Moving PST folder for IMAP account?

R

Roady [MVP]

"I want to use the calender, address book and Office integrated features."
Well then you need the required folder set ;-)
Note that Windows Vista will also come with Calendar support and a very much
improved Contact management.

Outlook will probably never have native NNTP support (there are quite a few
add-ins for this though). The main reason for that is that Outlook is
targeted to corporations which deals with NNTP serverside through Exchange
(note that the Home version of Office 2007 also doesn't include Outlook) and
that Windows itself already has NNTP support. As to already aswer a question
ahead; Outlook Express/Windows Mail is an e-mail client and Microsoft Office
Outlook is a PIM.

--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003


-----
brett said:
Just curious; What is your main reason to transfer from OE to Outlook?

I want to use the calender, address book and Office integrated
features. I also like the Rules in Outlook.

One thing that is still surprising with every release of Outlook - it
never includes support for newsgroups. OE has always had this nice
feature.

Brett
 
P

Patrick Schmid [MVP]

One add-in e.g. is Newshound from www.shorelinesoftware.com. That's the
one I use to read and reply to these newsgroup posts.

Patrick Schmid [OneNote MVP]
--------------
http://pschmid.net
***
Office 2007 RTM Issues: http://pschmid.net/blog/2006/11/13/80
Office 2007 Beta 2 Technical Refresh (B2TR):
http://pschmid.net/blog/2006/09/18/43
***
Customize Office 2007: http://pschmid.net/office2007/customize
OneNote 2007: http://pschmid.net/office2007/onenote
***
Subscribe to my Office 2007 blog: http://pschmid.net/blog/feed

"I want to use the calender, address book and Office integrated features."
Well then you need the required folder set ;-)
Note that Windows Vista will also come with Calendar support and a very much
improved Contact management.

Outlook will probably never have native NNTP support (there are quite a few
add-ins for this though). The main reason for that is that Outlook is
targeted to corporations which deals with NNTP serverside through Exchange
(note that the Home version of Office 2007 also doesn't include Outlook) and
that Windows itself already has NNTP support. As to already aswer a question
ahead; Outlook Express/Windows Mail is an e-mail client and Microsoft Office
Outlook is a PIM.

--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003


-----
brett said:
Just curious; What is your main reason to transfer from OE to Outlook?

I want to use the calender, address book and Office integrated
features. I also like the Rules in Outlook.

One thing that is still surprising with every release of Outlook - it
never includes support for newsgroups. OE has always had this nice
feature.

Brett
 

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