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Outlook 2003 - Contact Nicknames





 
 
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  #1  
Old October 11th 06, 03:31 PM posted to microsoft.public.outlook.contacts
FranksBank
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2
Default Outlook 2003 - Contact Nicknames

There seems to be a continual denial that Nickname usage has existed in
anything other than peculiar versions of Outlook. I have used Outlook '98,
2000 and now 2003 in various offices and at home; all aparently standard
versions. Only now in the 2003 version can I not use Nicknames in the way
that I have used them before. As follows:

Having set a nickname, I could hit Ctrl-K and have the relevant detail
appear in the To field. The fact that this does not work in Outlook 2003 is,
to say the least, extremely frustrating. It never ceases to amaze me how
application advances often translate into functional deterioration.

Having been unable to find a satisfactory answer to the question 'how do I
use my nicknames?' I would like to re-phrase this question and put it to to
the forum:

What is the Nickname field for in 2003? What purpose does it serve, and how
so?
Rather than a repeated 'that won't work and never did' answer, it would be
very useful and customer friendly to explain exactly what the field is about
and how it may be used.

Many thanks for any further constructive assistance with this issue.
Kind regards
FB



"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

Not in any standard version of Outlook. Only the long abandoned IMO mode of
Outlook made use of that field.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
wrote in message
ups.com...
There is a nickname field in the Contats setup page. This is the name
you could (previous to Outlook 2003) use in place of an actual e-mail
address in the "To" field, or the other fileds in a newlwy composed
message.




Ads
  #2  
Old October 11th 06, 03:49 PM posted to microsoft.public.outlook.contacts
Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 11,651
Default Outlook 2003 - Contact Nicknames

What is the Nickname field for in 2003? What purpose does it serve, and how
so?


The Nickname field holds data, like any other text field, that you can edit and use in searches in the Advanced Find dialog on that particular field. That field has no other special meaning within Outlook. You could put the person's pet's name or the name of a vegetable there, and Outlook wouldn't care.

For what you want to do -- enter a shortcut name for a contact when addressing a message -- a one-member distribution list is the solution.

Note: Apparently you were using Outlook 98 and Outlook 2000 is its very problematic IMO mode. The functionality you recall for the Nickname field worked only in that configuration.
--
Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP
Author of Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003
http://www.turtleflock.com/olconfig/index.htm
and Microsoft Outlook Programming - Jumpstart for
Administrators, Power Users, and Developers
http://www.outlookcode.com/jumpstart.aspx

"FranksBank" wrote in message ...
There seems to be a continual denial that Nickname usage has existed in
anything other than peculiar versions of Outlook. I have used Outlook '98,
2000 and now 2003 in various offices and at home; all aparently standard
versions. Only now in the 2003 version can I not use Nicknames in the way
that I have used them before. As follows:

Having set a nickname, I could hit Ctrl-K and have the relevant detail
appear in the To field. The fact that this does not work in Outlook 2003 is,
to say the least, extremely frustrating. It never ceases to amaze me how
application advances often translate into functional deterioration.

Having been unable to find a satisfactory answer to the question 'how do I
use my nicknames?' I would like to re-phrase this question and put it to to
the forum:

What is the Nickname field for in 2003? What purpose does it serve, and how
so?
Rather than a repeated 'that won't work and never did' answer, it would be
very useful and customer friendly to explain exactly what the field is about
and how it may be used.

Many thanks for any further constructive assistance with this issue.
Kind regards
FB



"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

Not in any standard version of Outlook. Only the long abandoned IMO mode of
Outlook made use of that field.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
wrote in message
ups.com...
There is a nickname field in the Contats setup page. This is the name
you could (previous to Outlook 2003) use in place of an actual e-mail
address in the "To" field, or the other fileds in a newlwy composed
message.

  #3  
Old October 11th 06, 09:58 PM posted to microsoft.public.outlook.contacts
Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 8,814
Default Outlook 2003 - Contact Nicknames

To add even further to the confusion is the fact that there are two types of
"nicknames" in Outlook and you have them confused. When you manually resolve
a name in Outlook, that name is stored in the autoresolution cache and is
referred to as a "nickname." The next time you resolve that name, it will
use the address you previously stored for that name. That has nothing to do
with the Nickname field, which as Sue points out is simply a data field in
the Contact record. That field has never been used for autoresolution in the
Outlook Address Book Service.
The reason you may have thought it was is that you weren't using the Outlook
Address Book Service in Outlook 98 and 2000 when you were using IMO mode.
You were using the Windows Address Book Service.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"FranksBank" wrote in message
...
There seems to be a continual denial that Nickname usage has existed in
anything other than peculiar versions of Outlook. I have used Outlook '98,
2000 and now 2003 in various offices and at home; all aparently standard
versions. Only now in the 2003 version can I not use Nicknames in the way
that I have used them before. As follows:

Having set a nickname, I could hit Ctrl-K and have the relevant detail
appear in the To field. The fact that this does not work in Outlook 2003
is,
to say the least, extremely frustrating. It never ceases to amaze me how
application advances often translate into functional deterioration.

Having been unable to find a satisfactory answer to the question 'how do I
use my nicknames?' I would like to re-phrase this question and put it to
to
the forum:

What is the Nickname field for in 2003? What purpose does it serve, and
how
so?
Rather than a repeated 'that won't work and never did' answer, it would be
very useful and customer friendly to explain exactly what the field is
about
and how it may be used.

Many thanks for any further constructive assistance with this issue.
Kind regards
FB



"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

Not in any standard version of Outlook. Only the long abandoned IMO mode
of
Outlook made use of that field.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
wrote in message
ups.com...
There is a nickname field in the Contats setup page. This is the name
you could (previous to Outlook 2003) use in place of an actual e-mail
address in the "To" field, or the other fileds in a newlwy composed
message.





  #4  
Old October 17th 06, 03:44 PM posted to microsoft.public.outlook.contacts
FranksBank
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2
Default Outlook 2003 - Contact Nicknames

Thanks Sue, and Russ, for your explanations. It's becoming clearer now
(although I don't know what 'IMO' is or was; but that doesn't matter as it's
not around anymore!).

I am in the process of re-populating my Contacts after a hard drive loss and
subsequent rebuild/applications upgrade. This new fangled thing is quite
different and will take a little getting used to, hence the questioning.

Thanks again for your comments.
Frank

"Sue Mosher [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

What is the Nickname field for in 2003? What purpose does it serve, and how
so?


The Nickname field holds data, like any other text field, that you can edit and use in searches in the Advanced Find dialog on that particular field. That field has no other special meaning within Outlook. You could put the person's pet's name or the name of a vegetable there, and Outlook wouldn't care.

For what you want to do -- enter a shortcut name for a contact when addressing a message -- a one-member distribution list is the solution.

Note: Apparently you were using Outlook 98 and Outlook 2000 is its very problematic IMO mode. The functionality you recall for the Nickname field worked only in that configuration.
--
Sue Mosher, Outlook MVP
Author of Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003
http://www.turtleflock.com/olconfig/index.htm
and Microsoft Outlook Programming - Jumpstart for
Administrators, Power Users, and Developers
http://www.outlookcode.com/jumpstart.aspx

"FranksBank" wrote in message ...
There seems to be a continual denial that Nickname usage has existed in
anything other than peculiar versions of Outlook. I have used Outlook '98,
2000 and now 2003 in various offices and at home; all aparently standard
versions. Only now in the 2003 version can I not use Nicknames in the way
that I have used them before. As follows:

Having set a nickname, I could hit Ctrl-K and have the relevant detail
appear in the To field. The fact that this does not work in Outlook 2003 is,
to say the least, extremely frustrating. It never ceases to amaze me how
application advances often translate into functional deterioration.

Having been unable to find a satisfactory answer to the question 'how do I
use my nicknames?' I would like to re-phrase this question and put it to to
the forum:

What is the Nickname field for in 2003? What purpose does it serve, and how
so?
Rather than a repeated 'that won't work and never did' answer, it would be
very useful and customer friendly to explain exactly what the field is about
and how it may be used.

Many thanks for any further constructive assistance with this issue.
Kind regards
FB



"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

Not in any standard version of Outlook. Only the long abandoned IMO mode of
Outlook made use of that field.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
wrote in message
ups.com...
There is a nickname field in the Contats setup page. This is the name
you could (previous to Outlook 2003) use in place of an actual e-mail
address in the "To" field, or the other fileds in a newlwy composed
message.


  #5  
Old January 6th 07, 04:10 AM posted to microsoft.public.outlook.contacts
Vicki
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 21
Default Outlook 2003 - Contact Nicknames

I, too, am trying to figure out how to turn back on this apparantly defunct
"feature" as I loved it and depended on it heavily in my 2000 version of
Outlook. Is there a way to reinstate the ability to have Outlook both "Find"
a contact and "Resolve a name" by using the Nickname Field in the Contact
record? I am willing to hack the registry.

Thanks,
Vicki

"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

To add even further to the confusion is the fact that there are two types of
"nicknames" in Outlook and you have them confused. When you manually resolve
a name in Outlook, that name is stored in the autoresolution cache and is
referred to as a "nickname." The next time you resolve that name, it will
use the address you previously stored for that name. That has nothing to do
with the Nickname field, which as Sue points out is simply a data field in
the Contact record. That field has never been used for autoresolution in the
Outlook Address Book Service.
The reason you may have thought it was is that you weren't using the Outlook
Address Book Service in Outlook 98 and 2000 when you were using IMO mode.
You were using the Windows Address Book Service.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"FranksBank" wrote in message
...
There seems to be a continual denial that Nickname usage has existed in
anything other than peculiar versions of Outlook. I have used Outlook '98,
2000 and now 2003 in various offices and at home; all aparently standard
versions. Only now in the 2003 version can I not use Nicknames in the way
that I have used them before. As follows:

Having set a nickname, I could hit Ctrl-K and have the relevant detail
appear in the To field. The fact that this does not work in Outlook 2003
is,
to say the least, extremely frustrating. It never ceases to amaze me how
application advances often translate into functional deterioration.

Having been unable to find a satisfactory answer to the question 'how do I
use my nicknames?' I would like to re-phrase this question and put it to
to
the forum:

What is the Nickname field for in 2003? What purpose does it serve, and
how
so?
Rather than a repeated 'that won't work and never did' answer, it would be
very useful and customer friendly to explain exactly what the field is
about
and how it may be used.

Many thanks for any further constructive assistance with this issue.
Kind regards
FB



"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

Not in any standard version of Outlook. Only the long abandoned IMO mode
of
Outlook made use of that field.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
wrote in message
ups.com...
There is a nickname field in the Contats setup page. This is the name
you could (previous to Outlook 2003) use in place of an actual e-mail
address in the "To" field, or the other fileds in a newlwy composed
message.





  #6  
Old January 6th 07, 04:19 AM posted to microsoft.public.outlook.contacts
Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 8,814
Default Outlook 2003 - Contact Nicknames

No. Outlook never had this ability. You were using Outlook Express when you
did this.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"Vicki" wrote in message
...
I, too, am trying to figure out how to turn back on this apparantly
defunct
"feature" as I loved it and depended on it heavily in my 2000 version of
Outlook. Is there a way to reinstate the ability to have Outlook both
"Find"
a contact and "Resolve a name" by using the Nickname Field in the Contact
record? I am willing to hack the registry.

Thanks,
Vicki

"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

To add even further to the confusion is the fact that there are two types
of
"nicknames" in Outlook and you have them confused. When you manually
resolve
a name in Outlook, that name is stored in the autoresolution cache and is
referred to as a "nickname." The next time you resolve that name, it will
use the address you previously stored for that name. That has nothing to
do
with the Nickname field, which as Sue points out is simply a data field
in
the Contact record. That field has never been used for autoresolution in
the
Outlook Address Book Service.
The reason you may have thought it was is that you weren't using the
Outlook
Address Book Service in Outlook 98 and 2000 when you were using IMO mode.
You were using the Windows Address Book Service.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"FranksBank" wrote in message
...
There seems to be a continual denial that Nickname usage has existed in
anything other than peculiar versions of Outlook. I have used Outlook
'98,
2000 and now 2003 in various offices and at home; all aparently
standard
versions. Only now in the 2003 version can I not use Nicknames in the
way
that I have used them before. As follows:

Having set a nickname, I could hit Ctrl-K and have the relevant detail
appear in the To field. The fact that this does not work in Outlook
2003
is,
to say the least, extremely frustrating. It never ceases to amaze me
how
application advances often translate into functional deterioration.

Having been unable to find a satisfactory answer to the question 'how
do I
use my nicknames?' I would like to re-phrase this question and put it
to
to
the forum:

What is the Nickname field for in 2003? What purpose does it serve, and
how
so?
Rather than a repeated 'that won't work and never did' answer, it would
be
very useful and customer friendly to explain exactly what the field is
about
and how it may be used.

Many thanks for any further constructive assistance with this issue.
Kind regards
FB



"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

Not in any standard version of Outlook. Only the long abandoned IMO
mode
of
Outlook made use of that field.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
wrote in message
ups.com...
There is a nickname field in the Contats setup page. This is the
name
you could (previous to Outlook 2003) use in place of an actual
e-mail
address in the "To" field, or the other fileds in a newlwy composed
message.






  #7  
Old January 8th 07, 04:11 AM posted to microsoft.public.outlook.contacts
Vicki
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 21
Default Outlook 2003 - Contact Nicknames

I'm not sure why you keep telling me "my memory is failing me" and I must
have been using "Outlook Express" when clearly I was using Outlook 2000 AND
when I have read other posts about this capability working in the "defunct
IMO mode". When a previous "feature" (that users grow to depend on) gets
removed from a "defunct" version of Outlook (NOT Outlook Express), it's
frustrating being told you are incorrect in your memory and use of that said
feature. If it doesn't work anymore, it doesn't work, but please don't
insult my intelligence by telling me I am wrong about the use of the feature.

"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

No. Outlook never had this ability. You were using Outlook Express when you
did this.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"Vicki" wrote in message
...
I, too, am trying to figure out how to turn back on this apparantly
defunct
"feature" as I loved it and depended on it heavily in my 2000 version of
Outlook. Is there a way to reinstate the ability to have Outlook both
"Find"
a contact and "Resolve a name" by using the Nickname Field in the Contact
record? I am willing to hack the registry.

Thanks,
Vicki

"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

To add even further to the confusion is the fact that there are two types
of
"nicknames" in Outlook and you have them confused. When you manually
resolve
a name in Outlook, that name is stored in the autoresolution cache and is
referred to as a "nickname." The next time you resolve that name, it will
use the address you previously stored for that name. That has nothing to
do
with the Nickname field, which as Sue points out is simply a data field
in
the Contact record. That field has never been used for autoresolution in
the
Outlook Address Book Service.
The reason you may have thought it was is that you weren't using the
Outlook
Address Book Service in Outlook 98 and 2000 when you were using IMO mode.
You were using the Windows Address Book Service.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"FranksBank" wrote in message
...
There seems to be a continual denial that Nickname usage has existed in
anything other than peculiar versions of Outlook. I have used Outlook
'98,
2000 and now 2003 in various offices and at home; all aparently
standard
versions. Only now in the 2003 version can I not use Nicknames in the
way
that I have used them before. As follows:

Having set a nickname, I could hit Ctrl-K and have the relevant detail
appear in the To field. The fact that this does not work in Outlook
2003
is,
to say the least, extremely frustrating. It never ceases to amaze me
how
application advances often translate into functional deterioration.

Having been unable to find a satisfactory answer to the question 'how
do I
use my nicknames?' I would like to re-phrase this question and put it
to
to
the forum:

What is the Nickname field for in 2003? What purpose does it serve, and
how
so?
Rather than a repeated 'that won't work and never did' answer, it would
be
very useful and customer friendly to explain exactly what the field is
about
and how it may be used.

Many thanks for any further constructive assistance with this issue.
Kind regards
FB



"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

Not in any standard version of Outlook. Only the long abandoned IMO
mode
of
Outlook made use of that field.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
wrote in message
ups.com...
There is a nickname field in the Contats setup page. This is the
name
you could (previous to Outlook 2003) use in place of an actual
e-mail
address in the "To" field, or the other fileds in a newlwy composed
message.






  #8  
Old January 8th 07, 11:24 AM posted to microsoft.public.outlook.contacts
Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 8,814
Default Outlook 2003 - Contact Nicknames

I already explained all that in my previous post. You weren't using the
Outlook Address Book in IMO mode. You were using Outlook Express'. No full
version of Outlook ever had this feature nor can it be configured to do so.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"Vicki" wrote in message
...
I'm not sure why you keep telling me "my memory is failing me" and I must
have been using "Outlook Express" when clearly I was using Outlook 2000
AND
when I have read other posts about this capability working in the "defunct
IMO mode". When a previous "feature" (that users grow to depend on) gets
removed from a "defunct" version of Outlook (NOT Outlook Express), it's
frustrating being told you are incorrect in your memory and use of that
said
feature. If it doesn't work anymore, it doesn't work, but please don't
insult my intelligence by telling me I am wrong about the use of the
feature.

"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

No. Outlook never had this ability. You were using Outlook Express when
you
did this.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"Vicki" wrote in message
...
I, too, am trying to figure out how to turn back on this apparantly
defunct
"feature" as I loved it and depended on it heavily in my 2000 version
of
Outlook. Is there a way to reinstate the ability to have Outlook both
"Find"
a contact and "Resolve a name" by using the Nickname Field in the
Contact
record? I am willing to hack the registry.

Thanks,
Vicki

"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

To add even further to the confusion is the fact that there are two
types
of
"nicknames" in Outlook and you have them confused. When you manually
resolve
a name in Outlook, that name is stored in the autoresolution cache and
is
referred to as a "nickname." The next time you resolve that name, it
will
use the address you previously stored for that name. That has nothing
to
do
with the Nickname field, which as Sue points out is simply a data
field
in
the Contact record. That field has never been used for autoresolution
in
the
Outlook Address Book Service.
The reason you may have thought it was is that you weren't using the
Outlook
Address Book Service in Outlook 98 and 2000 when you were using IMO
mode.
You were using the Windows Address Book Service.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"FranksBank" wrote in message
...
There seems to be a continual denial that Nickname usage has existed
in
anything other than peculiar versions of Outlook. I have used
Outlook
'98,
2000 and now 2003 in various offices and at home; all aparently
standard
versions. Only now in the 2003 version can I not use Nicknames in
the
way
that I have used them before. As follows:

Having set a nickname, I could hit Ctrl-K and have the relevant
detail
appear in the To field. The fact that this does not work in Outlook
2003
is,
to say the least, extremely frustrating. It never ceases to amaze me
how
application advances often translate into functional deterioration.

Having been unable to find a satisfactory answer to the question
'how
do I
use my nicknames?' I would like to re-phrase this question and put
it
to
to
the forum:

What is the Nickname field for in 2003? What purpose does it serve,
and
how
so?
Rather than a repeated 'that won't work and never did' answer, it
would
be
very useful and customer friendly to explain exactly what the field
is
about
and how it may be used.

Many thanks for any further constructive assistance with this issue.
Kind regards
FB



"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

Not in any standard version of Outlook. Only the long abandoned IMO
mode
of
Outlook made use of that field.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
wrote in message
ups.com...
There is a nickname field in the Contats setup page. This is the
name
you could (previous to Outlook 2003) use in place of an actual
e-mail
address in the "To" field, or the other fileds in a newlwy
composed
message.








  #9  
Old February 23rd 07, 03:32 AM posted to microsoft.public.outlook.contacts
David
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 167
Default Outlook 2003 - Contact Nicknames

Hello Russ,

I have just spent almost an hour reading people's queries and problems with
Outlook and must say that your posts are often rude and supercilious.
Take this problem with the loss of the, obviously, very useful nickname
functionality in previous versions. What does it matter that it was only
available in IMO mode (whatever that means)? The fact is that it WAS
available and a lot of people found it useful and now it is no more. Why
can't you just acknowledge this? It is exasperating when an updated version
offers a reduction in service, and this exasperation is compounded when
people like you do not recognise this, or worse still, tell us that we are
mistaken and that what we are missing was never actually available to us in
the first place!
A little more understanding and appreciation of the human condition wouldn't
go amiss.

"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

I already explained all that in my previous post. You weren't using the
Outlook Address Book in IMO mode. You were using Outlook Express'. No full
version of Outlook ever had this feature nor can it be configured to do so.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"Vicki" wrote in message
...
I'm not sure why you keep telling me "my memory is failing me" and I must
have been using "Outlook Express" when clearly I was using Outlook 2000
AND
when I have read other posts about this capability working in the "defunct
IMO mode". When a previous "feature" (that users grow to depend on) gets
removed from a "defunct" version of Outlook (NOT Outlook Express), it's
frustrating being told you are incorrect in your memory and use of that
said
feature. If it doesn't work anymore, it doesn't work, but please don't
insult my intelligence by telling me I am wrong about the use of the
feature.

"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

No. Outlook never had this ability. You were using Outlook Express when
you
did this.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"Vicki" wrote in message
...
I, too, am trying to figure out how to turn back on this apparantly
defunct
"feature" as I loved it and depended on it heavily in my 2000 version
of
Outlook. Is there a way to reinstate the ability to have Outlook both
"Find"
a contact and "Resolve a name" by using the Nickname Field in the
Contact
record? I am willing to hack the registry.

Thanks,
Vicki

"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

To add even further to the confusion is the fact that there are two
types
of
"nicknames" in Outlook and you have them confused. When you manually
resolve
a name in Outlook, that name is stored in the autoresolution cache and
is
referred to as a "nickname." The next time you resolve that name, it
will
use the address you previously stored for that name. That has nothing
to
do
with the Nickname field, which as Sue points out is simply a data
field
in
the Contact record. That field has never been used for autoresolution
in
the
Outlook Address Book Service.
The reason you may have thought it was is that you weren't using the
Outlook
Address Book Service in Outlook 98 and 2000 when you were using IMO
mode.
You were using the Windows Address Book Service.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"FranksBank" wrote in message
...
There seems to be a continual denial that Nickname usage has existed
in
anything other than peculiar versions of Outlook. I have used
Outlook
'98,
2000 and now 2003 in various offices and at home; all aparently
standard
versions. Only now in the 2003 version can I not use Nicknames in
the
way
that I have used them before. As follows:

Having set a nickname, I could hit Ctrl-K and have the relevant
detail
appear in the To field. The fact that this does not work in Outlook
2003
is,
to say the least, extremely frustrating. It never ceases to amaze me
how
application advances often translate into functional deterioration.

Having been unable to find a satisfactory answer to the question
'how
do I
use my nicknames?' I would like to re-phrase this question and put
it
to
to
the forum:

What is the Nickname field for in 2003? What purpose does it serve,
and
how
so?
Rather than a repeated 'that won't work and never did' answer, it
would
be
very useful and customer friendly to explain exactly what the field
is
about
and how it may be used.

Many thanks for any further constructive assistance with this issue.
Kind regards
FB



"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

Not in any standard version of Outlook. Only the long abandoned IMO
mode
of
Outlook made use of that field.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
wrote in message
ups.com...
There is a nickname field in the Contats setup page. This is the
name
you could (previous to Outlook 2003) use in place of an actual
e-mail
address in the "To" field, or the other fileds in a newlwy
composed
message.









  #10  
Old February 23rd 07, 11:12 AM posted to microsoft.public.outlook.contacts
Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 8,814
Default Outlook 2003 - Contact Nicknames

It's a common misconception that Outlook once had this feature and therefore
might have it again. Only Outlook Express has this feature, and Outlook 2000
IMO was Outlook Express in disguise. The point is that Outlook never had
this feature and won't, which is what people need to know. People who need
that feature can use Outlook Express if it's important.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"David" wrote in message
...
Hello Russ,

I have just spent almost an hour reading people's queries and problems
with
Outlook and must say that your posts are often rude and supercilious.
Take this problem with the loss of the, obviously, very useful nickname
functionality in previous versions. What does it matter that it was only
available in IMO mode (whatever that means)? The fact is that it WAS
available and a lot of people found it useful and now it is no more. Why
can't you just acknowledge this? It is exasperating when an updated
version
offers a reduction in service, and this exasperation is compounded when
people like you do not recognise this, or worse still, tell us that we are
mistaken and that what we are missing was never actually available to us
in
the first place!
A little more understanding and appreciation of the human condition
wouldn't
go amiss.

"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

I already explained all that in my previous post. You weren't using the
Outlook Address Book in IMO mode. You were using Outlook Express'. No
full
version of Outlook ever had this feature nor can it be configured to do
so.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"Vicki" wrote in message
...
I'm not sure why you keep telling me "my memory is failing me" and I
must
have been using "Outlook Express" when clearly I was using Outlook 2000
AND
when I have read other posts about this capability working in the
"defunct
IMO mode". When a previous "feature" (that users grow to depend on)
gets
removed from a "defunct" version of Outlook (NOT Outlook Express), it's
frustrating being told you are incorrect in your memory and use of that
said
feature. If it doesn't work anymore, it doesn't work, but please don't
insult my intelligence by telling me I am wrong about the use of the
feature.

"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

No. Outlook never had this ability. You were using Outlook Express
when
you
did this.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"Vicki" wrote in message
...
I, too, am trying to figure out how to turn back on this apparantly
defunct
"feature" as I loved it and depended on it heavily in my 2000
version
of
Outlook. Is there a way to reinstate the ability to have Outlook
both
"Find"
a contact and "Resolve a name" by using the Nickname Field in the
Contact
record? I am willing to hack the registry.

Thanks,
Vicki

"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

To add even further to the confusion is the fact that there are two
types
of
"nicknames" in Outlook and you have them confused. When you
manually
resolve
a name in Outlook, that name is stored in the autoresolution cache
and
is
referred to as a "nickname." The next time you resolve that name,
it
will
use the address you previously stored for that name. That has
nothing
to
do
with the Nickname field, which as Sue points out is simply a data
field
in
the Contact record. That field has never been used for
autoresolution
in
the
Outlook Address Book Service.
The reason you may have thought it was is that you weren't using
the
Outlook
Address Book Service in Outlook 98 and 2000 when you were using IMO
mode.
You were using the Windows Address Book Service.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
"FranksBank" wrote in
message
...
There seems to be a continual denial that Nickname usage has
existed
in
anything other than peculiar versions of Outlook. I have used
Outlook
'98,
2000 and now 2003 in various offices and at home; all aparently
standard
versions. Only now in the 2003 version can I not use Nicknames in
the
way
that I have used them before. As follows:

Having set a nickname, I could hit Ctrl-K and have the relevant
detail
appear in the To field. The fact that this does not work in
Outlook
2003
is,
to say the least, extremely frustrating. It never ceases to amaze
me
how
application advances often translate into functional
deterioration.

Having been unable to find a satisfactory answer to the question
'how
do I
use my nicknames?' I would like to re-phrase this question and
put
it
to
to
the forum:

What is the Nickname field for in 2003? What purpose does it
serve,
and
how
so?
Rather than a repeated 'that won't work and never did' answer, it
would
be
very useful and customer friendly to explain exactly what the
field
is
about
and how it may be used.

Many thanks for any further constructive assistance with this
issue.
Kind regards
FB



"Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote:

Not in any standard version of Outlook. Only the long abandoned
IMO
mode
of
Outlook made use of that field.
--
Russ Valentine
[MVP-Outlook]
wrote in message
ups.com...
There is a nickname field in the Contats setup page. This is
the
name
you could (previous to Outlook 2003) use in place of an actual
e-mail
address in the "To" field, or the other fileds in a newlwy
composed
message.











 




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