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problems reconnect old data file .pst
Hi,
Had to reinstall XP Sp2 and then Office 2003 student/teacher edition on new notebook. Copied the .pst and assorted files from an external hard drive and pasted to the notebook at: drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Local Settings\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook, drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Application Data\Microsoft\Signatures, and I think drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook. The personal folders opened fine, the calendar had my events and appointments but not my custom categories, but the worst part is the Contacts will not open. I get an error message: The address list could not be displayed. The contacts folder with this address list could not be opened; it may have been moved or deleted, or you do not have permissions. For information on how to remove this folder from the Outlook Address Book, see microsoft Office Outlook help. Do the contacts reside elsewhere??? And not in the .pst file?? I posted to microsoft.public.outlook.contacts and Brian Tillman said dragging the file could damage it. Is there a difference between dragging and copying and pasting? Because microsoft.com (http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/as...771141033.aspx) says to copy and paste. Should I reinstall office and follow instructions for reconnecting old data file (from http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/as...771141033.aspx ) and see what happens? Brian Tillman said, in the same post above, to attempt to create a new profile. I'm not sure how to do that, I was following instructions from someone else's site but it didn't work properly. Advice on how-to (or not) attempt that? I also tried to run the repair tool, scanpst.exe, on the .pst file and it indicated internal errors (real or not according to microsoft.com's site for XP and OL 2003), was able to make a .bak file of the .pst file, but the process stopped responding on the repair...twice. Thanks! Carmen |
problems reconnect old data file .pst
Greta Grip wrote:
Had to reinstall XP Sp2 and then Office 2003 student/teacher edition on new notebook. Copied the .pst and assorted files from an external hard drive and pasted to the notebook at: drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Local Settings\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook, drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Application Data\Microsoft\Signatures, and I think drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook. Oops. Mail profile corruption ahread. The personal folders opened fine, the calendar had my events and appointments but not my custom categories, but the worst part is the Contacts will not open. I get an error message: The address list could not be displayed. The contacts folder with this address list could not be opened; it may have been moved or deleted, or you do not have permissions. For information on how to remove this folder from the Outlook Address Book, see microsoft Office Outlook help. Your Outlook Address Book service doesn't know where to find your Contacts folder because of the way you moved things. Click ToolsE-mail AccountsView or change existing directories or address booksNext. Select the Outlook Address Book and click Change. Remove all the Contacts folders tyou see there. Click Close, then Finish. Stop and restart Outlook. Right-click your Contacts folder, choose Properties, select the Outlook Address Book tab, check the box labeled "Show this folder as an e-mail Address Book" and click OK. Stop and restart Outlook. Do things look better now? -- Brian Tillman |
problems reconnect old data file .pst
Something has changed, now when I open the address book I get no error
messages and it's empty. So the process Brian recommends below of : "Click ToolsE-mail AccountsView or change existing address booksNext. Select the Outlook Address Book and click Change. Remove all the Contacts folders you see there. Click Close, then Finish. " doesn't work now obviously because nothing's there. Maybe when I started the process of repairing the inbox with the inbox repair tool scanpst.exe, something happened. Though as mentioned the process wouldn't finish. what next? "Brian Tillman" wrote: Greta Grip wrote: Had to reinstall XP Sp2 and then Office 2003 student/teacher edition on new notebook. Copied the .pst and assorted files from an external hard drive and pasted to the notebook at: drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Local Settings\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook, drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Application Data\Microsoft\Signatures, and I think drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook. Oops. Mail profile corruption ahread. The personal folders opened fine, the calendar had my events and appointments but not my custom categories, but the worst part is the Contacts will not open. I get an error message: The address list could not be displayed. The contacts folder with this address list could not be opened; it may have been moved or deleted, or you do not have permissions. For information on how to remove this folder from the Outlook Address Book, see microsoft Office Outlook help. Your Outlook Address Book service doesn't know where to find your Contacts folder because of the way you moved things. Click ToolsE-mail AccountsView or change existing directories or address booksNext. Select the Outlook Address Book and click Change. Remove all the Contacts folders tyou see there. Click Close, then Finish. Stop and restart Outlook. Right-click your Contacts folder, choose Properties, select the Outlook Address Book tab, check the box labeled "Show this folder as an e-mail Address Book" and click OK. Stop and restart Outlook. Do things look better now? -- Brian Tillman |
problems reconnect old data file .pst
Brian,
Am I missing something? Microsoft explicitly indicates to copy and paste your .pst file in their instructions for "Reconnect your old outlook data file" , see http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/as...771141033.aspx, and yet you seem to be saying that's a sure way to corrupt your file? : "Moving your old data files You installed Outlook on a new computer or a new hard disk and are ready to start using your old data. Use Windows Explorer to copy each Personal Folders file (.pst) (Personal Folders file (.pst): Data file that stores your messages and other items on your computer. You can assign a .pst file to be the default delivery location for e-mail messages. You can use a .pst to organize and back up items for safekeeping.) from its backup location (network drive or removable media, such as a CD drive or portable hard disk) to the drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Local Settings\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook folder. Although you can keep your data files in any folder, this is the default folder that Outlook uses when creating .pst files." "Greta Grip" wrote: Something has changed, now when I open the address book I get no error messages and it's empty. So the process Brian recommends below of : "Click ToolsE-mail AccountsView or change existing address booksNext. Select the Outlook Address Book and click Change. Remove all the Contacts folders you see there. Click Close, then Finish. " doesn't work now obviously because nothing's there. Maybe when I started the process of repairing the inbox with the inbox repair tool scanpst.exe, something happened. Though as mentioned the process wouldn't finish. what next? "Brian Tillman" wrote: Greta Grip wrote: Had to reinstall XP Sp2 and then Office 2003 student/teacher edition on new notebook. Copied the .pst and assorted files from an external hard drive and pasted to the notebook at: drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Local Settings\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook, drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Application Data\Microsoft\Signatures, and I think drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook. Oops. Mail profile corruption ahread. The personal folders opened fine, the calendar had my events and appointments but not my custom categories, but the worst part is the Contacts will not open. I get an error message: The address list could not be displayed. The contacts folder with this address list could not be opened; it may have been moved or deleted, or you do not have permissions. For information on how to remove this folder from the Outlook Address Book, see microsoft Office Outlook help. Your Outlook Address Book service doesn't know where to find your Contacts folder because of the way you moved things. Click ToolsE-mail AccountsView or change existing directories or address booksNext. Select the Outlook Address Book and click Change. Remove all the Contacts folders tyou see there. Click Close, then Finish. Stop and restart Outlook. Right-click your Contacts folder, choose Properties, select the Outlook Address Book tab, check the box labeled "Show this folder as an e-mail Address Book" and click OK. Stop and restart Outlook. Do things look better now? -- Brian Tillman |
problems reconnect old data file .pst
Those instructions are wrong and always have been. I've implored Microsoft
to correct them, but they haven't seen fit to do so. If you copy another PST file into the default directory the odds are you will overwrite another PST file because Microsoft always creates PST files with the same name. Instead you must copy the PST file to another directory and then use Outlook's Data File Management utility to open it and set it as your default. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Greta Grip" wrote in message ... Brian, Am I missing something? Microsoft explicitly indicates to copy and paste your .pst file in their instructions for "Reconnect your old outlook data file" , see http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/as...771141033.aspx, and yet you seem to be saying that's a sure way to corrupt your file? : "Moving your old data files You installed Outlook on a new computer or a new hard disk and are ready to start using your old data. Use Windows Explorer to copy each Personal Folders file (.pst) (Personal Folders file (.pst): Data file that stores your messages and other items on your computer. You can assign a .pst file to be the default delivery location for e-mail messages. You can use a .pst to organize and back up items for safekeeping.) from its backup location (network drive or removable media, such as a CD drive or portable hard disk) to the drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Local Settings\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook folder. Although you can keep your data files in any folder, this is the default folder that Outlook uses when creating .pst files." "Greta Grip" wrote: Something has changed, now when I open the address book I get no error messages and it's empty. So the process Brian recommends below of : "Click ToolsE-mail AccountsView or change existing address booksNext. Select the Outlook Address Book and click Change. Remove all the Contacts folders you see there. Click Close, then Finish. " doesn't work now obviously because nothing's there. Maybe when I started the process of repairing the inbox with the inbox repair tool scanpst.exe, something happened. Though as mentioned the process wouldn't finish. what next? "Brian Tillman" wrote: Greta Grip wrote: Had to reinstall XP Sp2 and then Office 2003 student/teacher edition on new notebook. Copied the .pst and assorted files from an external hard drive and pasted to the notebook at: drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Local Settings\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook, drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Application Data\Microsoft\Signatures, and I think drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook. Oops. Mail profile corruption ahread. The personal folders opened fine, the calendar had my events and appointments but not my custom categories, but the worst part is the Contacts will not open. I get an error message: The address list could not be displayed. The contacts folder with this address list could not be opened; it may have been moved or deleted, or you do not have permissions. For information on how to remove this folder from the Outlook Address Book, see microsoft Office Outlook help. Your Outlook Address Book service doesn't know where to find your Contacts folder because of the way you moved things. Click ToolsE-mail AccountsView or change existing directories or address booksNext. Select the Outlook Address Book and click Change. Remove all the Contacts folders tyou see there. Click Close, then Finish. Stop and restart Outlook. Right-click your Contacts folder, choose Properties, select the Outlook Address Book tab, check the box labeled "Show this folder as an e-mail Address Book" and click OK. Stop and restart Outlook. Do things look better now? -- Brian Tillman |
problems reconnect old data file .pst
Hi,
Tried creating new profile, didn't solve problem. Also as Brian Tillman suggested, I tried alternating chkdsk & scandisk.exe. Finally scandisk said no errors and didn't hang. Now, If you click on the address book button while in say, mail view, it is still empty (the Show Names From field is completely blank, while trying this in the new profile I created shows the word "contacts" or address book in the Show Names field). (who knows, maybe the contacts "button" was always populated...but I really think I checked that a week ago....) However, the lower left pane shows a button called "Mail", and under that a "Calendar" button, then "Contacts", then "Tasks". If you click on the Contacts button - it has tons of my name entries!!! How do I get them into the "address book"? Because if I compose a new message and click the To: field, for example, the Select Names field is completely empty. Thanks! Carmen "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Those instructions are wrong and always have been. I've implored Microsoft to correct them, but they haven't seen fit to do so. If you copy another PST file into the default directory the odds are you will overwrite another PST file because Microsoft always creates PST files with the same name. Instead you must copy the PST file to another directory and then use Outlook's Data File Management utility to open it and set it as your default. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Greta Grip" wrote in message ... Brian, Am I missing something? Microsoft explicitly indicates to copy and paste your .pst file in their instructions for "Reconnect your old outlook data file" , see http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/as...771141033.aspx, and yet you seem to be saying that's a sure way to corrupt your file? : "Moving your old data files You installed Outlook on a new computer or a new hard disk and are ready to start using your old data. Use Windows Explorer to copy each Personal Folders file (.pst) (Personal Folders file (.pst): Data file that stores your messages and other items on your computer. You can assign a .pst file to be the default delivery location for e-mail messages. You can use a .pst to organize and back up items for safekeeping.) from its backup location (network drive or removable media, such as a CD drive or portable hard disk) to the drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Local Settings\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook folder. Although you can keep your data files in any folder, this is the default folder that Outlook uses when creating .pst files." "Greta Grip" wrote: Something has changed, now when I open the address book I get no error messages and it's empty. So the process Brian recommends below of : "Click ToolsE-mail AccountsView or change existing address booksNext. Select the Outlook Address Book and click Change. Remove all the Contacts folders you see there. Click Close, then Finish. " doesn't work now obviously because nothing's there. Maybe when I started the process of repairing the inbox with the inbox repair tool scanpst.exe, something happened. Though as mentioned the process wouldn't finish. what next? "Brian Tillman" wrote: Greta Grip wrote: Had to reinstall XP Sp2 and then Office 2003 student/teacher edition on new notebook. Copied the .pst and assorted files from an external hard drive and pasted to the notebook at: drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Local Settings\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook, drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Application Data\Microsoft\Signatures, and I think drive:\Documents and Settings\user\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook. Oops. Mail profile corruption ahread. The personal folders opened fine, the calendar had my events and appointments but not my custom categories, but the worst part is the Contacts will not open. I get an error message: The address list could not be displayed. The contacts folder with this address list could not be opened; it may have been moved or deleted, or you do not have permissions. For information on how to remove this folder from the Outlook Address Book, see microsoft Office Outlook help. Your Outlook Address Book service doesn't know where to find your Contacts folder because of the way you moved things. Click ToolsE-mail AccountsView or change existing directories or address booksNext. Select the Outlook Address Book and click Change. Remove all the Contacts folders tyou see there. Click Close, then Finish. Stop and restart Outlook. Right-click your Contacts folder, choose Properties, select the Outlook Address Book tab, check the box labeled "Show this folder as an e-mail Address Book" and click OK. Stop and restart Outlook. Do things look better now? -- Brian Tillman |
problems reconnect old data file .pst
Greta Grip wrote:
However, the lower left pane shows a button called "Mail", and under that a "Calendar" button, then "Contacts", then "Tasks". Those are each separate views in the Navigation Pane ans will show only those folders matching the type of view. The Mail view will show only mail folders, the Contacts view will show only Contacts folders, etc. If you click on the Contacts button - it has tons of my name entries!!! How do I get them into the "address book"? Because if I compose a new message and click the To: field, for example, the Select Names field is completely empty. Select a vew, like Contacts or Folder List that displays your COntacts folders. RIght-click each and choose Properties. Select the Outlook Address Book tab and check the box labeled "Show this folder as an e-mail Address Book". -- Brian Tillman |
problems reconnect old data file .pst
Hi Brian,
Thanks. In my original profile, the "Show this folder as an e-mail Address Book" box as you describe below, is greyed out (hence un-selectable). In the new profile I created, I was able to select it, but it still didn't populate the address book one views using the address book button... Carmen "Brian Tillman" wrote: Greta Grip wrote: However, the lower left pane shows a button called "Mail", and under that a "Calendar" button, then "Contacts", then "Tasks". Those are each separate views in the Navigation Pane ans will show only those folders matching the type of view. The Mail view will show only mail folders, the Contacts view will show only Contacts folders, etc. If you click on the Contacts button - it has tons of my name entries!!! How do I get them into the "address book"? Because if I compose a new message and click the To: field, for example, the Select Names field is completely empty. Select a vew, like Contacts or Folder List that displays your COntacts folders. RIght-click each and choose Properties. Select the Outlook Address Book tab and check the box labeled "Show this folder as an e-mail Address Book". -- Brian Tillman |
problems reconnect old data file .pst
Greta Grip wrote:
Thanks. In my original profile, the "Show this folder as an e-mail Address Book" box as you describe below, is greyed out (hence un-selectable). In the new profile I created, I was able to select it, but it still didn't populate the address book one views using the address book button... Are you sure your Address Book is pointing at the correct Contacts folder? ToolsOptions in the ADdress Book interface. -- Brian Tillman |
problems reconnect old data file .pst
Sorry, I don't understand what you mean. Where is the address book interface
you're speaking of? I don't see a place to point the address book to another contacts folder. thanks "Brian Tillman" wrote: Greta Grip wrote: Thanks. In my original profile, the "Show this folder as an e-mail Address Book" box as you describe below, is greyed out (hence un-selectable). In the new profile I created, I was able to select it, but it still didn't populate the address book one views using the address book button... Are you sure your Address Book is pointing at the correct Contacts folder? ToolsOptions in the ADdress Book interface. -- Brian Tillman |
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