DBXpress - http://www.oehelp.com/DBXpress/Default.aspx
--
Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm
"Rodrigo Santos" <Rodrig...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in
message news:2D617560-ED09-49BF...@microsoft.com...
> At one day five folders of my Outlook Express just gone. The .dbx
> files
> still remains at the identities/outlook folder. I used the following
> programs:
>
> Easy Outlook Express Repair
> QE-Mail Recovery
> Ontrack Easy Recovery
> Quick Recovery for Outlook Express
> Nucleus Kernel Outlook Express
>
> None could repair the .dbx files. Anyone has an ideia of how can I do
> it?
>
> PS: I扉e already tried to create a new identity and import the
> messages, but
> only the non-corrupted one愀 were avaliable to import.
"Michael Santovec" wrote:
> This program probably has the best chance of recovering any messages
> from corrupted DBX files.
>
> DBXpress - http://www.oehelp.com/DBXpress/Default.aspx
>
>
> --
>
> Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm
>
>
>
Thank´s man, it´s a great program but it didn´t work at all.
I noticed one thing, DBXpress just extract the messages form the dbx files
to a folder but when I use the program with the folders (the files) that have
problems the DBXpress don´t extract anything it´s like the file didn´t had
messages in it and the user told me that the Outlook Express a little after
the problem starts was showing a message about compacting the messages.
Do this has something relationed with the problem?
You have to run DBXpress in the Extract From Disk Mode to search the HDD for
the fragmented messages. The compacting process removed them from the dbx
files.
From DBXpress:
DBXpress can bypass a drive's file system and extract messages directly from
the hard drive, enabling extraction of messages from deleted files, or from
drives whose partition table has been damaged, or from drives that have been
formatted.
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~
Are there any DBT files in the Store Folder?
The DBX files were apparently filled with zeroes, perhaps by an anti-virus
program set to scan email. No anti-virus should be set to scan email. It
provides not added protection at all over just having the regular anti-virus
real-time protection running in the background.
--
Frank Saunders, MS-MVP OE/WM
http://www.fjsmjs.com
Answer in newsgroup. Don't send mail.
steve
"Rodrigo Santos" <Rodrig...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:538672E9-8B7C-4F9A...@microsoft.com...