and if I right click on a
contact, I can select "New Message to Contact";

This is a common occurrence when moving things around -- the
association between the Contacts folder and the Outlook Address
Book gets broken. To fix it, go to Tools | E-mail accounts, select
"View or change existing directories or address books", and click
Next. If you don't see the OAB in the Directories and Address
Books list, click the Back button, then select "Add a new directory
or address book", then "Additional Address Books", and add the OAB.
Then keep clicking Back until you get back to the first dialog box,
and go back to the Directories and Address Books list as you did
earlier.

Once the OAB appears in the list, select it and then click Change
to make sure the Contacts folder(s) you want to display are listed.
If any of them aren't listed, you'll need to enable those Contacts
folders as Outlook Address Books by right clicking the folder,
selecting Properties, clicking the Outlook Address Book tab, and
checking the "Show this folder as an E-mail address book" box.
Make sure you restart Outlook after making these changes.

In the folders list, the personal folders tree appears twice. If I
go to properties|OL address book after right-clicking either
instance of Contacts in the tree, I find that "Show this folder as
an E-mail address book" is already checked. If I uncheck it using
one instance of Contacts, it is then shown as unchecked if I use the
other instance of Contacts, so I figure the same entry appears twice
in the tree, not two separate personal folders. I check "Show this
folder..." again, click Apply, and OK.

I go to Tools | E-mail accounts, select "View or change existing
directories or address books", and click Next. OAB does appear in
the list, so I select it and click Change. Contacts: personal
folders appears twice in the list of Outlook address books. The
only available options are to change the sort order of the address
book, or to remove it. I do neither and close the window. I'm
stumped at this point and stop before I make things worse. Any
further ideas you can give me will be appreciated.


(2) When I click on Personal Folders in the navigation bar, I see
columns with my calendar, tasks, and counts of messages of
messages, just as I used to, except that the tasks are shown
reverse chronological order. If I display tasks by clicking tasks
in the navigation bar, I see them in chronological order, but I
can't figure out how to see them that way in Personal Folders view.

On the Outlook Today page, click Customize Outlook Today. You can
change the sort order of your tasks in Outlook Today there.

Duh. Thanks.


(3) Something I read gave me the impression that I should have
imported the old outlook.pst into outlook.pst that was newly
created when I installed OL. I moved all OL related files I could
find to a temporary folder, then uninstalled OL and reinstalled
it, figuring it would create a nice clean outlook.pst and I'd try
importing to it; this would give me the new file structure, too,
in place of the OL2002 structure. But no dice: When I try to run
the newly intsalled OL, it says it cannot find outlook.pst (it did
not create a new one) and it refuses to run.

The only thing I can see that you did "wrong" is to overwrite the
new .PST file with your old one, as you describe in the second
paragraph of your post. Doing this confuses Outlook. .PST files
can be located anywhere on your hard drive, so never overwrite one
.PST with another -- just put your desired .PST file where you want
it and then point Outlook to it. If you were using Outlook 2002
before and your old .PST file is in that format, you probably do
want to create a new .PST in the Outlook 2003 Unicode format, open
your old .PST in Outlook using File | Open | Outlook Data File, and
drag items from your old file to the new one. That way you get the
benefits of the new Unicode file format but you still have your old
data. Don't import and export, either -- that breaks things too.

I'll try that after I figure out how to fix number (1)--I'd like to
have things in good order before trying anything new. Thanks for
warning me about importing--I was going to try that.


I have a feeling that all of these are due to the simple-minded
approach I took to trying to move the old data. If anybody can
tell me how to start over and do it right, or how to fix things
without starting over, I'd sure appreciate it.

Elbert

--
Jocelyn Fiorello
MVP - Outlook

*** Messages sent to my e-mail address will NOT be answered --
please
reply only to the newsgroup to preserve the message thread. ***




  #8  
Old January 13th, 2005, 11:29 AM
Elbert
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Thanks for writing again. In OL, I did file|new|outlook data file. I told
OL to call it Personal Folders. OL created Personal Folders(1).pst in
c:\documents and settings\elbert\local settings\application
data\microsoft\outlook. The new data file appears in the OL navigation panel
as Personal Folders.

I now have three instances of Personal Folders in the navigation panel--the
one I just created and two that list the folders in the old files that I
moved from the dead computer. I can move some folders from the old Personal
Folders tree to the new one, but it will not let me move things like the
inbox and outbox. OL claims they are special files that cannot be moved. I
also cannot delete either the old Personal Folders or the newly created
Personal Folders from the navigation panel, so now I have three: two that
list the same thing and one I can't use to replace the old ones because it
won't let me move anything there.

Can you give me some more direction?

Thanks,
Elbert


"Jocelyn Fiorello [MVP - Outlook]" wrote:

I think you will have an easier time of it if you try (3) first and then go
back to (1). That way you'll only have one set of Personal Folders to worry
about. As long as you have that ghost .PST hanging around you really don't
have things in good order.

--
Jocelyn Fiorello
MVP - Outlook

*** Messages sent to my e-mail address will NOT be answered -- please
reply only to the newsgroup to preserve the message thread. ***


In ,
Elbert wrote:

Many thanks for your reply. Please see what I wrote after items (1),
(2), and (3).

Elbert

"Jocelyn Fiorello [MVP - Outlook]" wrote:

In ,
Elbert wrote:

My old computer is dead but the C-drive disk is OK, now connected to
my new computer via a USB adapter. I installed Outlook 2003 onto
the new computer from CD, and wanted to copy all stored emails etc.
from the old disk.

I found that installation from CD put new outlook.pst and some other
OL files in c:\documents and settings\Elbert\local
settings\application data\microsoft\outlook. I deleted them and
then copied the files from the same place on the old disk drive.

It almost worked, except:

(1) when I try to compose a new email and click on the TO button, it
says "The address list could not be displayed. The contacts list
associated with this address list could not be opened; it may have
been moved or deleted..." But if I click on Contacts in the
navigation bar, I see my contacts, and if I right click on a
contact, I can select "New Message to Contact";

This is a common occurrence when moving things around -- the
association between the Contacts folder and the Outlook Address Book
gets broken. To fix it, go to Tools | E-mail accounts, select "View
or change existing directories or address books", and click Next.
If you don't see the OAB in the Directories and Address Books list,
click the Back button, then select "Add a new directory or address
book", then "Additional Address Books", and add the OAB. Then keep
clicking Back until you get back to the first dialog box, and go
back to the Directories and Address Books list as you did earlier.

Once the OAB appears in the list, select it and then click Change to
make sure the Contacts folder(s) you want to display are listed. If
any of them aren't listed, you'll need to enable those Contacts
folders as Outlook Address Books by right clicking the folder,
selecting Properties, clicking the Outlook Address Book tab, and
checking the "Show this folder as an E-mail address book" box. Make
sure you restart Outlook after making these changes.


In the folders list, the personal folders tree appears twice. If I
go to properties|OL address book after right-clicking either instance
of Contacts in the tree, I find that "Show this folder as an E-mail
address book" is already checked. If I uncheck it using one instance
of Contacts, it is then shown as unchecked if I use the other
instance of Contacts, so I figure the same entry appears twice in the
tree, not two separate personal folders. I check "Show this
folder..." again, click Apply, and OK.

I go to Tools | E-mail accounts, select "View or change existing
directories or address books", and click Next. OAB does appear in
the list, so I select it and click Change. Contacts: personal
folders appears twice in the list of Outlook address books. The only
available options are to change the sort order of the address book,
or to remove it. I do neither and close the window. I'm stumped at
this point and stop before I make things worse. Any further ideas
you can give me will be appreciated.


(2) When I click on Personal Folders in the navigation bar, I see
columns with my calendar, tasks, and counts of messages of messages,
just as I used to, except that the tasks are shown reverse
chronological order. If I display tasks by clicking tasks in the
navigation bar, I see them in chronological order, but I can't
figure out how to see them that way in Personal Folders view.

On the Outlook Today page, click Customize Outlook Today. You can
change the sort order of your tasks in Outlook Today there.


Duh. Thanks.


(3) Something I read gave me the impression that I should have
imported the old outlook.pst into outlook.pst that was newly created
when I installed OL. I moved all OL related files I could find to a
temporary folder, then uninstalled OL and reinstalled it, figuring
it would create a nice clean outlook.pst and I'd try importing to
it; this would give me the new file structure, too, in place of the
OL2002 structure. But no dice: When I try to run the newly
intsalled OL, it says it cannot find outlook.pst (it did not create
a new one) and it refuses to run.

The only thing I can see that you did "wrong" is to overwrite the
new .PST file with your old one, as you describe in the second
paragraph of your post. Doing this confuses Outlook. .PST files
can be located anywhere on your hard drive, so never overwrite one
.PST with another -- just put your desired .PST file where you want
it and then point Outlook to it. If you were using Outlook 2002
before and your old .PST file is in that format, you probably do
want to create a new .PST in the Outlook 2003 Unicode format, open
your old .PST in Outlook using File | Open | Outlook Data File, and
drag items from your old file to the new one. That way you get the
benefits of the new Unicode file format but you still have your old
data. Don't import and export, either -- that breaks things too.


I'll try that after I figure out how to fix number (1)--I'd like to
have things in good order before trying anything new. Thanks for
warning me about importing--I was going to try that.


I have a feeling that all of these are due to the simple-minded
approach I took to trying to move the old data. If anybody can tell
me how to start over and do it right, or how to fix things without
starting over, I'd sure appreciate it.

Elbert

--
Jocelyn Fiorello
MVP - Outlook

*** Messages sent to my e-mail address will NOT be answered -- please
reply only to the newsgroup to preserve the message thread. ***




  #9  
Old January 14th, 2005, 05:11 AM
Jocelyn Fiorello [MVP - Outlook]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

OK, in that case you will need to create a new profile from scratch and only
tell it to use the one set of Personal Folders you want to use. If you need
to copy data from the other files before you create the new profile, you can
still use drag and drop -- but you can't drag entire folders if they are the
"special folders" like Inbox. You'd have to open the Inbox, select all
items and drag them as a group to the Inbox in the other set of Personal
Folders. For a folder like Calendar, switch to an unfiltered table view
like By Category and then you can select and drag all items from that view.

To create a new profile, go to Control Panel | Mail | Show Profiles, and
click Add. Once you have the new profile up and running you can go back and
delete the old one.

--
Jocelyn Fiorello
MVP - Outlook

*** Messages sent to my e-mail address will NOT be answered -- please
reply only to the newsgroup to preserve the message thread. ***


In ,
Elbert wrote:

Thanks for writing again. In OL, I did file|new|outlook data file.
I told OL to call it Personal Folders. OL created Personal
Folders(1).pst in c:\documents and settings\elbert\local
settings\application data\microsoft\outlook. The new data file
appears in the OL navigation panel as Personal Folders.

I now have three instances of Personal Folders in the navigation
panel--the one I just created and two that list the folders in the
old files that I moved from the dead computer. I can move some
folders from the old Personal Folders tree to the new one, but it
will not let me move things like the inbox and outbox. OL claims
they are special files that cannot be moved. I also cannot delete
either the old Personal Folders or the newly created Personal Folders
from the navigation panel, so now I have three: two that list the
same thing and one I can't use to replace the old ones because it
won't let me move anything there.

Can you give me some more direction?

Thanks,
Elbert


"Jocelyn Fiorello [MVP - Outlook]" wrote:

I think you will have an easier time of it if you try (3) first and
then go back to (1). That way you'll only have one set of Personal
Folders to worry about. As long as you have that ghost .PST hanging
around you really don't have things in good order.

--
Jocelyn Fiorello
MVP - Outlook

*** Messages sent to my e-mail address will NOT be answered -- please
reply only to the newsgroup to preserve the message thread. ***


In ,
Elbert wrote:

Many thanks for your reply. Please see what I wrote after items
(1), (2), and (3).

Elbert

"Jocelyn Fiorello [MVP - Outlook]" wrote:

In ,
Elbert wrote:

My old computer is dead but the C-drive disk is OK, now connected
to my new computer via a USB adapter. I installed Outlook 2003
onto the new computer from CD, and wanted to copy all stored
emails etc. from the old disk.

I found that installation from CD put new outlook.pst and some
other OL files in c:\documents and settings\Elbert\local
settings\application data\microsoft\outlook. I deleted them and
then copied the files from the same place on the old disk drive.

It almost worked, except:

(1) when I try to compose a new email and click on the TO button,
it says "The address list could not be displayed. The contacts
list associated with this address list could not be opened; it
may have been moved or deleted..." But if I click on Contacts in
the navigation bar, I see my contacts, and if I right click on a
contact, I can select "New Message to Contact";

This is a common occurrence when moving things around -- the
association between the Contacts folder and the Outlook Address
Book gets broken. To fix it, go to Tools | E-mail accounts,
select "View or change existing directories or address books", and
click Next.
If you don't see the OAB in the Directories and Address Books list,
click the Back button, then select "Add a new directory or address
book", then "Additional Address Books", and add the OAB. Then keep
clicking Back until you get back to the first dialog box, and go
back to the Directories and Address Books list as you did earlier.

Once the OAB appears in the list, select it and then click Change
to make sure the Contacts folder(s) you want to display are
listed. If any of them aren't listed, you'll need to enable those
Contacts folders as Outlook Address Books by right clicking the
folder, selecting Properties, clicking the Outlook Address Book
tab, and checking the "Show this folder as an E-mail address book"
box. Make sure you restart Outlook after making these changes.

In the folders list, the personal folders tree appears twice. If I
go to properties|OL address book after right-clicking either
instance of Contacts in the tree, I find that "Show this folder as
an E-mail address book" is already checked. If I uncheck it using
one instance of Contacts, it is then shown as unchecked if I use
the other instance of Contacts, so I figure the same entry appears
twice in the tree, not two separate personal folders. I check
"Show this folder..." again, click Apply, and OK.

I go to Tools | E-mail accounts, select "View or change existing
directories or address books", and click Next. OAB does appear in
the list, so I select it and click Change. Contacts: personal
folders appears twice in the list of Outlook address books. The
only available options are to change the sort order of the address
book, or to remove it. I do neither and close the window. I'm
stumped at this point and stop before I make things worse. Any
further ideas you can give me will be appreciated.


(2) When I click on Personal Folders in the navigation bar, I see
columns with my calendar, tasks, and counts of messages of
messages, just as I used to, except that the tasks are shown
reverse chronological order. If I display tasks by clicking
tasks in the navigation bar, I see them in chronological order,
but I can't figure out how to see them that way in Personal
Folders view.

On the Outlook Today page, click Customize Outlook Today. You can
change the sort order of your tasks in Outlook Today there.

Duh. Thanks.


(3) Something I read gave me the impression that I should have
imported the old outlook.pst into outlook.pst that was newly
created when I installed OL. I moved all OL related files I could
find to a temporary folder, then uninstalled OL and reinstalled
it, figuring it would create a nice clean outlook.pst and I'd try
importing to it; this would give me the new file structure, too,
in place of the OL2002 structure. But no dice: When I try to run
the newly intsalled OL, it says it cannot find outlook.pst (it
did not create a new one) and it refuses to run.

The only thing I can see that you did "wrong" is to overwrite the
new .PST file with your old one, as you describe in the second
paragraph of your post. Doing this confuses Outlook. .PST files
can be located anywhere on your hard drive, so never overwrite one
.PST with another -- just put your desired .PST file where you want
it and then point Outlook to it. If you were using Outlook 2002
before and your old .PST file is in that format, you probably do
want to create a new .PST in the Outlook 2003 Unicode format, open
your old .PST in Outlook using File | Open | Outlook Data File, and
drag items from your old file to the new one. That way you get the
benefits of the new Unicode file format but you still have your old
data. Don't import and export, either -- that breaks things too.

I'll try that after I figure out how to fix number (1)--I'd like to
have things in good order before trying anything new. Thanks for
warning me about importing--I was going to try that.


I have a feeling that all of these are due to the simple-minded
approach I took to trying to move the old data. If anybody can
tell me how to start over and do it right, or how to fix things
without starting over, I'd sure appreciate it.

Elbert

--
Jocelyn Fiorello
MVP - Outlook

*** Messages sent to my e-mail address will NOT be answered --
please reply only to the newsgroup to preserve the message thread.
***



  #10  
Old January 14th, 2005, 01:45 PM
Elbert
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

I'm not sure how to characterize your last bit of advice, but the word
genious does come to mind! It was tedious, but everything now seems to be
working.

I wasn't sure how to recover the archived stuff. Immediately after I
created the new profile, I archived. Of course there was nothing to archive,
but it created a new version of Archive Folders. I then opened the old
archive data file and copied everything to the new Archive Folders. I hope
when I next archive OL will add newly archived data to what's already there.

Many thanks for your help.

Elbert


"Jocelyn Fiorello [MVP - Outlook]" wrote:

OK, in that case you will need to create a new profile from scratch and only
tell it to use the one set of Personal Folders you want to use. If you need
to copy data from the other files before you create the new profile, you can
still use drag and drop -- but you can't drag entire folders if they are the
"special folders" like Inbox. You'd have to open the Inbox, select all
items and drag them as a group to the Inbox in the other set of Personal
Folders. For a folder like Calendar, switch to an unfiltered table view
like By Category and then you can select and drag all items from that view.

To create a new profile, go to Control Panel | Mail | Show Profiles, and
click Add. Once you have the new profile up and running you can go back and
delete the old one.

--
Jocelyn Fiorello
MVP - Outlook

*** Messages sent to my e-mail address will NOT be answered -- please
reply only to the newsgroup to preserve the message thread. ***


In ,
Elbert wrote:

Thanks for writing again. In OL, I did file|new|outlook data file.
I told OL to call it Personal Folders. OL created Personal
Folders(1).pst in c:\documents and settings\elbert\local
settings\application data\microsoft\outlook. The new data file
appears in the OL navigation panel as Personal Folders.

I now have three instances of Personal Folders in the navigation
panel--the one I just created and two that list the folders in the
old files that I moved from the dead computer. I can move some
folders from the old Personal Folders tree to the new one, but it
will not let me move things like the inbox and outbox. OL claims
they are special files that cannot be moved. I also cannot delete
either the old Personal Folders or the newly created Personal Folders
from the navigation panel, so now I have three: two that list the
same thing and one I can't use to replace the old ones because it
won't let me move anything there.

Can you give me some more direction?

Thanks,
Elbert


"Jocelyn Fiorello [MVP - Outlook]" wrote:

I think you will have an easier time of it if you try (3) first and
then go back to (1). That way you'll only have one set of Personal
Folders to worry about. As long as you have that ghost .PST hanging
around you really don't have things in good order.

--
Jocelyn Fiorello
MVP - Outlook

*** Messages sent to my e-mail address will NOT be answered -- please
reply only to the newsgroup to preserve the message thread. ***


In ,
Elbert wrote:

Many thanks for your reply. Please see what I wrote after items
(1), (2), and (3).

Elbert

"Jocelyn Fiorello [MVP - Outlook]" wrote:

In ,
Elbert wrote:

My old computer is dead but the C-drive disk is OK, now connected
to my new computer via a USB adapter. I installed Outlook 2003
onto the new computer from CD, and wanted to copy all stored
emails etc. from the old disk.

I found that installation from CD put new outlook.pst and some
other OL files in c:\documents and settings\Elbert\local
settings\application data\microsoft\outlook. I deleted them and
then copied the files from the same place on the old disk drive.

It almost worked, except:

(1) when I try to compose a new email and click on the TO button,
it says "The address list could not be displayed. The contacts
list associated with this address list could not be opened; it
may have been moved or deleted..." But if I click on Contacts in
the navigation bar, I see my contacts, and if I right click on a
contact, I can select "New Message to Contact";

This is a common occurrence when moving things around -- the
association between the Contacts folder and the Outlook Address
Book gets broken. To fix it, go to Tools | E-mail accounts,
select "View or change existing directories or address books", and
click Next.
If you don't see the OAB in the Directories and Address Books list,
click the Back button, then select "Add a new directory or address
book", then "Additional Address Books", and add the OAB. Then keep
clicking Back until you get back to the first dialog box, and go
back to the Directories and Address Books list as you did earlier.

Once the OAB appears in the list, select it and then click Change
to make sure the Contacts folder(s) you want to display are
listed. If any of them aren't listed, you'll need to enable those
Contacts folders as Outlook Address Books by right clicking the
folder, selecting Properties, clicking the Outlook Address Book
tab, and checking the "Show this folder as an E-mail address book"
box. Make sure you restart Outlook after making these changes.

In the folders list, the personal folders tree appears twice. If I
go to properties|OL address book after right-clicking either
instance of Contacts in the tree, I find that "Show this folder as
an E-mail address book" is already checked. If I uncheck it using
one instance of Contacts, it is then shown as unchecked if I use
the other instance of Contacts, so I figure the same entry appears
twice in the tree, not two separate personal folders. I check
"Show this folder..." again, click Apply, and OK.

I go to Tools | E-mail accounts, select "View or change existing
directories or address books", and click Next. OAB does appear in
the list, so I select it and click Change. Contacts: personal
folders appears twice in the list of Outlook address books. The
only available options are to change the sort order of the address
book, or to remove it. I do neither and close the window. I'm
stumped at this point and stop before I make things worse. Any
further ideas you can give me will be appreciated.


(2) When I click on Personal Folders in the navigation bar, I see
columns with my calendar, tasks, and counts of messages of
messages, just as I used to, except that the tasks are shown
reverse chronological order. If I display tasks by clicking
tasks in the navigation bar, I see them in chronological order,
but I can't figure out how to see them that way in Personal
Folders view.

On the Outlook Today page, click Customize Outlook Today. You can
change the sort order of your tasks in Outlook Today there.

Duh. Thanks.


(3) Something I read gave me the impression that I should have
imported the old outlook.pst into outlook.pst that was newly
created when I installed OL. I moved all OL related files I could
find to a temporary folder, then uninstalled OL and reinstalled
it, figuring it would create a nice clean outlook.pst and I'd try
importing to it; this would give me the new file structure, too,
in place of the OL2002 structure. But no dice: When I try to run
the newly intsalled OL, it says it cannot find outlook.pst (it
did not create a new one) and it refuses to run.

The only thing I can see that you did "wrong" is to overwrite the
new .PST file with your old one, as you describe in the second
paragraph of your post. Doing this confuses Outlook. .PST files
can be located anywhere on your hard drive, so never overwrite one
.PST with another -- just put your desired .PST file where you want
it and then point Outlook to it. If you were using Outlook 2002
before and your old .PST file is in that format, you probably do
want to create a new .PST in the Outlook 2003 Unicode format, open
your old .PST in Outlook using File | Open | Outlook Data File, and
drag items from your old file to the new one. That way you get the
benefits of the new Unicode file format but you still have your old
data. Don't import and export, either -- that breaks things too.

I'll try that after I figure out how to fix number (1)--I'd like to
have things in good order before trying anything new. Thanks for
warning me about importing--I was going to try that.


I have a feeling that all of these are due to the simple-minded
approach I took to trying to move the old data. If anybody can
tell me how to start over and do it right, or how to fix things
without starting over, I'd sure appreciate it.

Elbert

--
Jocelyn Fiorello
MVP - Outlook

*** Messages sent to my e-mail address will NOT be answered --
please reply only to the newsgroup to preserve the message thread.
***




 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Error installing Office XP onto a new computer JennA Setup, Installing & Configuration 1 November 17th, 2004 10:54 PM
Moving "Contacts" from one computer to another Lewis Contacts 4 August 20th, 2004 12:04 AM
Unable to access database after moving to another computer joel General Discussion 3 August 18th, 2004 09:36 PM
Help - where is mail saved? - need to retrieve from dead computer JS Outlook Express 2 June 12th, 2004 10:36 PM
Moving Contacts from old computer to new Rabbit Contacts 11 May 13th, 2004 04:19 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:37 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 OfficeFrustration.
The comments are property of their posters.