Saturday, December 19, 2015

Saigon Corner: How to Archive Email Messages in Outlook 2013

How to Archive Email Messages in Outlook 2013


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We’ve always been told that backing up our data is a good idea. Well, that same concept can extend to email as well. You may want to archive your email every so often, such as monthly, quarterly, or even yearly.
We’ll show you how to archive email in Outlook 2013 and make it easily available in the program. Your email is stored in a .pst file. To archive email, we will be moving the email into an archive .pst file.
NOTE: When you archive your email into another .pst file, all the email you choose to archive is moved into the archive file and is no longer available in the main .pst file.
To begin archiving your email, click the “File” tab on the ribbon.
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On the Account Information screen, click the “Cleanup Tool” button next to “Mailbox Cleanup.
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Select “Archive…” from the drop-down menu.
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The Archive dialog box displays. Select “Archive this folder and all subfolders” and select a folder to archive. If you want to archive all your email, select the node with your email address at the top.
Click the “Archive items older than” drop-down list to select the latest date for items to be archived. A calendar pops up. Select a date in the current month by clicking on the date or scroll to a different month to select a date. All items older than the selected date will be archived.
If you want to archive items that are not set to archive automatically using AutoArchive, select the “Include items with “AutoArchive” checked” check box.
NOTE: AutoArchive in Outlook 2013 works the same way as in Outlook 2010.
Click the “Browse” button if you want to change the location where the archive file will be saved and the name of the archive file. Click OK when you have made your selections.
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The archived .pst file is saved to the chosen location.
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Notice that all the email messages you chose to archive are not available anymore in the main .pst file. The archived .pst file should become available automatically in Outlook. However, if it doesn’t, click the “File” tab.
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n the blue panel on the left side of the “Account Information” screen, click on “Open & Export.”
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On the “Open” screen, click “Open Outlook Data File.”
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The “Open Outlook Data File” dialog box opens. Navigate to the location where you saved the archived .pst file, select it, and click OK.
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In the left pane of the main Outlook Mail window, a section called “Archives” displays and the emails you archived are available.
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Archiving email can help you keep your emails organized, making it easier to find older emails and to keep your inbox and folders uncluttered.
The howtogeek.com

Saigon Corner: How to Use Rules to Manage Your Outlook.com Email

How to Use Rules to Manage Your Outlook.com Email

If you are an Outlook.com user, you may be interested to know that setting up rules to manage your incoming and outgoing emails can make your life a whole lot simpler.

What are rules?

In their simplest form, Outlook rules are actions that your email account will automatically perform based on the guidelines that you have specified. There are two main categories of rules that you can create. These are organizational rules and notification based rules. These rules will are not retroactive, which means that they will only apply to unread messages.
  1. Organize your Emails – These rules focus on filing and organizing messages based on senders, subject keywords, and folders in your Outlook account. These are helpful for putting emails into relevant folders or categories.
  2. Keep current – These rules will send you notifications based on your incoming messages. These are useful if you want to get notifications of new emails to your mobile devices.

Creating New Rules in Outlook.com

Once you are logged into your Outlook.com email account, click on the “Settings” button, then on the “Manage Rules” option to create a new rule.
Outlook 1
Now, click on the “New” button to create your first rule. As you can see, there are two main sections. On the left, you will assign a condition or multiple conditions to identify the emails to which your new rule will apply. The right side is where you will define what action Outlook will take with your emails.
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For this example, we will choose two of the nine conditions that the email must meet, as well as two of the eight actions.
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CONDITIONS                     ACTIONS

We will first click on the conditions link to add a second condition. Let us say that any emails from “Sender@emailaddress.com” that have the word “apple” in the subject line should be sent to a folder called “Apple Emails” and must be categorized as “IMPORTANT!!!”
Do this by editing your rule till the two sections look like the images below.
Outlook 4
Outlook 5
Lastly, click on “Create Rule” and let it take effect. From now on, any emails from Sender@emailaddress.com that have the word apple in them will be classified as important and moved to your “Apple Emails” folder.
If you want to edit any of your previously created rules, all you need to do is click on the rule and edit it in the window that pops up. To delete a rule, simply click on the small recycle bin next to the rule.

Create Rules from Email Messages

The “Manage Rules” page is not the only way to create rules for your emails. Alternatively, if you want to create a rule based on an email you received, simply find it in your Inbox and right-click on it. Next, select the “Create Rule” option.
Outlook 7
Alternatively, you can click on the email to open it and create a rule by selecting the option from the “Extended Menu.”
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Once you have done this, you will see a popup window as shown below, in which you can customize the rule as needed.

Organizing your Rules

It is important to remember that Outlook.com will automatically select the rules you define and implement them based on the order in which they appear on your list of rules. This is why it is important to organize your rules by their order of importance. Simply click on the up and down arrows next to the rules to put them in order as needed.
Outlook 6

Rule Limits

Now that you know how to create and organize your rules, you need to know that there are also some limitations to the rules in the Outlook.com Web App. There is a limit on how many rules you can create. For some reason, you are only allotted 64 KB for your Outlook.com rules. There is no definitive answer on how many rules you can create since the size of the rules will vary based on the length of the rule and how many conditions and actions you have defined. Once you have reached your limit, Outlook.com will let you know that you cannot create any more rules. This is when you will need to consolidate rules or delete old rules that are no longer needed.
In addition to the limit on the amount of rules you are allowed to create, if you also use the Microsoft Outlook desktop application with rules, you may get a warning that your rules conflict with those on the desktop app. You will need to double check to make sure you can disable the conflicting rules or delete them if necessary.Congratulations, you now know pretty much everything that you need to know about creating, manipulating, and using rules in the Microsoft Outlook Web App. Have fun managing your digital communication with ease on Outlook.com.
The howtogeek.com

Saigon Corner: How to Create, Manage, and Share Calendars in Outlook 2013

How to Create, Manage, and Share Calendars in Outlook 2013



Unless you’re living a life free of responsibilities, the sun probably rises and settles on your daily calendar. If you don’t know what’s going on a daily basis, you can quickly find yourself lost in a maze of missed appointments and surprise meetings.
Let’s talk about Outlook’s Calendars because outside of email, (perhaps even more so at times), being organized and productive relies on the ability to manage events and get stuff done. One of the things that Outlook does with great aplomb, perhaps better than most other applications, is calendaring. Outlook’s calendar functions are second-to-none when it comes to creating, modifying, and sharing events.
This article will focus primarily on the simple stuff. We’ll show you how to create and manage your calendars, add appointments, meetings, and also share them with others in your address book for easy collaboration. By the time we’re done, we’ll show how beyond using Outlook for the basics like e-mail or contacts and address books, you can incorporate the calendar into your busy life and improve your home or small office.

Calendar Basics

Whenever you use Outlook, you’ll have its calendaring capabilities at your disposal. Even if you don’t have an email account set up, you can still use Outlook for the rest of its features. The calendar works best, however, if you can take advantage of its collaborative capabilities, so using an email account assures you’re able to send meeting invites and receive attendee notifications.
Regardless, here’s your basic, everyday calendar, i.e. the default calendar associated with your default Outlook profile. This is the monthly view, but you can use the functions on the Arrange tab to change the view.
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For example, below is the work week view (versus the whole week view). It’s very simple, with the weather (you can set it to your town), and a search box. If you have any meetings or appointments, you’d see them here, and you can skip to the previous or following week by clicking the “Previous Appointment” or “Next Appointment” buttons, respectively, along the calendar edges.
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Let’s move on a bit and focus on how to change your calendar’s arrangement to better suit your specific or particular needs.

Flexing Your Calendar’s Muscle

You can do quite a bit to change your calendar’s arrangement and appearance. If you check out the View tab below, you see a whole assortment of styles that you can employ for a calendar that suits your organizational needs.
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Check out the following calendar. We’ve made some minor changes to its appearance. For one, you can change the color, which is a subtle but nice touch.
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The View tab lets you add several other views to accentuate the mode you’re in. For example, there’s the To-Do Bar, which lets you add calendars, people, and tasks to the right-hand column (see above). This To-Do Bar is customizable to the mode you’re in, so even if you’ve got the tasks and calendar enabled, as in the above screenshot, if you switch to your inbox, you will need to re-enable the To-Do Bar.
It’s a good idea to play around with the View tab in each mode because they’ll not all be exactly the same. For example, the Reading Pane isn’t much use in the calendar view, but it’s definitely a great addition to you inbox.
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Similarly, check out a daily calendar view with the Daily Task View enabled. You can see here you daily calendar with your due tasks below.
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We’ll talk a great deal more about tasks in an upcoming article, but now let’s focus on everything you might want to know about appointments and meetings.

Adding Appointments and Meetings

Let’s look at setting up appointments and meetings. In the following example, we’re organizing a pizza party. The subject of course, is the nature of the appointment, and while a pizza party isn’t necessarily an “appointment,” you get the idea. You can then add other specifics such as where the pizza party is taking place, and its start and end times.
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There’s a lot of space (technically unlimited) to add notes, instructions, or directions to the event. Of course, it’s not much of a party if you don’t have other people there. So we’ll need to invite some attendees. Once you invite people, it’s no longer considered an appointment. Instead, Outlook changes it to a meeting. In the following screenshot, we see our new appointment turned meeting.
You can type in names by hand, or click the “To” button to add attendees from your address book. If you haven’t set up an address book yet, we can tell you how to add and manage contact as well as import contacts from other sources, like Gmail.
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You can cut straight to the chase and simply click “New Meeting” from the Ribbon’s Home tab. When you’re inviting attendees, you have the option of requesting further Response Options.
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If you request a response (rather than simply putting the word out and leaving it at that), then invitees will have a chance to RSVP. Note, this works wonderfully with a Microsoft product such as an Outlook.com e-mail account, where you’re given response options directly in the message.
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In Gmail, you’ll be able to act on an invite in pretty much the same way. However you respond, it will be sent to the event organizer and automatically added to their Outlook.
Now that we’re clear on appointments and meetings, we’ll move on to modifying and canceling them because change is inevitable, and sometimes our best laid plans fall through.

Modifying or Canceling Meetings and Tracking Responses

Something has come up, and we need to move our pizza party to Saturday night. This is no problem for us but what about our attendees? Well, their plans are entirely up to them, but Outlook at least makes it easy to alert them to changes.
To modify a meeting and alert your attendees, first open the event from your Outlook calendar and make the changes you need. In this case, we’re just moving the meeting back one day. Note, that you can click “Send Update” and your invitees will be updated on the change.
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At this point, if any attendees had previously accepted your invitation, they will need to re-accept it.
Now might be a good time to show how to track your meeting’s progress. Click the “Tracking” button and from here you can see your meeting’s progress. Right now, only one invitee has accepted so maybe this Saturday isn’t such a good time.
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Uh oh, again something has just come up and we need to cancel the meeting. Simply click the “Cancel Meeting” button. Your invite will now change and you will get a “Send Cancelation” button to click and send out the bad news.
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It’s as easy as that, your previous invitees will receive an updated email and the event will be removed from your Outlook calendar.

Events

With your appointments-turned-meetings entered and saved, you’ll see it on your calendar. When you hover over it, you’ll see the pertinent details. At this point, if everything is good, you can leave it and move on to other things.
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If, however, you want to change or delete it, you can open it by either double-clicking it or using the appropriate action on the Ribbon, which here is the “Open” button.
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You can also access many of the same ribbon controls from the right-click context menu.
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With your meeting or appointment open, note the Options tab, which will let you affect some changes such as changing your status (Busy, Tentative, Out of Office, etc.), set a reminder, change the time zone, and finally set the event as a recurring one.
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Recurring events are common, such as a weekly meeting or quarterly earnings event, or just lunch with a friend, so it’s good to know how to set them. As you can see from the screenshot, this should be pretty easy to work out. You can set the time of the appointment, the pattern, and of course the range or how long the recurrence will occur.
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You see in the following image, we’ve set up a recurring event for every Monday at 1:00pm, which will continue indefinitely.
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It’s important to remember that while meetings and appointments do have several key differences, they still look and can be modified the same way, so all the options you see for appointments will be the same for meetings.

Attaching a File or Document to a Calendar item

Let’s imagine you’ve made an appointment, such as to take your pet to the vet, or to get your oil changed, and in either case, you have a document or image you want to attach to it so you don’t forget.
In the following example, we’re getting our oil changed finally, and we’ve got a coupon for it. You could print out the coupon and try to remember it beforehand, or you could simply attach it to the appointment so when Outlook reminds you, the coupon is right there so you can print it while you’re thinking about it.
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In order to do this, you want to click the “Attach File” and then browse to the location where it is saved. You can either insert the file as is, paste it inline as text, or insert the location of the file as a hyperlink. In this instance, we’re just going to attach the PDF as is.
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Of course, this is going to be a highly useful feature if you need to share documents for a business meeting, send out study materials to students, or whenever the situation might call for supplementary information.

Managing and Sharing Calendars

Managing calendars will let you accomplish two things. You can open calendars from various sources, and you can create and save calendar groups.
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If you click the “Open Calendar” button, you can create a calendar from several sources including from the Internet, or you can create a blank calendar. One advantage of creating a blank calendar is that you’re able to keep your work and home life separate.
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In the following screenshot, you see several calendars have been created, and we’ve also created a special group for work. You can actually drag events from one calendar to another; you see how we have an entry for a weekly meeting in the two calendar we’ve selected to show.
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Being able to drag events across calendars means that if you’ve spent time adding an appointment or meeting, if you later decide it needs to be on a different calendar, you don’t need to recreate the events.
Finally, you can share calendars, which should be pretty self-explanatory, of note though is the ability to e-mail a calendar. This is simply another way to accomplish it. Here in the following screenshot, you see what happens when you use this option.
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You can specify which calendar you share, the date range (from a single day to the whole calendar), level of details to share (simple availability, limited, and full details), and then there’s a few Advanced options you can use.
Sharing in this way means that you can quickly, easily, and seamlessly disseminate your calendar information with other Outlook users, as well as integrate calendars sent to you.

Calendar Options

There’s quite a few calendar options to sort through (though not quite as many as with e-mail). Most of these options are intended to configure the calendar to work more effectively with your professional and personal needs.
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For example, you can change your work hours and work week, add holidays, change the time zone, set the default color, and even choose between Fahrenheit and Celsius. Work your way through them at your leisure and try out what works best for you.
The calendar features in Outlook are top-notch and if you work in an organization with a central Exchange server, then you’re likely familiar with how you can collaborate on shared calendars, see events, and more. All of this seamlessly works within your own local Outlook installation for added power and convenience.
At home, it’s nice to have a calendar with so many features in the same program. There’s no need to switch from an e-mail app to your calendar app, you can schedule events and quickly invite participants with just a few clicks of the mouse button, and much more.
But, that’s enough talking from us. Why don’t we hear from you now? Let us know your thoughts or lend your comments in our discussion forum.
The howtogeek.com

Thursday, December 17, 2015

Sai Gon Corner: How to Add Programs, Files, and Folders to System Startup in Windows(10, 8.1, 8, 7, or even Vista)

How to Add Programs, Files, and Folders to System Startup in Windows(10, 8.1, 8, 7, or even Vista)


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Many programs in Windows add themselves to system startup when you install them, allowing them to automatically start up when you boot your computer. You can also have other programs automatically start and files and folders automatically open when Windows starts.
This should work in Windows 10, 8, 8.1, 7, or even Vista.
We showed you how to disable startup programs in Windows. Now, we’ll show you how to add programs, files, and folders to system startup, or the “Startup” folder, so they automatically start or open when you boot your computer.

Add Programs to Startup in Any Version of Windows

To add a program to the “Startup” folder, we will use a shortcut from the desktop. As an example, we will add the program Sizer to system startup, since we use that often to resize Windows for screenshots.
NOTE: If there is no shortcut on the desktop for the program you want to add, we will show you later in this article how to create a shortcut in the “Startup” folder.
To copy a shortcut on the desktop, right-click on the shortcut and select “Copy” from the popup menu.
01_copying_a_shortcut
Open the “Run” dialog box by pressing the Windows key + R. Type “shell:startup” (without the quotes) in the “Open” edit box and click “OK.”
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In the right pane of the Windows Explorer window, right-click on the empty space and select “Paste” from the popup menu.
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The shortcut is placed in the “Startup” directory.
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If the shortcut you want to add to the “Startup” directory is not available on the desktop, you can create a shortcut for the program in the directory. To create a new shortcut, right-click on an empty area in the right pane of the “Startup” directory in Windows Explorer. Select “New” from the popup menu and then select “Shortcut” from the submenu.
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On the first screen of the “Create Shortcut” dialog box, click “Browse.”

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On the “Browse for Files or Folders” dialog box, navigate to the directory for the program you want to add to system startup, select the “.exe” file, and click “OK.”

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The path to the program’s executable file is added to the “Type the location of the item:” edit box. Click “Next.”


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Enter a name for the shortcut in the “Type a name for this shortcut:” edit box and click “Finish.”

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The next time you start up Windows the program you added to the “Startup” directory that program will automatically start.

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You can also add shortcuts to files and folders (using the same procedure described above) to the “Startup” directory and they will automatically open when Windows starts.

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