naffyb said:
Thanks for that. Something there may help. However, I was wondering
on a much simpler basis if importing the contacts file would work? -
There is no "contacts file" in Outlook. All Outlook data (Inbox, Contacts,
Outbox, Calendar, Tasks, etc.) are stored in the same file, called the
Personal Folders file, which has an extension of ".pst". The default
location for that file on WIndows XP is %UserProfile%\Local
Settings\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook and, I believe,
%AppData%\Local\Microsoft\Outlook on Vista. Just copy the entire PST to the
other machine.
If the changes made on the different computers related to different
contacts - eg starting with the same contacts list and then adding a
new name on one computer and adding a different couple of new
names/amendments on the other, whether simply importing the
contacts.pst file and not allowing duplicates would update one
computer to match the other. The pst file could then be imported the
other way so that they were in sync.
Importing won't guard against duplicates. Your best bet is to open the
copied PST in Outlook with File>Open>Outlook Data File, which will give you
access to all the data it contains. Then open that PST's Contacts folder
and copy the contacts you want to the default contacts folder. You can
select only thos contacts you know are not duplicates. When you're done,
close the PST again by right-clicking on its root and choosing Close.
Would this not work? If so, I'm curious as to how outlook recognises
duplicates - does it only see a duplicate where all fields match? or
if it sees the same name or company, would it then sync all fields
within the contact as appropriate with conflicts per option selected?
I think that the entire item must match exactly to be considered a
duplicate, but it may be as simple as the contents of the File As field. I
don't now. I rarely worry about duplicates because I copy in ways that
don't produce them. If I did, though, I'd get a duplicate eliminator from
http://www.slipstick.com/addins/contacts.htm#dupes . At least one (the last
one in the list) is free.