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-   -   Beginner needs help backing up files (https://www.askmehelpdesk.com/showthread.php?t=7206)

  • Jan 17, 2005, 06:27 AM
    eaccm01
    Beginner needs help backing up files
    Hello, please can someone help a novice? I know I must back up regularly, and I do this by copying my letters and info onto floppy disks. However, there is not enough space on a floppy disk to copy my photos, and my computer does not have the facility to copy onto a CD or DVD, so how can I back up my photos? Also, can you tell me how to copy my emails and address book from Outlook Express?
    Many thanks.
  • Jan 17, 2005, 07:12 AM
    fredg
    Backup
    Hi,
    The very, very first thing you need is a CD burner installed!
    A good one, total cost installed, at a local computer retail/repair store near you is around 40 dollars US, or so.

    You can "back up" all you are talking about to your hard drive, in different places. But, if your hard drive crashes, you will lose everything!!

    With a CD burner installed, you can burn anything you want to, to a CD-R, which you can get about 50 of them for around 16 dollars US.
    I can give you step by step on how to backup Outlook Express to a CD-R, but you can't do it on floppies... as you say, not enough room.
    Best wishes,
    fredg
  • Jan 19, 2005, 08:28 AM
    ScottGem
    I would also recommend getting a CD burner. They are very inexpensive nowadays. Many come with backup utilities.

    As for backing up Outlook Espress, the best way would be to Export your data to a file and then save that file.
  • Jan 19, 2005, 09:18 AM
    Wendy225
    Try this
    This how to do it, but also the below website has a progarm that works with most of the major Email programs out there today.

    http://www.amicutilities.com/outlook-express-backup/

    Backup your Outlook Express Data: Step by Step...
    Outlook express data consists of the several parts.
    Email messages
    Account settings
    Address Book (if used)
    Mail rules (if any)
    Passwords
    1. Email Messages:
    From the Outlook Express menu select Tools | Options | Maintenance and click the StoreFolder button. You see a dialog with the name of the directory that has your mail files. If you look in that directory you find files named after your mail folders and news groups. They all have a .DBX suffix. Outlook Express keeps all messages in these database files. If you make copies of these files regularly, you'll have a safe backup of your OE mail.

    Restore (if necessary): To restore the backup data, just copy it back to the directory. You can selectively restore folders by just copying specific files back. Alternatively, you can use OE's File | Import | Messages feature to import one or more of the backup folders. Email Account Settings

    As far as we know, the procedure works for all kind of email: The regular SMTP / POP3 based email, MAPI, IMAP or even the free Hotmail Account, that is built into Outlook. For Hotmail, however, some messages and settings might be stored only at the Hotmail server ( = somewhere at Microsoft !) and not on your local PC.

    2. Account settings:
    Data about your mail and news accounts are stored in the registry key HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Internet Account Manager. To save this data, start RegEdit and select that key in the left-hand pane. Then from the menu select Registry | Export Registry File. Save the file to a name like "outlook.reg".

    Restore (if necessary) To restore the account settings, right-click the .REG file and select Merge.

    Note: As an alternative, you can save the data one account at a time through Outlook Express: click Tools | Accounts | Export and specify the name of the file to save the settings. Be sure to save this information for every account.


    3. Address Book
    Getting the data out of your address book for safekeeping is relatively easy. From the menu select File | Export | Address Book and select the comma separated text file as your output format. Then select the fields you want to export. To make sure you know where the backup is going, give a full path name. To restore the address book or to get your addresses onto a new system, the process is not quite symmetrical. Select File | Import | Other address book and select the text file option again. You'll be given a list of fields to import. Since you're importing a file that was created by Outlook Express, you usually don't need to make any changes here. After that, click your way on through the wizard and you'll get your address book back.

    4. Mail Rules
    The mail rules are stored at HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Identities. If you run Regedit and export this entire subkey to a file the same way you did with account settings: from the menu select Registry | Export Registry File. Save the file to a name like "rules.reg".

    Restore (if necessary): Under the Identities key each subkey has a long number that looks similar to {36753740-2WEE-781D3-89B1-00A0C9900DSA}. So if you have five different identities in Outlook you will have five of these long numbers. Below the numbers are all the settings specific the identity (signatures, mail rules,. ). If you are restoring without reinstall and on the same PC these numbers do not change (as far as we know !) and you can just restore the registry entries by clicking on the reg file.

    Moving OE settings to a NEW PC:
    If you're moving to a new system or doing a clean install, the {... } numbers are be different and you may have to manually move the entries to the differently numbered entries that are actually being used.

    How to do this? This is the method that we use in our office:

    1. Export the registry branch on the old PC to a *.reg file.

    2. Transfer this "reg" file to the new PC

    3. On the new computer search for the (still empty) settings of your new Outlook Express installation. Once you find, you have the new {... } number!

    4. Now, open the transfered*.reg file with a text editor and make a "Search and Replace":

    Replace the old {... } value with the NEW {... } that you just located in the registry.

    5. Save this file and then click on it. This will import your old settings in the NEW registry.



    5. Passwords
    Outlook Express, along with those of most other Microsoft applications such as Internet Explorer, stores its passwords in .PWL files in your Windows directory. There's a separate file for each username on the system. Backup the files frequently. You can view the content of these files with the FREE "Write All Stored Password" utility from iOpus Software.

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