G
Gregg
I have installed Office 2003 on a Win2K system that had Office 2002. All the
programs worked fine except Outlook which pops up that great new box saying
there has been an error and Outlook must close with a check box to have it
restart and a button to send an error report to Microsoft. If I leave the
restart box checked I get the same result over and over. I tried the repair
installation with no luck and uninstalled and reinstalled with no luck. On
December 9th I called Microsoft support and after going through everything I
had tried the tech told me the CD was bad and they would send a new one in
7 -10 Days. Yesterday, 1/16/04, over a month later (they said it was back
ordered) I received the replacement, installed Outlook and guess what, same
problem. I have uninstalled Outlook 2003 and reinstalled 2002 so I can get
my mail but now I can't use Word as my email editor because Word is 2003 and
Word can't use the 2002 contact list.
I really need help solving this problem. I like the new features in Office
2003 but I need the complete set.
TIA, Gregg
programs worked fine except Outlook which pops up that great new box saying
there has been an error and Outlook must close with a check box to have it
restart and a button to send an error report to Microsoft. If I leave the
restart box checked I get the same result over and over. I tried the repair
installation with no luck and uninstalled and reinstalled with no luck. On
December 9th I called Microsoft support and after going through everything I
had tried the tech told me the CD was bad and they would send a new one in
7 -10 Days. Yesterday, 1/16/04, over a month later (they said it was back
ordered) I received the replacement, installed Outlook and guess what, same
problem. I have uninstalled Outlook 2003 and reinstalled 2002 so I can get
my mail but now I can't use Word as my email editor because Word is 2003 and
Word can't use the 2002 contact list.
I really need help solving this problem. I like the new features in Office
2003 but I need the complete set.
TIA, Gregg