Monday 26 March 2012

How to fix common problems with Microsoft Outlook


How to fix common problems with Microsoft Outlook


 You use Microsoft Outlook to manage your email, your appointments, your contacts and your to-do lists. In other words, you use it to manage your work life. So when this program doesn’t behave the way it’s supposed to, you have a nightmare.

I’m here to help relieve you of those waking bad dreams. Following are solutions to five common but serious Microsoft Outlook problems. I’ll tell you what to do if your data set has grown too large and cumbersome. I’ll explain why you seem to be spamming your friends. I’ll help you check your mail on more than one computer. And I’ll show you how to back up and restore your Outlook data, as well as how to make Outlook contacts display the information you want to see.


These tips are for Outlook 2007 and 2010, although in their generalities, if not their specifics, they’ll work with earlier versions, too.

 

Your Outlook data suddenly vanishes



Let’s nip this nightmare in the bud, before it happens.


You keep a lot of information in your Outlook data file, including your email messages, your contacts and your appointments. If something destroys or corrupts that file, you’re in trouble. And since Outlook handles its data files in its own unique way, your regular backup routine may not be protecting its data. You do back up regularly, don’t you?


Backup
So you need to make sure that you’re backing up your Outlook data. But first, you have to find that data.

You can do so in the Account Settings dialog box. To open it in Outlook 2007, select Tools, Account Settings. For version 2010, click the File tab, and then select the Info option in the left pane, followed by Account Settings, and Account Settings again.

Once you’re in the dialog box, click the Data Files tab. Select your data file (probably Outlook.pst), and then click the Open Folder button (version 2007) or the Open File Location button (2010). Windows Explorer will open to your Outlook data folder.


With Outlook closed and the folder open, copy the contents of the folder to a safe location, such as an external hard drive. Better yet, make sure that your regular backup routine includes this folder.


Restore


When the nightmare hits and you’ve lost your data, here’s how to restore it:
1. Reinstall Outlook and go through the setup wizard. This will create a new but empty data file.
2. Once Outlook is up and running, launch the Import and Export Wizard. In Outlook 2007, select File, Import and Export. In Outlook 2010, click the File tab and then the Open option on the left, and choose Import.
3. In the wizard, select Import from another program or file and click Next.
4. For the file type, for Outlook 2007, select Personal Folder File (.pst). For 2010, choose Outlook Data File (.pst).
5. On the wizard’s next page, click the Browse button and find the backed-up Outlook folder. Select the appropriate file (probably Outlook or Outlook.pst).
6. As you go through the rest of the wizard, select Personal Folders, make sure Include subfolders is checked, and click Finish to start importing your backed-up data.
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