Categorized | Affiliate Marketing 101

Can’t Access My Outlook Folders (ms Office 2007) On My Vista System?

Hi,
I have Vista Home Basic with Office 2007. I got this external hard drive, and wanted to get my outlook to save the emails on it. So I tried to cut the Outlook.pst from its original folder into a new folder created on the new HD. The process failed in the middle and canceled all. Then my outlook refused to launch, giving me the error message below. I created a new profile setting it to default, and my outlook opened showing me now two sets of personal folders (the older and the new profiles). When clicking on the older personal folders, it won’t access them prompting thhe same error message below (without the word default now). I tried repairing the .pst file using the pst scan tool as per the MS site instructions, it found errors there and said it fixed them. I changed the properties of the file to be fully shared by all users also as per MS site instructions. Still no use. The error message I’m getting is as follows (sorry if it’s not specific, I’m translating it into English since my system language isn’t English):
“Could not open the folders group. Aceess denied to file. You do not have the permission required to access the file
C:\Users\Beebo\AppData\Local\Microsoft…
The older message before creating a new default profile was the same with “default folder” instead of “folders group”.
Please note that “Beebo” above is the user name on the computer with administrative privilges (that’s me)
I would appreciate your help in this regard, all my business emails are in that account with all clients’ and invoicing information. I’m in deep trouble becuase of this crazy step I attempted, and don’t know how to solve this out :S

No Responses to “Can’t Access My Outlook Folders (ms Office 2007) On My Vista System?”

  1. Anonymous says:

    move the file back to C drive and fix the first profile remove the 2nd and export the profile after that you need disk management to change the drive letter on the external to a static drive letter like Z: this will insure your PATH is correct

Trackbacks/Pingbacks


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Archives

Powered by Yahoo! Answers