Posted on 05/16/2010 4:51:44 PM PDT by blessu
I've been trying for weeks to EXPORT or SYNCRONIZE all my Outlook 2007 data from one Vista computer to another.
Not just contacts, but EVERYTHING, including, calendar, to do list, settings, fonts, and signatures.
Help! I'm just about brain dead trying to do this... it shouldn't be so complicated!
Rick
typically, i have just done the Export to a .pst file. Then copy the file to a new computer and open or import. This should work seamlessly, including calendar, tasks and emails.
tech help.
Pay attention to the options in the wizard that follows. If you just want everything, then select the option from the wizard to import into the same folder in the target.
You will need to move accounts by hand.
If you want the cached name/nicknames list that isn't part of contacts, you will also need the .NK2 file. There is a k-base article on how to do that here: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/287623.
Agree with #2. PST file export is the way to get all your info from one PC to another.
Use windows Easy transfer. Put in your Vista disk, autostart it, on the menu pick other tasks. Follow the prompts..stuff the data into a folder and copy the folder over to the new computer and run the wizard again on the new machine to inport. You could even map a drive across the network and dump the exported data directly onto the new machine.
You can choose what to transfer...if you pick just the outlook stuff, it’ll do the entire thing.
Exporting can work too but you have to be a bit more thorough.
Okay, I posted the original question, but the answers so far do not export all the SETTINGS AND SIGNATURES AND SCREEN/FONT SETTINGS.
Anyone know how to do this?
Rick
And for a more complicated twist, how do I copy my address/contact information from Outlook to my netbook, which has neither Outlook nor Outlook Express (which apparently does not exist any more)? Or is that even possible?
Import or export a set of rules
As far as I know, there isn't a way (or an easy way) to transfer general Office/Outlook settings.
Windows Mail is the new Outlook Express, and should come with Windows 7.
You can export your data in a myriad of different formats, including even CSV for working with in a spreadsheet program, etc...
Are you pulling from an Exchange Server? That’s normally stored on the server, although an offline cache file (ost) could exist. IMAP4 accounts also store on the server. If you are pulling from a POP3 login (click on Tools/Account Settings) then the default location for the Outlook.pst file is buried down in the unseen directories in your user area. The clickable places I mention above will display in the bottom window the path of the pst. Go there and copy off the .pst file.
You will have to add the email accounts to the other computer.
Okay everyone, listen up!
I’m the original poster, and I’m not a computer expert. I am an ordinary person with a simple question. I don’t want any more irrelevant posts about Windows 7, Outlook Express, Exchange, networks, etc. — please READ the original question, and give me a SIMPLE answer!
Hello? Bueller? Anyone?
Rick
For email create a personal folder and move the mail into it. This will be on a local drive. You can also copy your pst file over to the new computer and it should have your email. Do a search for *.pst. Make sure the emails are on the new PC before deleting the old one.
For contacts go to file > import export and export your contacts into a file. You can then move the files over to new computer. Through bad experiences I’ve found it best to make back up copies of the contacts and mail folders on occasion. If its stored locally you can lose it all through a hard drive failure.
If the export is to another client, other than Outlook, the work can be accomplished by exporting to a csv text file or some intermediary program, even Excel or Access.
Gmail...
Thanks, Dan. I’ll have to dig into it a bit. I don’t like Windows Mail nearly as well as I like Outlook. I guess 10 years of habit is hard to break....
No Excel on this computer either - it’s MS Works, which really is fine. I have plans to get a REAL laptop in the near future, but I really don’t want to spend unnecessarily in today’s economy. A good laptop equals a lot of meals.
Windows Easy Transfer is the answer you want. It will do what you want to do and it’s seriously easy to use, and works well.
Instructions are here:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/928634
You can also use WET to move your “docs” folder, pics, favorites... everything, but it’ll move your Outlook profile and all your stuff.
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