importing .pst file

C

CHW

I created a *.pst file of Outlook 2000 "contacts" on my XP machine. Burned
a cd but when I tried to import the file into Outlook 2007 on a new Windows
7 machine I was denied access:

"You do not have the permission required to access the file E:\outlook.pst",

Help or other suggested alternative method appreciated in advance.

Craig
 
D

DL

The correct way to move outlook data is posted here daily, and you chose the
wrong method
Nor can you import a pst from a cd
 
V

VanguardLH

CHW said:
I created a *.pst file of Outlook 2000 "contacts" on my XP machine. Burned
a cd but when I tried to import the file into Outlook 2007 on a new Windows
7 machine I was denied access:

"You do not have the permission required to access the file E:\outlook.pst",

Help or other suggested alternative method appreciated in advance.

Craig

Outlook always requires write access to the .pst file. When you put the
..pst file on a CD, you made it read-only since you put it on read-only
media. When you copied the .pst file off the CD, it retained its file
attributes and that includes the read-only attribute.

You have to remove the read-only attribute from the .pst file that you
copied from the CD onto your hard disk. Right-click on the file and change
properties.
 
C

CHW

Thanks for the response. I saved the contacts folder to a cd using the CVS
format and it worked fine.

Craig
 
R

Russ Valentine

Moreover, you never import PST files. You open them. Wake up. Read the posts
here before you post. Your question has been answered countless times.
 
V

VanguardLH

Russ said:
Moreover, you never import PST files. You open them. Wake up. Read the posts
here before you post. Your question has been answered countless times.

I didn't address the issue of importing the .pst file versus opening the
..pst file. I only addressed that the read-only attribute needs to be
removed.
 
G

Gordon

CHW said:
Thanks for the response. I saved the contacts folder to a cd using the CVS
format and it worked fine.

Why would you do that? Just copy the pst file and open it in the new
instance of Outlook.
 

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