Can someone tell me how to extract email address's from a outlook PST file?
At 12:42 AM 17/10/2008, DHSinclair wrote:
Trying to build Wxp on a pretty old stack of hdw.
Abit bx6-r2, P2-450, 512mb ram, seagate 160gb pata drive.
Yes, I know, how silly can I be?
when I started 6 hours ago, bios said the hd was LBA UD33 136gb and
winxp formatted 152618mb. 152.618GB. OK.
Are they in the contacts part of the PST, or in the emails themselves?
Gary wrote:
Can someone tell me how to extract email address's from a outlook PST file?
Contacts
---Original Message---
From: Ben Ruset
Date: 17-Oct-2008 8:07:32 AM
To: hardware@hardwaregroup.com
Subject: Re: [H] PST File
Are they in the contacts part of the PST, or in the emails themselves?
Gary wrote:
Can someone tell me how to extract email
my memory may be a little fussy but not kidding, this chip was in a bx6 in a
customer system with xp until the mb blew caps. check in bios and see if 133 is
available. Like I said, fussy. Still have manuals and original driver disks.
Have a BH6 dual in the pile also.
I do have slot one cpu's,
Click on export, then export to a CSV, XLS, etc., then select contacts
and let it run.
Gary wrote:
Contacts
---Original Message---
From: Ben Ruset
Date: 17-Oct-2008 8:07:32 AM
To: hardware@hardwaregroup.com
Subject: Re: [H] PST File
Are they in the contacts part of
Not current outlook file but a old file
---Original Message---
From: Ben Ruset
Date: 17-Oct-2008 8:54:19 AM
To: hardware@hardwaregroup.com
Subject: Re: [H] PST File
Click on export, then export to a CSV, XLS, etc., then select contacts
And let it run.
Gary
Yeah. Open the PST, it will show up in the left hand column. Then go to
Export and you can access it from there. Not hard at all.
Gary wrote:
Not current outlook file but a old file
---Original Message---
From: Ben Ruset
Date: 17-Oct-2008 8:54:19 AM
To:
Sorry Ali,
Can not forward it to you.
Drive crashed and all is lost.
Windows was trashed and could not be repaired.
Am on a new HD.
Don't know if it was the Trojan or the removal by by AVG that did it.
Will not try the AVG removal in the future except for a last resort.
Sam
Mesdaq, Ali wrote:
My BIOS has a selection for ACPI.
Does ACPI have to be enabled to install WinXP?
Thanks,
Duncan
At 02:01 PM 10/17/2008, you wrote:
Can run a 1 gigger in the bx6, got one did that. Has to be good ram tho.
There is a slot one 1Ghz that will run in the BX6, and that was the
fastest slot one to come out.
You can buy one on Ebay for 20 bucks. http://tinyurl.com/6z48e3
However, the fastest
Can run a 1 gigger in the bx6, got one did that. Has to be good ram tho.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of FORC5
Sent: Friday, October 17, 2008 8:51 AM
To: hardware@hardwaregroup.com
Subject: Re: [H] Odd?
my memory may be a little fussy but
ACPI is an advanced way for the OS to communicate with peripherials, notably
drives. It's not required but does have some interesting features.
Be careful though. If you install Windows on a system with the BIOS set to
SATA or IDE communication with drives and then change it to ACPI it's likely
Man, I loved that mobo. I have fond memories of running a 300 Mhz Celeron
overclocked to 800 Mhz on one of those puppies. Ran like a
dream.---
Brian Weeden
Technical Consultant
Secure World Foundation http://www.secureworldfoundtion.org
+1 (514) 466-2756 (Canada)
+1 (202) 683-8534 (USA)
that said ACPI on for windows to shut down without telling you it is now safe
to turn off like the older at psu's
should be ON b4 install is best
fred
At 02:31 PM 10/17/2008, Brian Weeden Poked the stick with:
ACPI is an advanced way for the OS to communicate with peripherials, notably
drives.
On Fri, 17 Oct 2008 17:33:10 -0400
Brian Weeden [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Man, I loved that mobo. I have fond memories of running a 300 Mhz Celeron
overclocked to 800 Mhz on one of those puppies. Ran like a
dream.---
Ah yes, the Celeron days...
Really two questions here. First, I have a new laptop which came with a
160G drive. Since I cannot add a second drive I am planning on replacing it
with a larger (hopefully faster) drive. The Seagate Momentus 320G/7200RPM
would give me the space I need and it appears to be a very fast drive.
I think the GParted Live CD will do what Ghost does, for free.
You should be able to put the new drive in a USB to SATA enclosure and
clone the old drive on the new.
Gary Udstrand wrote:
Really two questions here. First, I have a new laptop which came with a
160G drive. Since I cannot add
AFAIK from my own experience most consumer hard drives are about the same
these days. Most people find a brand that works for them and stick with it
until it pisses them off and then they move on. About the only thing to
differentiate them is the length of warranty.
Gpartd should be able to
I just did 3 laptops with Seagate Momentus 7200 rpm drives, the old
ones were slower 4200 or 5400 rpm drives. I like the 5 yr warranty...
I used an external USB drive connector (like 19 bux from NewEgg) and a
WinPE or BartPE type boot CD that I downloaded..
Then you can just boot to the
Hello FORC5,
Thursday, October 16, 2008, 10:04:21 PM, you wrote:
u guys making me feel deprived, main box and server still AMD.
Still building AMD systems for customers. Hope I am not the only one
supporting the supposed underdog :-)
No way man, I vend AMD also... I'd say 95% of my systems
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