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Old December 7th 07, 08:24 PM posted to microsoft.public.outlook
Diane Poremsky
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Posts: 2,402
Default Outlook address book additions

there are 3rd party add-ins available if you require every address saved.
It's not a feature in outlook because the bulk of users don't need *every*
address saved and it was the source of a lot of support calls - people
discovered they had tons of addresses in their contacts that they didn't
knowing add and didn't want as contacts.

http://www.slipstick.com/addins/contacts_entry.asp

--
Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook]
Author, Teach Yourself Outlook 2003 in 24 Hours
Need Help with Common Tasks? http://www.outlook-tips.net/beginner/
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"Tish" wrote in message
...
Outlook.....in all of its versions.....was supposed to be the most
sophisticated of the commercially available e-mail programs. In both 2002
and 2003 Outlook benefitted from a great deal of work that had been done
by
the original Outlook Express Team....their work had some great features
that
almost no-one who used Outlook...or who ran help desks....knew existed.

But today, with Outlook 2007, I still haven't found a way for it to
automatically add the people I correspond with to my contacts/address
book.
I must, in a very cumbersome fashion, add each individually. Of course I
can
go to Earthlink, receive a message, and have Earthlink (whose e-mail
interface looks and acts suspiciously like just the e-mail part of
Outlook)
ask me if I want that recipient saved to my address book. If Earthlink
can
manage this, it should be too complicated to be a basic feature of
Outlook.

We use Outlook as our primary application. It has amazing (underutilized)
database capabilities including such things as version controls on
documents
that no tech I've ever spoken with knew was buried inside it. This is a
powerful application so let's get the basics fixed.

"Brian Tillman" wrote:

Roger wrote:

With Outlook Express under Windows98 I could click on recipients of
an email I also received and there was an option to add all
recipients to my Address Book at one time. A couple of clicks did
it; not a couple of hundred required for a recipient list of 30
people.


The option you describe has never been a part of Outlook. Outlook and
Outlook Express are two different applications, so why should they behave
in
a similar fashion? That would be like claiming technology has regressed
because you installed Word and it doesn't allow the same options that,
say,
Notepad offers.
--
Brian Tillman


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