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#1
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Outlook 2003, SP3
I moved my data to a different hard drive. My pst file is located on this F drive, the name in outlook is AP2009. Both Contacts and Business are checked as email address books, but a 2nd contact address book keeps showing up. When I check it out under view address books, it shows Business: AP2009 Contacts: AP2009 Contacts: Personal Folder I don't know where this personal folder comes from and I don't seem to be able to get rid of it. |
#2
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Hard to answer without more specific information on how you moved your data
and connected it to the new installation. Any reason you can't simply remove the unwanted folder from the address book view? Normally, you would do so he Tools E-mail accounts View or change existing directories or address books Outlook Address Book Change… If you can't then provide information we can use with your reply, like how you migrated your data, whether you let Outlook set up its own default data file, and how you migrated your old file. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Anne" wrote in message ... Outlook 2003, SP3 I moved my data to a different hard drive. My pst file is located on this F drive, the name in outlook is AP2009. Both Contacts and Business are checked as email address books, but a 2nd contact address book keeps showing up. When I check it out under view address books, it shows Business: AP2009 Contacts: AP2009 Contacts: Personal Folder I don't know where this personal folder comes from and I don't seem to be able to get rid of it. |
#3
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I had an internal hard drive which had the drive letter F. I added an
external hard drive and synced the data to this drive. Used Computer management and renamed F to another letter, then renamed the other external drive and made it F. I rebooted and opened outlook. Theoretically Outlook should not have noticed that the drive was even changed. I think this happened earlier this week and I had not yet noticed. I had to reconfigure my computer from scratch (windows Vista). Upon opening Outlook, it wanted me to create an email account and I declined, but to open Outlook you have to do it. I then deleted the the outlook.pst from the C drive, under users. Upon re-opening outlook I was asked where the personal folder was and I directed it to the F drive. The file on the F drive is now my mail delivery location. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Hard to answer without more specific information on how you moved your data and connected it to the new installation. Any reason you can't simply remove the unwanted folder from the address book view? Normally, you would do so he Tools E-mail accounts View or change existing directories or address books Outlook Address Book Change… If you can't then provide information we can use with your reply, like how you migrated your data, whether you let Outlook set up its own default data file, and how you migrated your old file. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Anne" wrote in message ... Outlook 2003, SP3 I moved my data to a different hard drive. My pst file is located on this F drive, the name in outlook is AP2009. Both Contacts and Business are checked as email address books, but a 2nd contact address book keeps showing up. When I check it out under view address books, it shows Business: AP2009 Contacts: AP2009 Contacts: Personal Folder I don't know where this personal folder comes from and I don't seem to be able to get rid of it. |
#4
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That was enormous amount of information you left out. Did you think we were
mind readers? You "synced the data to this drive?" What does that mean? You have created an indecipherable quagmire that violates every supported method for migrating Outlook data. Why did you not use any of the supported methods for migrating Outlook data? Your term "theoretically" is beyond wishful thinking. Read the posts here on how to migrate Outlook data correctly. Follow them. Tell us if they don't work and why. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Anne" wrote in message ... I had an internal hard drive which had the drive letter F. I added an external hard drive and synced the data to this drive. Used Computer management and renamed F to another letter, then renamed the other external drive and made it F. I rebooted and opened outlook. Theoretically Outlook should not have noticed that the drive was even changed. I think this happened earlier this week and I had not yet noticed. I had to reconfigure my computer from scratch (windows Vista). Upon opening Outlook, it wanted me to create an email account and I declined, but to open Outlook you have to do it. I then deleted the the outlook.pst from the C drive, under users. Upon re-opening outlook I was asked where the personal folder was and I directed it to the F drive. The file on the F drive is now my mail delivery location. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Hard to answer without more specific information on how you moved your data and connected it to the new installation. Any reason you can't simply remove the unwanted folder from the address book view? Normally, you would do so he Tools E-mail accounts View or change existing directories or address books Outlook Address Book Change… If you can't then provide information we can use with your reply, like how you migrated your data, whether you let Outlook set up its own default data file, and how you migrated your old file. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Anne" wrote in message ... Outlook 2003, SP3 I moved my data to a different hard drive. My pst file is located on this F drive, the name in outlook is AP2009. Both Contacts and Business are checked as email address books, but a 2nd contact address book keeps showing up. When I check it out under view address books, it shows Business: AP2009 Contacts: AP2009 Contacts: Personal Folder I don't know where this personal folder comes from and I don't seem to be able to get rid of it. |
#5
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Actually my sync was just making a copy of data to a new drive.
As far as the new configuration, I did read up and it looks like I did it correctly. Either way, it seems that I will have to create a new profile to clean things up. Until I have time to deal with it, I will just skip over the extra contact list, when selecting email contract. The non-existing contact list is listing in the middle, so I do not get the annoying error message. I do wish Microsoft would come up with some way to backup our own email addresses and defaults. Can you back up the signatures? I can still boot to the old hard drive and get info off if I need to. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: That was enormous amount of information you left out. Did you think we were mind readers? You "synced the data to this drive?" What does that mean? You have created an indecipherable quagmire that violates every supported method for migrating Outlook data. Why did you not use any of the supported methods for migrating Outlook data? Your term "theoretically" is beyond wishful thinking. Read the posts here on how to migrate Outlook data correctly. Follow them. Tell us if they don't work and why. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Anne" wrote in message ... I had an internal hard drive which had the drive letter F. I added an external hard drive and synced the data to this drive. Used Computer management and renamed F to another letter, then renamed the other external drive and made it F. I rebooted and opened outlook. Theoretically Outlook should not have noticed that the drive was even changed. I think this happened earlier this week and I had not yet noticed. I had to reconfigure my computer from scratch (windows Vista). Upon opening Outlook, it wanted me to create an email account and I declined, but to open Outlook you have to do it. I then deleted the the outlook.pst from the C drive, under users. Upon re-opening outlook I was asked where the personal folder was and I directed it to the F drive. The file on the F drive is now my mail delivery location. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Hard to answer without more specific information on how you moved your data and connected it to the new installation. Any reason you can't simply remove the unwanted folder from the address book view? Normally, you would do so he Tools E-mail accounts View or change existing directories or address books Outlook Address Book Change… If you can't then provide information we can use with your reply, like how you migrated your data, whether you let Outlook set up its own default data file, and how you migrated your old file. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Anne" wrote in message ... Outlook 2003, SP3 I moved my data to a different hard drive. My pst file is located on this F drive, the name in outlook is AP2009. Both Contacts and Business are checked as email address books, but a 2nd contact address book keeps showing up. When I check it out under view address books, it shows Business: AP2009 Contacts: AP2009 Contacts: Personal Folder I don't know where this personal folder comes from and I don't seem to be able to get rid of it. |
#6
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I suspect you didn't do it correctly. If you changed any aspect of your PST
file outside of Outlook without then reconnecting that file to your profile, there is no way Outlook could use it. Backing up Outlook data is unlike any other procedure you may have used for backing up other data, but it can be done if you follow the proper procedures, all documented he http://www.slipstick.com/config/backup.htm http://www.howto-outlook.com/Howto/backupandrestore.htm http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/as...771141033.aspx -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Anne" wrote in message ... Actually my sync was just making a copy of data to a new drive. As far as the new configuration, I did read up and it looks like I did it correctly. Either way, it seems that I will have to create a new profile to clean things up. Until I have time to deal with it, I will just skip over the extra contact list, when selecting email contract. The non-existing contact list is listing in the middle, so I do not get the annoying error message. I do wish Microsoft would come up with some way to backup our own email addresses and defaults. Can you back up the signatures? I can still boot to the old hard drive and get info off if I need to. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: That was enormous amount of information you left out. Did you think we were mind readers? You "synced the data to this drive?" What does that mean? You have created an indecipherable quagmire that violates every supported method for migrating Outlook data. Why did you not use any of the supported methods for migrating Outlook data? Your term "theoretically" is beyond wishful thinking. Read the posts here on how to migrate Outlook data correctly. Follow them. Tell us if they don't work and why. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Anne" wrote in message ... I had an internal hard drive which had the drive letter F. I added an external hard drive and synced the data to this drive. Used Computer management and renamed F to another letter, then renamed the other external drive and made it F. I rebooted and opened outlook. Theoretically Outlook should not have noticed that the drive was even changed. I think this happened earlier this week and I had not yet noticed. I had to reconfigure my computer from scratch (windows Vista). Upon opening Outlook, it wanted me to create an email account and I declined, but to open Outlook you have to do it. I then deleted the the outlook.pst from the C drive, under users. Upon re-opening outlook I was asked where the personal folder was and I directed it to the F drive. The file on the F drive is now my mail delivery location. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Hard to answer without more specific information on how you moved your data and connected it to the new installation. Any reason you can't simply remove the unwanted folder from the address book view? Normally, you would do so he Tools E-mail accounts View or change existing directories or address books Outlook Address Book Change… If you can't then provide information we can use with your reply, like how you migrated your data, whether you let Outlook set up its own default data file, and how you migrated your old file. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Anne" wrote in message ... Outlook 2003, SP3 I moved my data to a different hard drive. My pst file is located on this F drive, the name in outlook is AP2009. Both Contacts and Business are checked as email address books, but a 2nd contact address book keeps showing up. When I check it out under view address books, it shows Business: AP2009 Contacts: AP2009 Contacts: Personal Folder I don't know where this personal folder comes from and I don't seem to be able to get rid of it. |
#7
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On second thought, I suspect that you so thoroughly altered the descriptors
Outlook uses for identifying its data file, that you will never be able to repair this Outlook profile. I'd start over with a new profile and connect it properly to the new location of your data file. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Anne" wrote in message ... I had an internal hard drive which had the drive letter F. I added an external hard drive and synced the data to this drive. Used Computer management and renamed F to another letter, then renamed the other external drive and made it F. I rebooted and opened outlook. Theoretically Outlook should not have noticed that the drive was even changed. I think this happened earlier this week and I had not yet noticed. I had to reconfigure my computer from scratch (windows Vista). Upon opening Outlook, it wanted me to create an email account and I declined, but to open Outlook you have to do it. I then deleted the the outlook.pst from the C drive, under users. Upon re-opening outlook I was asked where the personal folder was and I directed it to the F drive. The file on the F drive is now my mail delivery location. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Hard to answer without more specific information on how you moved your data and connected it to the new installation. Any reason you can't simply remove the unwanted folder from the address book view? Normally, you would do so he Tools E-mail accounts View or change existing directories or address books Outlook Address Book Change… If you can't then provide information we can use with your reply, like how you migrated your data, whether you let Outlook set up its own default data file, and how you migrated your old file. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Anne" wrote in message ... Outlook 2003, SP3 I moved my data to a different hard drive. My pst file is located on this F drive, the name in outlook is AP2009. Both Contacts and Business are checked as email address books, but a 2nd contact address book keeps showing up. When I check it out under view address books, it shows Business: AP2009 Contacts: AP2009 Contacts: Personal Folder I don't know where this personal folder comes from and I don't seem to be able to get rid of it. |
#8
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Actually my sync was just making a copy of data to a new drive.
As far as the new configuration, I did read up and it looks like I did it correctly. Either way, it seems that I will have to create a new profile to clean things up. Until I have time to deal with it, I will just skip over the extra contact list, when selecting email contract. The non-existing contact list is listing in the middle, so I do not get the annoying error message. I do wish Microsoft would come up with some way to backup our own email addresses and defaults. Can you back up the signatures? I can still boot to the old hard drive and get info off if I need to. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: On second thought, I suspect that you so thoroughly altered the descriptors Outlook uses for identifying its data file, that you will never be able to repair this Outlook profile. I'd start over with a new profile and connect it properly to the new location of your data file. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Anne" wrote in message ... I had an internal hard drive which had the drive letter F. I added an external hard drive and synced the data to this drive. Used Computer management and renamed F to another letter, then renamed the other external drive and made it F. I rebooted and opened outlook. Theoretically Outlook should not have noticed that the drive was even changed. I think this happened earlier this week and I had not yet noticed. I had to reconfigure my computer from scratch (windows Vista). Upon opening Outlook, it wanted me to create an email account and I declined, but to open Outlook you have to do it. I then deleted the the outlook.pst from the C drive, under users. Upon re-opening outlook I was asked where the personal folder was and I directed it to the F drive. The file on the F drive is now my mail delivery location. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Hard to answer without more specific information on how you moved your data and connected it to the new installation. Any reason you can't simply remove the unwanted folder from the address book view? Normally, you would do so he Tools E-mail accounts View or change existing directories or address books Outlook Address Book Change… If you can't then provide information we can use with your reply, like how you migrated your data, whether you let Outlook set up its own default data file, and how you migrated your old file. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Anne" wrote in message ... Outlook 2003, SP3 I moved my data to a different hard drive. My pst file is located on this F drive, the name in outlook is AP2009. Both Contacts and Business are checked as email address books, but a 2nd contact address book keeps showing up. When I check it out under view address books, it shows Business: AP2009 Contacts: AP2009 Contacts: Personal Folder I don't know where this personal folder comes from and I don't seem to be able to get rid of it. |
#9
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"Anne" wrote in message
... I do wish Microsoft would come up with some way to backup our own email addresses and defaults. Backing up is as easy as copying in Windows Explorer. http://www.howto-outlook.com/howto/backupandrestore.htm Can you back up the signatures? I can still boot to the old hard drive and get info off if I need to. If you haven't change the associated registry setting, sigatures are in %AppData%\Microsoft\Signatures. Just copy them to make a backup. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] |
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