Two contacts folders in Outlook, one empty

G

Guest

I'm running Vista 64 on a new PC and am using Outlook 2002 on this. I've
imported my contacts as a pst file from my old PC and they've copied in fine.
Only one contacts folder shows in the folder list. However, when I try to
send an email and click on the To: field, it goes to an empty Contacts
folder. In the dropdown I can then choose another contacts folder that
includes all the details but I don't know how to delete the empty one.
I saw a post somewhere about this for someone running XP but the
instructions were not applicable to the set-up on my PC. I'm sure I had a
similar problem before once when importing contacts but cannot work out how
to sort this.
Any knowledge gratefully received!
 
G

Gordon

LS said:
I'm running Vista 64 on a new PC and am using Outlook 2002 on this. I've
imported my contacts as a pst file from my old PC and they've copied in
fine.
Only one contacts folder shows in the folder list. However, when I try to
send an email and click on the To: field, it goes to an empty Contacts
folder. In the dropdown I can then choose another contacts folder that
includes all the details but I don't know how to delete the empty one.

if you'd done any research at ALL (posted on the Outlook groups daily) , you
would have discovered that this is one symptom of importing a pst file. it
is NOT recommended to import/export pst files. Why?

(Courtesy of Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook])

Importing an entire PST may well corrupt your profile and may create a ghost
PST that you can't close. Importing PST's will lose:
1. Custom Forms
2. Custom Views
3. Connections between contacts and activities
4. Received dates on mail
5. Birthdays and anniversaries in calendar
6. Journal connections
7. Distribution Lists

Opening a PST file will preserve all of these. That is why we do not advise
people to import a native file into Outlook.

Have a look here:
http://ict.cas.psu.edu/training/howto/outlook/contactsremoveextra.htm
 
G

Guest

Thank you for your help - although I should point out that after researching
this in the Microsoft support pages I just found endless information on how
to import and export .pst files - and this on actual Microsoft support pages
- so clearly that doesn't help give a consistent message.
--
Lizzie


Gordon said:
LS said:
I'm running Vista 64 on a new PC and am using Outlook 2002 on this. I've
imported my contacts as a pst file from my old PC and they've copied in
fine.
Only one contacts folder shows in the folder list. However, when I try to
send an email and click on the To: field, it goes to an empty Contacts
folder. In the dropdown I can then choose another contacts folder that
includes all the details but I don't know how to delete the empty one.

if you'd done any research at ALL (posted on the Outlook groups daily) , you
would have discovered that this is one symptom of importing a pst file. it
is NOT recommended to import/export pst files. Why?

(Courtesy of Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook])

Importing an entire PST may well corrupt your profile and may create a ghost
PST that you can't close. Importing PST's will lose:
1. Custom Forms
2. Custom Views
3. Connections between contacts and activities
4. Received dates on mail
5. Birthdays and anniversaries in calendar
6. Journal connections
7. Distribution Lists

Opening a PST file will preserve all of these. That is why we do not advise
people to import a native file into Outlook.

Have a look here:
http://ict.cas.psu.edu/training/howto/outlook/contactsremoveextra.htm
 
G

Gordon

LS said:
Thank you for your help - although I should point out that after
researching
this in the Microsoft support pages I just found endless information on
how
to import and export .pst files - and this on actual Microsoft support
pages
- so clearly that doesn't help give a consistent message.

Much stuff on MS "support" pages does not recognise current wisdom and is
NEVER updated - even down to the fact that they STILL say you can run XP on
128 MB RAM when the accepted minimum is at least 256 MB......
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top