pamar <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
> I deleted all calendar entries because when I would make an update in
> our company's application then synch it to Outlook 2003, changes
> would not be made, but new entries would appear.
How do you sync it?
> Since I don't enter
> info directly into Outlook, I just do the synch to get info into it I
> figured I would just delete all the entries and resynch like its an
> empty calendar. I tried creating a new calendar (2nd one) but I
> don't get an option to choose which calendar to synch with so that
> doesn't work. Its like Outlook thinks the data is already there.
Why do you say that Outlook "thinks the data is already there"? Exactly
what happens?
> Nothing was in my deleted files afterwards, nor did I create a backup
> because I wanted everything gone to be able to synch clean. When I
> was deleting all the calendar entries I did ask to confirm because
> the data being deleted would be unrecoverable unless I had a backup.
> I don't want to recover them, just be able to resync.
Sounds like you performed a permanent delete, or otherwise Outlook would not
have presented that "are you sure" dialogue.
> How do I create a new Outlook profile? Is that the same as creating
> a new calendar?
No, it's not the same. Creating a new mail profile allows you to
reestablish the relationships between Outlook, the send/receive settings,
the data in the folders, the account information, various pane settings, and
other settings. Creating a new folder is as simple as File>New>Folder and
it's done in the existing mail profile (because you must be running Outlook
to sdo it), or it could mean starting with a new data file where all your
folders reside, unless you're using Exchange as the folder repository. The
only way to create a new default calendar folder is to have the Exchange
admin create a new mailbox (if you're using Exchange) or to create a new
data file (if you're using a PST) and making that new file the delivery
location.
--
Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook]
|