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LOST OR DISASSOCIATED CONTACTS, SUB-FOLDERS AND NOTES
I am overseas and i hired an IT person to romove some redundant data
(duplicate data files) from my hard drive to fee up space. He seemed careful enough when disposing of any file, making sure to check with me. The bottom line is, I have no contacts in my contact folder, nor my 30 sub-folders in my inbox and no notes. I have all contacts on my blackberry plus notes. I have searched and located all .pst files and placed them back on my outlook folder, which now seems to reside in my C drive as a stand alone folder (C:outlook). Before Outlook was located in a different location. Placing all .pst files back into the outlook folder does not restore my sub-folders or contacts. I am afraid to sync with the BB because I dont want Outlook to mess up my BB contacts. (I have 3000 contacts). When I do a search, i see all of the .pst files. Some seem duplicative because they have the same name and kb. What can I do to get back a useful outlook? thanks |
LOST OR DISASSOCIATED CONTACTS, SUB-FOLDERS AND NOTES
"ahsoitgo" wrote in message
... Placing all .pst files back into the outlook folder does not restore my sub-folders or contacts. That's because there is no "Outlook folder" for PST. Outlook doesn't care where you put them as long as it has read/write access to them. It won't add them to your mail profile automatically. You must do that, either with the Mail applet in Control Panel (the Data Files button) or in Outlook, either with FileOpenOutlook Data File or with FileData File ManagementAdd -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] |
LOST OR DISASSOCIATED CONTACTS, SUB-FOLDERS AND NOTES
Brian:
That was extremely helpful. As I am adding each .pst file via this method, it is adding folders to the outlook tree. I need them to merge into my inbox. Do I just cut and paste old emails into my existing inbox? One of the .pst files is just one that says personal folder but it has nothing in it. Safe to delete? "Brian Tillman [MVP - Outlook]" wrote: "ahsoitgo" wrote in message ... Placing all .pst files back into the outlook folder does not restore my sub-folders or contacts. That's because there is no "Outlook folder" for PST. Outlook doesn't care where you put them as long as it has read/write access to them. It won't add them to your mail profile automatically. You must do that, either with the Mail applet in Control Panel (the Data Files button) or in Outlook, either with FileOpenOutlook Data File or with FileData File ManagementAdd -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] |
LOST OR DISASSOCIATED CONTACTS, SUB-FOLDERS AND NOTES
To continue, now that I have added the data files back in, they are all
appearing and I see my real contacts folder. How do I consolidate and finally end up with an outlook condition where I can sync with my BB and the info goes to where we want it? "ahsoitgo" wrote: Brian: That was extremely helpful. As I am adding each .pst file via this method, it is adding folders to the outlook tree. I need them to merge into my inbox. Do I just cut and paste old emails into my existing inbox? One of the .pst files is just one that says personal folder but it has nothing in it. Safe to delete? "Brian Tillman [MVP - Outlook]" wrote: "ahsoitgo" wrote in message ... Placing all .pst files back into the outlook folder does not restore my sub-folders or contacts. That's because there is no "Outlook folder" for PST. Outlook doesn't care where you put them as long as it has read/write access to them. It won't add them to your mail profile automatically. You must do that, either with the Mail applet in Control Panel (the Data Files button) or in Outlook, either with FileOpenOutlook Data File or with FileData File ManagementAdd -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] |
LOST OR DISASSOCIATED CONTACTS, SUB-FOLDERS AND NOTES
"ahsoitgo" wrote in message
... To continue, now that I have added the data files back in, they are all appearing and I see my real contacts folder. How do I consolidate and finally end up with an outlook condition where I can sync with my BB and the info goes to where we want it? For the empty PST, right-click its root and choose Close. You can delete it from disk later afer you close Outlook. Never delete a PST in Windows unless it's not in a mail profile. If you have located the PST that contains the folders you want to be your default folders, you must make that PST the delivery location. Exactly how is version-specific. For Outlook 2003 and earlier, click ToolsE-mail AccountsView or change existing e-mail accounts". In the "Deliver new e-mail to the following location" drop-down at the lower left, select the PST that contains those folders. Click Finish. For Outlook 2007, click ToolsAccount SettingsData Files, select the PST containing those folders and click Set as Default. Restart Outlook. Now that the delivery location folders are set, for each of the other PSTs, expand it. If any of the folders are NOT default folders, i.e., they are ones you created with names other than those of the default folders Outlook creates, you can copy the entire folder to the delivery location PST's root. For each folder that 's named the same as a default folder, open that folder, select all the items in it with Ctrl-A, then copy the selection to the corresponding folder in the delivery location PST. Once you're done with a PST, you can right-click its root and choose Close to remove it from the Navigation Pane. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] |
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