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#1
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Is there any difference between exporting pst files and simply copying them
to another drive while Outlook is closed? I had assumed that there had to be SOME reason for the export function which takes an age while the copy function takes a few seconds? Is the exported pst file more compressed than the copied one or does the exported one export the contents of the file attachments like the normal pst file does? For some reason, both in safe mode and normal, the export function wont work on my archive folder; it starts, exhibits an hourglass or goes on to export but always crashes the program before it finishes. I am just wondering when the scanpst function which detects that it wasn't closed last time stops working and my user pst files start being irretrievably corrupted by all this crashing? (BTW, is there some way of doing this in outlook express? Is everything in OE carried in one big file somewhere?) |
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#2
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The exported file won't contain rules, custom views, custom forms, etc., only individual data items. Copying the entire file is always better than exporting all your folders.
You might want to alternate ScanPST with Scandisk or another disk repair tool 3-4 times. -- Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP Author of Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003 http://www.turtleflock.com/olconfig/index.htm and Microsoft Outlook Programming - Jumpstart for Administrators, Power Users, and Developers http://www.outlookcode.com/jumpstart.aspx "news.microsoft.com" wrote in message ... Is there any difference between exporting pst files and simply copying them to another drive while Outlook is closed? I had assumed that there had to be SOME reason for the export function which takes an age while the copy function takes a few seconds? Is the exported pst file more compressed than the copied one or does the exported one export the contents of the file attachments like the normal pst file does? For some reason, both in safe mode and normal, the export function wont work on my archive folder; it starts, exhibits an hourglass or goes on to export but always crashes the program before it finishes. I am just wondering when the scanpst function which detects that it wasn't closed last time stops working and my user pst files start being irretrievably corrupted by all this crashing? |
#3
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Then I wonder why anyone bothers to export or why they include this
feature!! I will follow your instructions although I cant see the point of exporting when copying is so easy. Did you ever have any ideas about how I might repair my pst file which was copied while outlook was open before I discovered (the hard way) that you cant do this? As I still cant find anywhere easy in the instructions which tell you not to do this, I thought that so many people must have got corrupted backup files by now that SOMEONE must have written a program which repairs precisely this corruption? "Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote in message ... The exported file won't contain rules, custom views, custom forms, etc., only individual data items. Copying the entire file is always better than exporting all your folders. You might want to alternate ScanPST with Scandisk or another disk repair tool 3-4 times. -- Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP Author of Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003 http://www.turtleflock.com/olconfig/index.htm and Microsoft Outlook Programming - Jumpstart for Administrators, Power Users, and Developers http://www.outlookcode.com/jumpstart.aspx "news.microsoft.com" wrote in message ... Is there any difference between exporting pst files and simply copying them to another drive while Outlook is closed? I had assumed that there had to be SOME reason for the export function which takes an age while the copy function takes a few seconds? Is the exported pst file more compressed than the copied one or does the exported one export the contents of the file attachments like the normal pst file does? For some reason, both in safe mode and normal, the export function wont work on my archive folder; it starts, exhibits an hourglass or goes on to export but always crashes the program before it finishes. I am just wondering when the scanpst function which detects that it wasn't closed last time stops working and my user pst files start being irretrievably corrupted by all this crashing? |
#4
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Exporting to a .pst file can be a quick way to make a copy of just one or two folders, although Ctrl+drag/drop is probably just as fast.
See my earlier response for repair suggestions. -- Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP Author of Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003 http://www.turtleflock.com/olconfig/index.htm and Microsoft Outlook Programming - Jumpstart for Administrators, Power Users, and Developers http://www.outlookcode.com/jumpstart.aspx "news.microsoft.com" wrote in message ... Then I wonder why anyone bothers to export or why they include this feature!! I will follow your instructions although I cant see the point of exporting when copying is so easy. Did you ever have any ideas about how I might repair my pst file which was copied while outlook was open before I discovered (the hard way) that you cant do this? As I still cant find anywhere easy in the instructions which tell you not to do this, I thought that so many people must have got corrupted backup files by now that SOMEONE must have written a program which repairs precisely this corruption? "Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote in message ... The exported file won't contain rules, custom views, custom forms, etc., only individual data items. Copying the entire file is always better than exporting all your folders. You might want to alternate ScanPST with Scandisk or another disk repair tool 3-4 times. "news.microsoft.com" wrote in message ... Is there any difference between exporting pst files and simply copying them to another drive while Outlook is closed? I had assumed that there had to be SOME reason for the export function which takes an age while the copy function takes a few seconds? Is the exported pst file more compressed than the copied one or does the exported one export the contents of the file attachments like the normal pst file does? For some reason, both in safe mode and normal, the export function wont work on my archive folder; it starts, exhibits an hourglass or goes on to export but always crashes the program before it finishes. I am just wondering when the scanpst function which detects that it wasn't closed last time stops working and my user pst files start being irretrievably corrupted by all this crashing? |
#5
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Exporting is for transferring Outlook data to another format. If you don't
need to change format, just copy the PST. There is nothing unique to this type of data file corruption. If alternating the Inbox Repair Tool with a scandisk utility fails to repair the PST file, you can use the following tool to find out what can be fixed: http://officerecovery.com/outlook/index.htm -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "news.microsoft.com" wrote in message ... Then I wonder why anyone bothers to export or why they include this feature!! I will follow your instructions although I cant see the point of exporting when copying is so easy. Did you ever have any ideas about how I might repair my pst file which was copied while outlook was open before I discovered (the hard way) that you cant do this? As I still cant find anywhere easy in the instructions which tell you not to do this, I thought that so many people must have got corrupted backup files by now that SOMEONE must have written a program which repairs precisely this corruption? "Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote in message ... The exported file won't contain rules, custom views, custom forms, etc., only individual data items. Copying the entire file is always better than exporting all your folders. You might want to alternate ScanPST with Scandisk or another disk repair tool 3-4 times. -- Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP Author of Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003 http://www.turtleflock.com/olconfig/index.htm and Microsoft Outlook Programming - Jumpstart for Administrators, Power Users, and Developers http://www.outlookcode.com/jumpstart.aspx "news.microsoft.com" wrote in message ... Is there any difference between exporting pst files and simply copying them to another drive while Outlook is closed? I had assumed that there had to be SOME reason for the export function which takes an age while the copy function takes a few seconds? Is the exported pst file more compressed than the copied one or does the exported one export the contents of the file attachments like the normal pst file does? For some reason, both in safe mode and normal, the export function wont work on my archive folder; it starts, exhibits an hourglass or goes on to export but always crashes the program before it finishes. I am just wondering when the scanpst function which detects that it wasn't closed last time stops working and my user pst files start being irretrievably corrupted by all this crashing? |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
merging .PST files | Dorian C. Chalom | Outlook - General Queries | 7 | February 22nd 06 02:38 AM |
Corrupted pst files | [email protected] | Outlook - General Queries | 3 | February 18th 06 10:37 PM |
2 .pst files | til | Outlook - General Queries | 7 | February 4th 06 02:58 AM |
Exporting to PST error | Jon LaBarge | Outlook - General Queries | 2 | January 17th 06 10:05 PM |
pst files | JerryMac | Outlook - Using Contacts | 3 | January 14th 06 12:15 AM |