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#11
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Export Account Settings in Outlook 2007
BTW,
I forgot to say it on the previous post: it is possible to export the Outlook Email Accounts direct from the Registry and import it back on the other installation. To do this open the Regedit and go to: [HKEY_USERS\S-1-5-21-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxx\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Windows Messaging Subsystem\Profiles\Outlook Note: "S-1-5-21-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxx" is your GUID, which will differ for each installation. Edit or delete entries as you need, then export the entire key to a file and import it into your new installation! If you use this method to move the settings to another PC, make sure you do a search and replace on the xxxxx as your GUID will be different. It's usually a good idea to back up the existing key on the new PC before deleting it. Remember to always make a registry backup first and just be careful in there! It works for me all the time. My "FULL backup procedure" is simple: 1) Save the PST file (which is your Post Office file, containing all the e-mails, calendar, address book, etc) 2) Export your RULES 3) Export the aforementioned Registry Key To import it on another installation is simple (just a few more steps): 1) Open Outlook at least ONCE, and DO NOT create an e-mail account a this time. Just follow the start up screens until it is done. 2) Find out the location of your PST file (go to TOOLS - ACCOUNT SETTINGS - DATA FILES). Take a note of the PST file location. 3) Close Outlook (don't minimize, CLOSE IT). 4) Go to the folder where the PST file is located and DELETE IT, replacing it by your own backup copy 5) Open the REGEDIT and import the KEY with your email accounts settings (make sure you have changed the GUID on the backup file as explained above) 6) Open Outlook again. Don't be scared if it gives you an error message. Just ignore it and close the message window. Outlook will open with all your e-mails and accounts already restored. 7) Import the RULES back (TOOLS - RULES AND ALERTS - OPTIONS - IMPORT RULES). Note that you may have to "adjust" some rules in very rare cases. In most cases you just need to re-enable them. 8) As your PST file uses "direct access" to link some "shortcuts", the Address Book link will probably be lost (but all the addresses you have are still there). To fix it just delete the EMPTY address book on the tree and link yours using the address book tool to fix the shortcuts (TOOLS - ADDRESS BOOK). It is pretty much simple this procedure and it may takes 15 minutes only of your time (a lot less than develop a solution for that). I've been thinking myself to create an automated tool for the task, but as I've said: it is so fast to do it by hand (and failure free) that doesn't make sense on my case to develop a tool for the task. However, I'd love to see someone else doing the job (maybe YOU, Galen?). If someone wants to develop a tool I'd like to help. Just drop me a line and I can provide lots of information about Outlook tricks... Hope this post have helped someone else. -- Wolf 4) "Wolf" wrote: Galen, Your reply almost pushed me to say "bad words"!!!! Doesn't matter how wonderful or powerful the suite is if it lacks of such a simple and important tool as an "account exporter"... The "Outlook Develop Team" should be at a shame of themselves for this stupid failure (and Microsoft, as a company, for not providing a external tool of fixing upgrade for that). People who PAY MONEY for their operational tools should not be required to waste their valuable time studding SDKs and APIs to develop solutions to cover up the incompetence of a so well paid team (the Outlook Develop Team). Why don't you shut up and stop bragging about how "wonderful" the "most popular Office suite on the planet" is and open your mind to realize that, regardless of its "wonderfulness", IT STILL LACKS OF SOME SIMPLE AND IMPORTANT RESOURCE!!! Stop saying to people to "put up or shut up" because they PAID for something and they have the right to complaint once it doesn't do the job entirely!!! -- Wolf "Galen" wrote: My reply is at the bottom of your sent message. In , alt.testing typed: Or lose a few mail accounts ;-) I personally prefer multiple aliases on a single mailbox than having multiple mailboxes. It's indeed a shame that there isn't such a tool It's a shame? It's a joke. Why there isn't such a mechanism to perform this task seamlessly is outside the scope of human understanding. Hell, I could write something in a scripting language that could do this, if provided a decent API. Testament to much of the disdain that exists towards Outlook. The Outlook APIs and SDK are among the best on the planet. Put up or shut up. We're not talking some obscure OS or small time operation here. We're talking about the most popular Office suite on the planet. Put up or shut up. -- Galen (Not Current MS-MVP) My Geek Site: http://kgiii.info Web Hosting: http://whathostingshould.be "In solving a problem of this sort, the grand thing is to be able to reason backwards. That is a very useful accomplishment, and a very easy one, but people do not practise it much. In the every-day affairs of life it is more useful to reason forwards, and so the other comes to be neglected. There are fifty who can reason synthetically for one who can reason analytically." - Sherlock Holmes |
#12
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Export Account Settings in Outlook 2007
"Wolf" wrote: BTW, I forgot to say it on the previous post: it is possible to export the Outlook Email Accounts direct from the Registry and import it back on the other installation. To do this open the Regedit and go to: [HKEY_USERS\S-1-5-21-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxx\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Windows Messaging Subsystem\Profiles\Outlook Note: "S-1-5-21-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxx" is your GUID, which will differ for each installation. Edit or delete entries as you need, then export the entire key to a file and import it into your new installation! Wolf this is great but I have a simple [probably stupid] question. So Do I export the entire key "Outlook"? Or is it necessary to find the keys that actually hold the account settings themselves? |
#13
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Export Account Settings in Outlook 2007
"Glostah" wrote in message
... "Wolf" wrote: BTW, I forgot to say it on the previous post: it is possible to export the Outlook Email Accounts direct from the Registry and import it back on the other installation. To do this open the Regedit and go to: [HKEY_USERS\S-1-5-21-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxx\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Windows Messaging Subsystem\Profiles\Outlook Better to use HKEY_CURRENT_USER rather than the GUID. You should be able to export whatever is below "profiles". It may not be the word "Outlook", since your mail profile name may not be "Outlook". It will be whatever your mail profile name is. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] |
#14
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Export Account Settings in Outlook 2007
As Brian brightly replied, exporting the entire KEY named "Outlook" (or, the
KEY that reflects the Outlook profile name) should do the trick very well. Also I would like to reinforce what Brian also said about using the HKEY_CURRENT_USER instead of HKEY_USERS\S-1-5-21-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxx... Both work as same, as far as you are on the same Windows Account in which the Outlook runs... The fact is that on the majority of time when I execute this procedure I do it on the "safe mode" and the user has another account... But, if you are logged on the same account in which the Outlook is running, both methods will work as same. Just some remarks: 1) I am not sure if this "backup method" will work entirely if the account is using Microsoft Exchange. I can assure it will work with POP3/IMAP/HTTP/RSS, but I haven't have a chance to try it on a machine with Microsoft Exchange. If someone else is able to try it and post the results it would be nice; 2) On the Office 2007 the KEY also carries the RULES, so then you don't need to export them. On the previous version of Outlook the rules use to require the exporting method; 3) Don't forget to backup any existing signatures, they are commonly save on external files. Besides those remarks, this procedure is wonderfully fast and safe. Regards to you all. -- Wolf "Glostah" wrote: "Wolf" wrote: BTW, I forgot to say it on the previous post: it is possible to export the Outlook Email Accounts direct from the Registry and import it back on the other installation. To do this open the Regedit and go to: [HKEY_USERS\S-1-5-21-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxx\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Windows Messaging Subsystem\Profiles\Outlook Note: "S-1-5-21-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxx" is your GUID, which will differ for each installation. Edit or delete entries as you need, then export the entire key to a file and import it into your new installation! Wolf this is great but I have a simple [probably stupid] question. So Do I export the entire key "Outlook"? Or is it necessary to find the keys that actually hold the account settings themselves? |
#15
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Export Account Settings in Outlook 2007
"Wolf" wrote in message
... 1) I am not sure if this "backup method" will work entirely if the account is using Microsoft Exchange. I can assure it will work with POP3/IMAP/HTTP/RSS, but I haven't have a chance to try it on a machine with Microsoft Exchange. If someone else is able to try it and post the results it would be nice; It won't retain any account passwords. You'll have to redefine them. 2) On the Office 2007 the KEY also carries the RULES, so then you don't need to export them. On the previous version of Outlook the rules use to require the exporting method; For Outlook 2007 rules are in a hidden folder in the PST, not in the mail profile. If you move a PST properly, the rules can move with it. Hoewever, it's always best to use the Rules Wizard to export the rules and move the exported RWZ file, importing them again if needed on the target PC. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] |
#16
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Export Account Settings in Outlook 2007
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#17
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Export Account Settings in Outlook 2007
@Galen: Just passing through, almost a year after you wrote this, I wonder if
you're still as big a tool as you were when you wrote it? Exactly how, I wonder, did you think this absurdly arrogant and self-aggrandizing post accomplished anything beyond making you look like a complete jerk? The truth of the matter is that it's generally bad form to take features away without providing alternate means for accomplishing the same goal(s), so, in fact, MSFT did drop the ball here, your "my big brother can lick your big brother" remarks notwithstanding. If you would leverage some of that backwards reasoning you extoll in your Sherlock Holmes quote instead of the backSIDE reasoning you used here, you'd know that. "Galen" wrote: My reply is at the bottom of your sent message. In , alt.testing typed: Or lose a few mail accounts ;-) I personally prefer multiple aliases on a single mailbox than having multiple mailboxes. It's indeed a shame that there isn't such a tool It's a shame? It's a joke. Why there isn't such a mechanism to perform this task seamlessly is outside the scope of human understanding. Hell, I could write something in a scripting language that could do this, if provided a decent API. Testament to much of the disdain that exists towards Outlook. The Outlook APIs and SDK are among the best on the planet. Put up or shut up. We're not talking some obscure OS or small time operation here. We're talking about the most popular Office suite on the planet. Put up or shut up. -- Galen (Not Current MS-MVP) My Geek Site: http://kgiii.info Web Hosting: http://whathostingshould.be "In solving a problem of this sort, the grand thing is to be able to reason backwards. That is a very useful accomplishment, and a very easy one, but people do not practise it much. In the every-day affairs of life it is more useful to reason forwards, and so the other comes to be neglected. There are fifty who can reason synthetically for one who can reason analytically." - Sherlock Holmes |
#18
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Export Account Settings in Outlook 2007
"DWD" wrote in message
... @Galen: Just passing through, almost a year after you wrote this, I wonder if you're still as big a tool as you were when you wrote it? Chances are Galen won't ever see this. I don't recall any other posts of his. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] |
#19
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Export Account Settings in Outlook 2007
"Wolf" wrote: BTW, I forgot to say it on the previous post: it is possible to export the Outlook Email Accounts direct from the Registry and import it back on the other installation. To do this open the Regedit and go to: [HKEY_USERS\S-1-5-21-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxx\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Windows Messaging Subsystem\Profiles\Outlook Note: "S-1-5-21-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxx" is your GUID, which will differ for each installation. Edit or delete entries as you need, then export the entire key to a file and import it into your new installation! If you use this method to move the settings to another PC, make sure you do a search and replace on the xxxxx as your GUID will be different. It's usually a good idea to back up the existing key on the new PC before deleting it. Remember to always make a registry backup first and just be careful in there! It works for me all the time. My "FULL backup procedure" is simple: 1) Save the PST file (which is your Post Office file, containing all the e-mails, calendar, address book, etc) 2) Export your RULES 3) Export the aforementioned Registry Key To import it on another installation is simple (just a few more steps): 1) Open Outlook at least ONCE, and DO NOT create an e-mail account a this time. Just follow the start up screens until it is done. 2) Find out the location of your PST file (go to TOOLS - ACCOUNT SETTINGS - DATA FILES). Take a note of the PST file location. 3) Close Outlook (don't minimize, CLOSE IT). 4) Go to the folder where the PST file is located and DELETE IT, replacing it by your own backup copy 5) Open the REGEDIT and import the KEY with your email accounts settings (make sure you have changed the GUID on the backup file as explained above) 6) Open Outlook again. Don't be scared if it gives you an error message. Just ignore it and close the message window. Outlook will open with all your e-mails and accounts already restored. 7) Import the RULES back (TOOLS - RULES AND ALERTS - OPTIONS - IMPORT RULES). Note that you may have to "adjust" some rules in very rare cases. In most cases you just need to re-enable them. 8) As your PST file uses "direct access" to link some "shortcuts", the Address Book link will probably be lost (but all the addresses you have are still there). To fix it just delete the EMPTY address book on the tree and link yours using the address book tool to fix the shortcuts (TOOLS - ADDRESS BOOK). It is pretty much simple this procedure and it may takes 15 minutes only of your time (a lot less than develop a solution for that). I've been thinking myself to create an automated tool for the task, but as I've said: it is so fast to do it by hand (and failure free) that doesn't make sense on my case to develop a tool for the task. However, I'd love to see someone else doing the job (maybe YOU, Galen?). If someone wants to develop a tool I'd like to help. Just drop me a line and I can provide lots of information about Outlook tricks... Hope this post have helped someone else. -- Wolf Actually I had real problems with replacing the key using regedit, Wolf. I carefully exported my W7 laptop key to a file then edited it so the GUID was the same as the one on my desktop. I saved it to a thumb drive, stuck it in my desktop and tried to replace the key. All I got was error messages. After an hour of frustration I simply loaded Acronis, saved the Outlook data and restored it on the desktop. I hate to launch a bloated program for such a simple job. Don |
#20
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Export Account Settings in Outlook 2007
For future reference see;
http://www.howto-outlook.com/howto/backupandrestore.htm -- Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook] Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003 http://www.howto-outlook.com/ Outlook FAQ, HowTo, Downloads, Add-Ins and more http://www.msoutlook.info/ Real World Questions, Real World Answers ----- "Sneaks" wrote in message news "Wolf" wrote: BTW, I forgot to say it on the previous post: it is possible to export the Outlook Email Accounts direct from the Registry and import it back on the other installation. To do this open the Regedit and go to: [HKEY_USERS\S-1-5-21-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxx\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Windows Messaging Subsystem\Profiles\Outlook Note: "S-1-5-21-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxxxxxx-xxxx" is your GUID, which will differ for each installation. Edit or delete entries as you need, then export the entire key to a file and import it into your new installation! If you use this method to move the settings to another PC, make sure you do a search and replace on the xxxxx as your GUID will be different. It's usually a good idea to back up the existing key on the new PC before deleting it. Remember to always make a registry backup first and just be careful in there! It works for me all the time. My "FULL backup procedure" is simple: 1) Save the PST file (which is your Post Office file, containing all the e-mails, calendar, address book, etc) 2) Export your RULES 3) Export the aforementioned Registry Key To import it on another installation is simple (just a few more steps): 1) Open Outlook at least ONCE, and DO NOT create an e-mail account a this time. Just follow the start up screens until it is done. 2) Find out the location of your PST file (go to TOOLS - ACCOUNT SETTINGS - DATA FILES). Take a note of the PST file location. 3) Close Outlook (don't minimize, CLOSE IT). 4) Go to the folder where the PST file is located and DELETE IT, replacing it by your own backup copy 5) Open the REGEDIT and import the KEY with your email accounts settings (make sure you have changed the GUID on the backup file as explained above) 6) Open Outlook again. Don't be scared if it gives you an error message. Just ignore it and close the message window. Outlook will open with all your e-mails and accounts already restored. 7) Import the RULES back (TOOLS - RULES AND ALERTS - OPTIONS - IMPORT RULES). Note that you may have to "adjust" some rules in very rare cases. In most cases you just need to re-enable them. 8) As your PST file uses "direct access" to link some "shortcuts", the Address Book link will probably be lost (but all the addresses you have are still there). To fix it just delete the EMPTY address book on the tree and link yours using the address book tool to fix the shortcuts (TOOLS - ADDRESS BOOK). It is pretty much simple this procedure and it may takes 15 minutes only of your time (a lot less than develop a solution for that). I've been thinking myself to create an automated tool for the task, but as I've said: it is so fast to do it by hand (and failure free) that doesn't make sense on my case to develop a tool for the task. However, I'd love to see someone else doing the job (maybe YOU, Galen?). If someone wants to develop a tool I'd like to help. Just drop me a line and I can provide lots of information about Outlook tricks... Hope this post have helped someone else. -- Wolf Actually I had real problems with replacing the key using regedit, Wolf. I carefully exported my W7 laptop key to a file then edited it so the GUID was the same as the one on my desktop. I saved it to a thumb drive, stuck it in my desktop and tried to replace the key. All I got was error messages. After an hour of frustration I simply loaded Acronis, saved the Outlook data and restored it on the desktop. I hate to launch a bloated program for such a simple job. Don |
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