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Outlook 2003
I am replacing my old computer with a new one running Vista and would like
to transfer the database of Outlook 2003 from the old one to the new one. Can someone advise me where is the database files of emails, contacts, calendar and if just place the old one over the new. Thanks, Scott |
Outlook 2003
On Feb 16, 9:11 am, "Scott" wrote:
I am replacing my old computer with a new one running Vista and would like to transfer the database of Outlook 2003 from the old one to the new one. Can someone advise me where is the database files of emails, contacts, calendar and if just place the old one over the new. Thanks, Scott Scott, you can right-click on your mail folder in Outlook. Select "Properties" then click the "Advanced" button. This will show you where the pst file is located. Once you move this file, you can just open it from Outlook on your new machine. Bill |
Outlook 2003
Scott wrote:
I am replacing my old computer with a new one running Vista and would like to transfer the database of Outlook 2003 from the old one to the new one. Can someone advise me where is the database files of emails, contacts, calendar and if just place the old one over the new. http://www.howto-outlook.com/howto/backupandrestore.htm -- Brian Tillman |
Outlook 2003
Bill,
Thanks for your advice. I copied the file from the old pc and tried to place in the new pc without success. Although I have administrator right on my account, I cannot access the contents of Documents and Settings folder. Do I need to do something different from Windows XP in order to access the contents of that folder? Thanks, Scott 在郵件 oups.com ä¸*撰寫... On Feb 16, 9:11 am, "Scott" wrote: I am replacing my old computer with a new one running Vista and would like to transfer the database of Outlook 2003 from the old one to the new one. Can someone advise me where is the database files of emails, contacts, calendar and if just place the old one over the new. Thanks, Scott Scott, you can right-click on your mail folder in Outlook. Select "Properties" then click the "Advanced" button. This will show you where the pst file is located. Once you move this file, you can just open it from Outlook on your new machine. Bill |
Outlook 2003
Brian,
Many thanks for your useful information. Now I need to resolve the access issue before I can make give it a try. Scott "Brian Tillman" ¦b¶l¥ó ¤¤¼¶¼g... Scott wrote: I am replacing my old computer with a new one running Vista and would like to transfer the database of Outlook 2003 from the old one to the new one. Can someone advise me where is the database files of emails, contacts, calendar and if just place the old one over the new. http://www.howto-outlook.com/howto/backupandrestore.htm -- Brian Tillman |
Outlook 2003
Scott wrote:
Thanks for your advice. I copied the file from the old pc and tried to place in the new pc without success. Although I have administrator right on my account, I cannot access the contents of Documents and Settings folder. Do I need to do something different from Windows XP in order to access the contents of that folder? Can you not open your My Documents folder? -- Brian Tillman |
Outlook 2003
On Feb 17, 1:29 am, "Scott" wrote:
Bill, Thanks for your advice. I copied the file from the old pc and tried to place in the new pc without success. Although I have administrator right on my account, I cannot access the contents of Documents and Settings folder. Do I need to do something different from Windows XP in order to access the contents of that folder? Thanks, Scott 在郵件news:1171650357.128151.309830@a75g2000cwd .googlegroups.comä¸*撰寫... On Feb 16, 9:11 am, "Scott" wrote: I am replacing my old computer with a new one running Vista and would like to transfer the database of Outlook 2003 from the old one to the new one. Can someone advise me where is the database files of emails, contacts, calendar and if just place the old one over the new. Thanks, Scott Scott, you can right-click on your mail folder in Outlook. Select "Properties" then click the "Advanced" button. This will show you where the pst file is located. Once you move this file, you can just open it from Outlook on your new machine. Bill Scott, Can you tell me what the problem is with accessing your folder? Can you not see it or do you get an "access denied" error or something else? Bill |
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