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| Windows 2000 Pro / NT Workstation Support Find support for Windows 2000 Pro / NT Workstation here |
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#1 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 53
OS: Windows 2000
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Where/how is Outlook Express mail stored?
Anybody know details of getting Outlook Express mail from an old Windows installation to a new one?
A cyber-clueless friend wanted to upgrade from Windows 98, so he bought an additional hard drive, made it the primary master, and installed Windows 2000 Professional on it. Now he wants to grab his email (and address book, etc.) from the old drive, which is still in there as the primary slave. But I can't figure out how or where it is stored. Everything I read on this topic requires you to have already done a backup from within (the old) Outlook Express first. And we can't do that because 98 won't boot anymore; I get the "has generated errors and will be shut down" message from Explorer, and then it hangs, even in Safe Mode. Maybe I'm spoiled by Eudora, but seems like it should be just a matter of moving a bunch of files into a different folder. Isn't there a setting under options in Outlook Express for where the data is to be stored? I read somewhere that they are stored as .dbx files, and these do show up in a search, but strangely, I can't navigate to them in Explorer. It's like some internediate folders in the path are hidden. I would appreciate if someone who understands Outlook Express better than I do can provide a solution. It's OE version 6, I believe. (Plan B: If there's no other alternative, can I do a repair on Windows 98 that might fix it enough to boot to the desktop without clobbering the data and run OE?) Thanks, Ted |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Manager, Design
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The files are stored with the names like the folders they represent. They are inside of the Application Data folder which is hidden by default. I can't remember the extension at the moment but I think it was .dbx.
__________________
![]() ![]() ----------------------------- There are no dumb questions, unless a customer is asking them. Help in the fight against cancer and other serious illnesses. |
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#3 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 53
OS: Windows 2000
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Quote:
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#5 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 53
OS: Windows 2000
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Quote:
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#6 (permalink) |
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Manager, Design
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The files aren't hidden, but the folders are. To backup them up just copy-> paste them to another location. When you want to use them again tell Outlook where they are and restart it.
__________________
![]() ![]() ----------------------------- There are no dumb questions, unless a customer is asking them. Help in the fight against cancer and other serious illnesses. |
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#7 (permalink) | |
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Permanently Banned
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#8 (permalink) | ||
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 53
OS: Windows 2000
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Quote:
Quote:
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#9 (permalink) | |
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Manager, Design
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Quote:
To un-hide them use the Folders and Views control panel and check "Show hidden folder and files." To assign the storage location go to Tools -> Options... and click the Maintenance tab. The click the "Store Folder" button and choose the location you wish.
__________________
![]() ![]() ----------------------------- There are no dumb questions, unless a customer is asking them. Help in the fight against cancer and other serious illnesses. |
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#10 (permalink) | ||
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 53
OS: Windows 2000
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Quote:
Update: now I'm even more confused; I just looked at my work computer, and it doesn't have that problem. The entire path is there. (Well, the work computer has XP instead of 2000, maybe that's the difference.) Quote:
Thanks very much. |
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#11 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 53
OS: Windows 2000
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Ok, the instructions I needed were posted in another forum:
Quote:
I copied-and-pasted them to another location, then imported into Outlook Express as explained above. I did get a couple errors, which went away when I quit trying to think independently and followed the instructions exactly: 1. Copy to the desktop (not some other folder) 2. Copy *all* the files, not just select one or two As soon as I did both of those, everything worked fine. Thanks, Ted |
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