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#1
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Greetings,
I am using Microsoft Outlook 2000, and have acidently deleted some of my important mails from my inbox, (not my pst folder), using Shift + delete. As I work on a remote server, so we donot have "RUN" also to use the usual steps of recovery of permanently deleted mails. Can someone please help?Quick response will be appreciated. TIA |
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#2
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wrote in message
oups.com... I am using Microsoft Outlook 2000, and have acidently deleted some of my important mails from my inbox, (not my pst folder), using Shift + delete. As I work on a remote server, so we donot have "RUN" also to use the usual steps of recovery of permanently deleted mails. Can someone please help?Quick response will be appreciated. Assuming your server is Exchange, ask the administrator to restore your mailbox to the most recent backup from before your message deletion. If it so happens that the messages were recieved after that backup, well, you can always ask whoever sent the messages to resend them. -- f.h. |
#4
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wrote in message
oups.com... I am using Microsoft Outlook 2000, and have acidently deleted some of my important mails from my inbox, (not my pst folder), using Shift + delete. As I work on a remote server, so we donot have "RUN" also to use the usual steps of recovery of permanently deleted mails. How does anyone accidentally delete anything? You mistakeningly deleted them but your action was deliberate. There is a reason why it is called a PERMANENT delete, plus you not only had to do the deletion but you had to hold down the Shift key. I suppose Microsoft could've required a key combination requiring 10 fingers and your nose but no such deletion could be construed as accidental. There are 2 ways to permanently delete e-mails in Outlook. One is the Shift+Del that you mentioned. The other is to delete items from the 'Deleted Items' folder (items there haven't been actually deleted but merely moved to that folder). If using Exchange as your mail server, somewhere in the menus is an option to recover deleted e-mails. If that doesn't work, you will need to contact your Exchange admin to have your mailbox restored from the backups. If using a PST file as your local message store, you will need to use DBXpress or DBXtract (Google for them) to yank out the delete-marked items in the PST file. When you permanently delete an item, it is merely marked with a status of "Delete" in the database (PST file). It physically still resides in the database until you or Outlook compacts it. Delete-marked items are hidden from your view in Outlook but they still physically exist in the PST file until that file gets compacted. If the PST file has not yet been compacted, use the tools mentioned to yank them out. If you are using a PST file as the local message store and if that file has already been compacted then the delete-marked items have been physically purged from that file. They're gone from that file and you won't ever get them out of that PST file. Then you will need to restore the .pst file from your routine backups. If you don't do backups, you have deemed your data as unimportant. Backups are ALWAYS required if your data is important and cannot be replaced using other means. |
#5
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"Vanguard" wrote in message
... wrote in message oups.com... I am using Microsoft Outlook 2000, and have acidently deleted some of my important mails from my inbox, (not my pst folder), using Shift + delete. As I work on a remote server, so we donot have "RUN" also to use the usual steps of recovery of permanently deleted mails. How does anyone accidentally delete anything? You mistakeningly deleted them but your action was deliberate. My friends say I'm a semantic b*stard, but even I am not going to quibble the use of 'accidental' and 'mistaken'. There is a reason why it is called a PERMANENT delete, plus you not only had to do the deletion but you had to hold down the Shift key. I suppose Microsoft could've required a key combination requiring 10 fingers and your nose but no such deletion could be construed as accidental. Except that in Exchange 2007/Outlook 2007 combo they actually *have* provided a way to restore shift-deleted items. So, obviously, Microsoft recognized that sometimes, yes, people accidentally delete mail, even permanently. Not to mention that I've had my shift key get stuck on *many* occasions. -- f.h. |
#6
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"F. H. Muffman" wrote in message
... Except that in Exchange 2007/Outlook 2007 combo they actually *have* provided a way to restore shift-deleted items. So, obviously, Microsoft recognized that sometimes, yes, people accidentally delete mail, even permanently. When using Exchange as the mail server, the "Recover Deleted Items" feature has been available since Outlook 2000 (corporate mode) but is also tied to the version of Exchange (I think v5.5 was required). See http://support.microsoft.com/kb/195794/en-us. |
#7
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"Vanguard" wrote in message
... Except that in Exchange 2007/Outlook 2007 combo they actually *have* provided a way to restore shift-deleted items. So, obviously, Microsoft recognized that sometimes, yes, people accidentally delete mail, even permanently. When using Exchange as the mail server, the "Recover Deleted Items" feature has been available since Outlook 2000 (corporate mode) but is also tied to the version of Exchange (I think v5.5 was required). See http://support.microsoft.com/kb/195794/en-us. Except for the fact that the recover deleted items never worked (without a registry hack) on any folder but the Deleted Items folder. In 2007, it does not require a registry hack. -- f.h. |
#8
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![]() I suggest you use EASEUS Data Recovery Wizard to recover files. Download demo version: http://www.easeus.com/download.htm You can use "AdvancedRecovery" to scan your corrupted drive. After the scan is complete, the lost file will be displayed in Data Recovery Wizard, you can select them and recover them. NOTICE: never install in on the harddisk you want to recover. -- yutao |
#9
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"yutao" wrote in message
... I suggest you use EASEUS Data Recovery Wizard to recover files. Download demo version: http://www.easeus.com/download.htm You can use "AdvancedRecovery" to scan your corrupted drive. After the scan is complete, the lost file will be displayed in Data Recovery Wizard, you can select them and recover them. NOTICE: never install in on the harddisk you want to recover. Of course, since the email isn't a seperate file on the hard drive, this is useless. -- f.h. |
#10
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"F. H. Muffman" wrote in message
... "Vanguard" wrote ... "F. H. Muffman" wrote: Except that in Exchange 2007/Outlook 2007 combo they actually *have* provided a way to restore shift-deleted items. So, obviously, Microsoft recognized that sometimes, yes, people accidentally delete mail, even permanently. When using Exchange as the mail server, the "Recover Deleted Items" feature has been available since Outlook 2000 (corporate mode) but is also tied to the version of Exchange (I think v5.5 was required). See http://support.microsoft.com/kb/195794/en-us. Except for the fact that the recover deleted items never worked (without a registry hack) on any folder but the Deleted Items folder. In 2007, it does not require a registry hack. For those that would like proof of what Muffman said, the registry hack he mentioned but didn't identify is: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/178630 The "Recover Selected Items" feature was originally designed to work on items deleted from the 'Deleted Items' folder, not for hard deletes in other folders. The hack extended the functionality to include hard deletes from other folders. It is not required that it be applied to the user's host to get Outlook to work on all folders regarding hard deletes. As Muffman pointed out before, you could ask the admin to do the recovery because the Exchange admin in maintaining the server should've already known about this update and applied the registry edit to his own host so he could do the recovery upon request for someone else's mailbox. However, the registry hack could be pushed to the users' hosts so they could do their own recovery. Depended entirely on where the admin wanted to focus control for recovery of hard deleted items. Hopefully Exchange 2007 has not removed the ability of the admin to decide who has control over recovery of deleted items. Since this newsgroup is for Outlook while Exchange has its own newsgroups, and because the OP didn't look like an Exchange admin, it didn't seem appropriate to discuss what are the duties of the admin in maintaining and updating the Exchange server. |
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