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#1
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I am trying to get a couple issues resolved with Outlook 2003 on a
Windows XP media system. First issue is with the "The Operation Failed" with your only option an OK button. I've re-created the profile, but it hasn't been fixed yet. The system was originally connected to a Microsoft Exchange server, as its default mail server. The user had a number of contacts, which were saved as a Windows CSV file. The contacts, once the Exchange server was removed from Outlook, were imported. They show up in contacts. This brings me to the second problem - even though the contacts that were imported into Outlook show up under Contacts, when you click on the Check Name tool on the toolbar, it can't find it, looking in Contacts, and Address book has no entries. How do you make this thing check name against the contacts you have on the system? These problems may be related to one another. Please advise. Thanks, BC |
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#2
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Your first problem is so incompletely described that I assume you have
another thread somewhere that includes the relevant information needed to solve it. Consult that thread. Your second problem has been answered countless times. Exporting and importing are never the correct way to transfer Outlook data. Doing so through a non-Outlook format is just a guarantee that you will lose and corrupt data. Electronic addresses, for example, are never resolved when you import them. That of course is why they don't show up in the Address Book view. Open and save each Contact record one at a time to force the resolution, or go back and transfer the data correctly: Place them in a PST file and open that PST file in the new installation. Do not ever touch the export and import command to transfer Outlook data ever again. Not even once. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Blasting Cap" wrote in message ... I am trying to get a couple issues resolved with Outlook 2003 on a Windows XP media system. First issue is with the "The Operation Failed" with your only option an OK button. I've re-created the profile, but it hasn't been fixed yet. The system was originally connected to a Microsoft Exchange server, as its default mail server. The user had a number of contacts, which were saved as a Windows CSV file. The contacts, once the Exchange server was removed from Outlook, were imported. They show up in contacts. This brings me to the second problem - even though the contacts that were imported into Outlook show up under Contacts, when you click on the Check Name tool on the toolbar, it can't find it, looking in Contacts, and Address book has no entries. How do you make this thing check name against the contacts you have on the system? These problems may be related to one another. Please advise. Thanks, BC |
#3
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(the first) was in another thread, that hasn't been addressed. The
second problem (with the contacts) was only apparent after removing Exchange from the Outlook email setup. Regarding the first problem - the "The Operation Failed" - I can reproduce the error numerous times. Open outlook, do whatever, then close outlook. Then, try to re-launch outlook, after little or no time (or up to a minute or so after you close the original instance of Outlook), and you will get a small box that says: "The Operation Failed." with your only options to use the X at the top or the OK button. The message on the blue bar doesn't display anything other than the first few characters of the word Outlook. You click OK, and then you can double click on the Outlook shortcut and it will open normally. It can be re-produced any number of times, by closing Outlook and then re-opening it within just a few seconds of when it has closed. The only "solution" I have been offered is to check the Applications log, in which nothing appears in it. The only thing that I see that DOES go into any of the log files (Windows XP), is a WMI Service that has entered a stopped state in the system log. That's the only thing I see that occurs at even close to the same time as the Outlook box. The problem of importing & exporting contacts - that was all I was given to work with was a CSV file of them.... I was able though, to get them to resolve - however, that was going into Contacts in Personal Folders, highlighting them and then taking them into the Contacts folder in Outlook. Saving each one of them (nearly 700) wasn't a workable option in the time I had to fool around with the contacts. BC Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] wrote: Your first problem is so incompletely described that I assume you have another thread somewhere that includes the relevant information needed to solve it. Consult that thread. Your second problem has been answered countless times. Exporting and importing are never the correct way to transfer Outlook data. Doing so through a non-Outlook format is just a guarantee that you will lose and corrupt data. Electronic addresses, for example, are never resolved when you import them. That of course is why they don't show up in the Address Book view. Open and save each Contact record one at a time to force the resolution, or go back and transfer the data correctly: Place them in a PST file and open that PST file in the new installation. Do not ever touch the export and import command to transfer Outlook data ever again. Not even once. |
#4
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I'd keep the first problem in the original thread since it has the
appropriate subject and will get the appropriate traffic. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Blasting Cap" wrote in message ... (the first) was in another thread, that hasn't been addressed. The second problem (with the contacts) was only apparent after removing Exchange from the Outlook email setup. Regarding the first problem - the "The Operation Failed" - I can reproduce the error numerous times. Open outlook, do whatever, then close outlook. Then, try to re-launch outlook, after little or no time (or up to a minute or so after you close the original instance of Outlook), and you will get a small box that says: "The Operation Failed." with your only options to use the X at the top or the OK button. The message on the blue bar doesn't display anything other than the first few characters of the word Outlook. You click OK, and then you can double click on the Outlook shortcut and it will open normally. It can be re-produced any number of times, by closing Outlook and then re-opening it within just a few seconds of when it has closed. The only "solution" I have been offered is to check the Applications log, in which nothing appears in it. The only thing that I see that DOES go into any of the log files (Windows XP), is a WMI Service that has entered a stopped state in the system log. That's the only thing I see that occurs at even close to the same time as the Outlook box. The problem of importing & exporting contacts - that was all I was given to work with was a CSV file of them.... I was able though, to get them to resolve - however, that was going into Contacts in Personal Folders, highlighting them and then taking them into the Contacts folder in Outlook. Saving each one of them (nearly 700) wasn't a workable option in the time I had to fool around with the contacts. BC Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] wrote: Your first problem is so incompletely described that I assume you have another thread somewhere that includes the relevant information needed to solve it. Consult that thread. Your second problem has been answered countless times. Exporting and importing are never the correct way to transfer Outlook data. Doing so through a non-Outlook format is just a guarantee that you will lose and corrupt data. Electronic addresses, for example, are never resolved when you import them. That of course is why they don't show up in the Address Book view. Open and save each Contact record one at a time to force the resolution, or go back and transfer the data correctly: Place them in a PST file and open that PST file in the new installation. Do not ever touch the export and import command to transfer Outlook data ever again. Not even once. |
#5
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![]() "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote in message ... (clip) Your second problem has been answered countless times. Exporting and importing are never the correct way to transfer Outlook data. Doing so through a non-Outlook format is just a guarantee that you will lose and corrupt data. Electronic addresses, for example, are never resolved when you import them. That of course is why they don't show up in the Address Book view. Open and save each Contact record one at a time to force the resolution, or go back and transfer the data correctly: Place them in a PST file and open that PST file in the new installation. Do not ever touch the export and import command to transfer Outlook data ever again. Not even once. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Blasting Cap" wrote in message ... I am trying to get a couple issues resolved with Outlook 2003 on a Windows XP media system. First issue is with the "The Operation Failed" with your only option an OK button. I've re-created the profile, but it hasn't been fixed yet. The system was originally connected to a Microsoft Exchange server, as its default mail server. The user had a number of contacts, which were saved as a Windows CSV file. The contacts, once the Exchange server was removed from Outlook, were imported. They show up in contacts. This brings me to the second problem - even though the contacts that were imported into Outlook show up under Contacts, when you click on the Check Name tool on the toolbar, it can't find it, looking in Contacts, and Address book has no entries. How do you make this thing check name against the contacts you have on the system? These problems may be related to one another. Please advise. Thanks, BC ===================== Russ, despite the "countless times" this subject of how best to transfer Outlook PST data between machines has come up I feel that I'm going to have to chime in here - I hear the proferred professional advice from you. As a simple domestic user using XP/Outlook 2003 and Vista/MS Office 2007 I have occasion to move stuff between machines every spring and fall when I move from a winter setting and a summer setting. Consequently I have the need to update things like contacts and move material under current consideration periodically. Leaving out the niceties of differences between contacts and address books, which I don't understand anyway, I find Outlook's internal Import/Export system useful albeit a little labor intensive - but I have yet to experience a loss, corruption or garbeling. Frankly, especially between the myriad versions of Outlook I've experienced and now yet another Windows, I don't know where my Outlook data is stored or what the files are called. I can tell you that if I search my XP or Vista machines, including hidden files, for PST files I don't return any, unless I have created some into a hard drive folder in anticipation of transport on one of these inexpensive mobile drives available today. So if I have a question it is where does does Outlook store its data ... in XP ... in Vista ... and what are these files called? Is there any consistency here? With shifting locations, mutiple users etc and different search functions and now "indexing" in Vista it's a wonder that I ever find anything. I am fearful of losing or corrupting or leaving data behind if I get into diffricult to understand areas like this, difficult for a domestic civilian such as me that is. I'm much more secure with Import/Export - as I'm sure many others are. Regards, Denzil. |
#6
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Just curious. In what way does importing and exporting solve your problem of
not being able to keep track of where your Outlook data (PST) file is stored for every version of Outlook and every OS? You must still know those files' locations in order to import and export. I don't follow your logic as to why you "and many others" are more secure with Import/Export. The reason I do not recommend Import?Export for PST files is that it alters the data. Even worse, in more recent versions of Outlook it also corrupts the Outlook profile: Users who import their entire PST file end up with 2 PST files, neither of which they can close or combine into one. Also, Outlook's programmatically derived fields such as Full Name and File As are often corrupted when Contacts are imported. Finally, the following data is also lost or disrupted when you import a PST file: 1. Custom Forms 2. Custom Views 3. Connections between contacts and activities 4. Received dates on mail 5. Birthdays and anniversaries in calendar 6. Journal connections 7. Distribution Lists All of this information is preserved when you simply open and reuse a PST file. Your choice. Outlook data files always have a .pst extension. Searches always returns them when the search includes hidden files--in every OS. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Denzil Hathway" wrote in message ... "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote in message ... (clip) Your second problem has been answered countless times. Exporting and importing are never the correct way to transfer Outlook data. Doing so through a non-Outlook format is just a guarantee that you will lose and corrupt data. Electronic addresses, for example, are never resolved when you import them. That of course is why they don't show up in the Address Book view. Open and save each Contact record one at a time to force the resolution, or go back and transfer the data correctly: Place them in a PST file and open that PST file in the new installation. Do not ever touch the export and import command to transfer Outlook data ever again. Not even once. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Blasting Cap" wrote in message ... I am trying to get a couple issues resolved with Outlook 2003 on a Windows XP media system. First issue is with the "The Operation Failed" with your only option an OK button. I've re-created the profile, but it hasn't been fixed yet. The system was originally connected to a Microsoft Exchange server, as its default mail server. The user had a number of contacts, which were saved as a Windows CSV file. The contacts, once the Exchange server was removed from Outlook, were imported. They show up in contacts. This brings me to the second problem - even though the contacts that were imported into Outlook show up under Contacts, when you click on the Check Name tool on the toolbar, it can't find it, looking in Contacts, and Address book has no entries. How do you make this thing check name against the contacts you have on the system? These problems may be related to one another. Please advise. Thanks, BC ===================== Russ, despite the "countless times" this subject of how best to transfer Outlook PST data between machines has come up I feel that I'm going to have to chime in here - I hear the proferred professional advice from you. As a simple domestic user using XP/Outlook 2003 and Vista/MS Office 2007 I have occasion to move stuff between machines every spring and fall when I move from a winter setting and a summer setting. Consequently I have the need to update things like contacts and move material under current consideration periodically. Leaving out the niceties of differences between contacts and address books, which I don't understand anyway, I find Outlook's internal Import/Export system useful albeit a little labor intensive - but I have yet to experience a loss, corruption or garbeling. Frankly, especially between the myriad versions of Outlook I've experienced and now yet another Windows, I don't know where my Outlook data is stored or what the files are called. I can tell you that if I search my XP or Vista machines, including hidden files, for PST files I don't return any, unless I have created some into a hard drive folder in anticipation of transport on one of these inexpensive mobile drives available today. So if I have a question it is where does does Outlook store its data ... in XP ... in Vista ... and what are these files called? Is there any consistency here? With shifting locations, mutiple users etc and different search functions and now "indexing" in Vista it's a wonder that I ever find anything. I am fearful of losing or corrupting or leaving data behind if I get into diffricult to understand areas like this, difficult for a domestic civilian such as me that is. I'm much more secure with Import/Export - as I'm sure many others are. Regards, Denzil. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Imported contacts not found on "Check Name" | Blasting Cap | Outlook - General Queries | 5 | April 27th 07 10:28 PM |
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