Wednesday, April 4, 2012

New Computer - Old Email, or How to Back up and change Your Email

If you have a brand new computer, or are mental about buying one in the near future, one of the things that you will need to think is how to change your emails from the old principles to the new system.

At least once a week in my job as a help desk analyst, I am helping a buyer set up Outlook Express or Outlook (there are other email clients that are used, but these two are the most popular) on their new computer. Once we are fulfilled, with the setup and they open it up to the Inbox the examine is asked "where are my old emails?" The easy answer; "on your old computer". Then of policy the ensue up examine is; "how do I get them to the new computer?"

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Easy or Hard

New Computer - Old Email, or How to Back up and change Your Email

The easiest way to do this is to back them up to an external hard drive or a ageement disc before you make the switch to the new computer and then copy them over to the new computer in the exact same directory. The harder way is in the case of a crashed computer or the inability to access the files normally. I cover a bit of that in an additional one report called 'Got Backups?' which you can find at my website.

Outlook Express

With Outlook Express your emails/email folders are stored on your hard drive in a directory that is buried way down deep in the Operating System. Instead of me giving you the full path to get there, it's easiest if you have Outlook Express open, click on Tools then Options.

Copy/Paste

Once you are here, click on the Maintenance tab and then click on the Store briefcase button. This will pop an additional one window with the location of your emails. Using your mouse, feature the path and then right click and copy it.

You will then click on the Start button, then click Run, and then right click in the Open box and Paste the path. Click Ok.

This will open an additional one window with your email files. Unless you have added other folders to your Outlook Express, the default folders will be here with a .dbx postponement (Folders, Inbox, Sent Items, Deleted Items, and Drafts).

Backup

If you are going to write these files to a Cd, you can burn them at this time by using your popular burning software (providing that you have a Cd burner installed in your computer).

To copy them to an external hard drive, you must now associate that gadget to your computer, originate a briefcase on that drive (I regularly call it Email Backups), copy the files from the old computer then paste the files into the Email Backups folder.

Import

Once you have the files copied to the Cd or external drive, then you will go to the new factory of Outlook Express and import the messages. It would be nice if you could just copy them to the new Oe and be done, but Microsoft doesn't like you to do it that way.

Open up Oe and then click on File, Import, Messages. This will open a new window called Outlook Express Import. Pick Microsoft Outlook Express 6 then click Next. Click in the circle that says 'Import mail from an Oe6 store directory'. Click Ok. Then click 'Browse' and navigate to and agree the directory you have saved them to. Click Ok. The next window will give you a list of all of the email folders you have previously saved. Keep 'All folders' premium and click Next.

This will begin the process of importing all of your 'old' emails into your 'new' Outlook Express. Once it has fulfilled, you will have all of your old emails back! Cool, huh?

Outlook

The policy to save and then import your emails in Outlook is similar, but different.

To start with, Outlook uses a file postponement called pst, or Personal briefcase File. Don't ask me why it's called that. Call Bill Gates and ask him.

Export

You will start on the old computer and with Outlook open, click on File, then 'Import and Export'. This opens the Import and Export Wizard. Pick 'Export to a file' then click Next. Pick 'Personal briefcase File' here and then click Next. In the Export Personal Folders dialogue box you have your selection of what you want to do. The easiest is to keep the default selection of just the inbox, but if you want your sent items and all the other folders, Pick the top item (Personal Folders) and then Pick the 'Include subfolders' selection and then click Next.

The next window will have a default location listed
(usually C:Documents and Settings'your computer name'Local SettingsApplication DataMicrosoftOutlookbackup.pst). I would propose following the same policy as for Oe (see above). Then click 'Finish' and let it do it's thing.
Once you have your pst files backed up, move to the new computer and the import process will again be similar to Oe.

Connect your external hard drive to your computer or insert the Cd into the drive.

Import

Open Outlook, click on File, then Import and Export. In the Import and Export Wizard, this time Pick 'Import from an additional one program or file' then click Next. In the 'Import a File' window, scroll down and agree Personal briefcase File (.pst) and then click Next.

In the 'Import Personal Folders' window, click the Browse button and navigate out to the location of your backed up pst file, Pick it and then click Next. Click 'Finish' and it will import all of your messages.

New Computer - Old Email, or How to Back up and change Your Email

Asus N61Jq-X1 16-Inch Laptop - A transported Entertainment Dream

Laptops these days can do just about anything. From serving as a movable office to a favorable entertainment hub, you can find a unit to do anything you need it to do. In the case of the Asus N61Jq-X1, this is one intelligent and satisfying laptop that won't leave you bored for a singular solitary second.

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Of course, entertainment is the name of the game for Asus and that means that it good have a good graphics setup. Good news: the Asus N61Jq-X1 features Ati various Graphics engine juiced by Mobility Radeon Hd 5730 with 1Gb Ddr3 Vram. That's a mouthful of technical jargon that basically translates to "really powerful" and "really smooth." Oh, and the graphics card is DirectX 11-ready, so you'll be able to snag all the latest games.

Asus N61Jq-X1 16-Inch Laptop - A transported Entertainment Dream

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Asus N61Jq-X1 16-Inch Laptop - A transported Entertainment Dream