"Support7556" wrote:
> We made a full export to a pst file from Outlook 2000 and copied it for a 
> backup.
> 2Gb is going to be a slow pig in any version of Outlook.
> I would suggest Creating a special Archive of everything 6 months or older.
> And then OPEN (other users/folders/files) that archive.pst when needed.
> We manually uninstalled Outlook 2000 and then installed Outlook 2003
> However I'm fairly sure Outlook 2003 install will detect 2000 and do the 
> same thing.
> BOL Glenn.
> 
> "Craig" wrote:
> 
> > I am running Office 2000, with Publisher 2002 & Frontpage 2002. I want to 
> > install Office 2003. I have the full install version of Office 2003. Do I 
> > need to uninstall Office 2000, or just install 2003 over it?
> > 
> > What do I need to do about converting my .pst file to the 2003 format? I am 
> > bumping up against the 2 GB limit in the 2000 format.
> > 
> > 
> What do I need to do about converting my .pst file to the 2003
> format? I am bumping up against the 2 GB limit in the 2000 format.
In Outlook, click File>New>Outlook Data File.  Select "Office Outlook 
Personal Folders File" (which should be the default anyway) and click OK. 
Browse to the folder where you'd like to store it (or accept the default). 
Give it a file name (or accept the default).  Click OK.  Give it a display 
name (or accept the default) and click OK.  A new folder set, containing the 
single folder "Deleted Items" will appear in your Folder List view of the 
Navigation Pane.
Make the new PST your default delivery location with the "Deliver new e-mail 
to the following location" drop-down at the bottom left of Tools>E-mail 
Accounts>Next.  Stop and restart Outlook.  When it restarts, your new PST 
will be the "Outlook Today" PST and will be populated with a full complement 
of default folders, all empty.  Yor old folders will also appear, probably 
under the "Personal Folders" heading.
For each non-default folder in  your old PST, right-click and drag it to the 
root of your new folder set, release the button and choose Copy. 
Alternatively, select it, click Edit>Copy to Folder and specify the root of 
the new PST (currently your default) as the destination.  Click OK.  The 
entire folder will be moved to the new PST.
For each default folder in the old PST, open the folder, select all the 
items in it (CTRL-A usually works) and either right-click and drag it to the 
corresponding folder in the new PST, choosing Copy when you release the 
mouse, or click Edit>Copy to Folder and specify the corresponding default 
folder as the destination (copy the contents of the old Calendar folder to 
the new Calendar, for example).  For the Calendar folder, you'll have to 
switch to a list view like By Category before CTRL-A will select everything.
When you're all done copying, right-click the root of the old PST and choose 
Close.
-- 
Brian Tillman