I don't use Outlook any more but I had used this a couple of years
ago. I never used "import" but I did use drag & drop. It worked
well once you understand what it can do and what it cannot.
In any drag and drop it is best to use the outline (all tasks) view
to drop them into. Dropping anything into a filtered to-do list will
create the task but due to the filter and the sort, the new task
will probably not be where you expect it to be, and may not be
visible at all. Once you have dropped the email into the outline, it
gets created with a link back to the place in Outlook's folders
where the email lives. The link is placed in to task note, and if
you click it Outlook opens and shows you the email. Two things to
look out for: (1) As BOC points out, if you move the email in
Outlook away from where it was (to the trash, to the archive, to a
different folder, or whatever) the old like will not work any more.
This is an issue with Outlook, not MLO. For a cure, if you are the
kind of Outlook user who has lots of files and shuffles messages
around to various folders, then do that first, and drag it to MLO
after it finds its forever home in Outlook. If the email absolutely
must be moved after you make it a task, get a new link after you are
done moving the email. (2) If you use MLO to edit the task note, the
hyperlinks will look blue but they will not be clickable. Get out of
edit mode and they will work. I used this a lot and I never
experienced any problems with the links as long as I did not create
either of the two problems described above
Now that I am using Thunderbird, drag and drop to MLO is not
available. Instead I use the Tasks By Email (TBE) function where you
forward an email to the cloud sync server, which converts it to a
task and adds it to your cloud sync.
-Dwight