D
DuncanH
Help please for non techie. Step by step guide for an idiot !!
I've just had installed Office Outlook 2003 on my laptop.
It is configured with one account for the Exchange Server in the offic
with emails going to "Mailbox - Duncan" Location. These are busines
emails.
I need to pickup private emails from 2 Pop3 Accounts and a Hotmai
Account. I will be in the office connected to the exchange server som
of the time and the rest of the time I'll be at home and will b
connected to internet only but won't need emails from exchange server.
I don't need / want the private sync to exchange server.
1. How do I set it up to pickup each account and put in differen
folders.
2. I presume if you reply to an email it will use whatever account th
email was received from but if you are sending new email how do yo
choose which account it will be sent from.
3. I've been using Outlook 2000 on another machine (standalone, can
just open the old .pst file in 2003 to be able to read or transfe
emails or are they not compatible.
Sorry if these are simple questions.
Thabks, Dunca
I've just had installed Office Outlook 2003 on my laptop.
It is configured with one account for the Exchange Server in the offic
with emails going to "Mailbox - Duncan" Location. These are busines
emails.
I need to pickup private emails from 2 Pop3 Accounts and a Hotmai
Account. I will be in the office connected to the exchange server som
of the time and the rest of the time I'll be at home and will b
connected to internet only but won't need emails from exchange server.
I don't need / want the private sync to exchange server.
1. How do I set it up to pickup each account and put in differen
folders.
2. I presume if you reply to an email it will use whatever account th
email was received from but if you are sending new email how do yo
choose which account it will be sent from.
3. I've been using Outlook 2000 on another machine (standalone, can
just open the old .pst file in 2003 to be able to read or transfe
emails or are they not compatible.
Sorry if these are simple questions.
Thabks, Dunca