C
Charles Belov
While trying something out in Outlook 2000 for Windows, I changed
message delivery from a.pst to the Microsoft Exchange Server, then back
to a.pst. I also have a second pst file open b.pst, which was not
affected by this change. a.pst has 3 shortcuts in my Outlook bar, b.pst
has about 30, which were quite a lot of work to create.
Since I did this, every time I start Outlook 2000, it gives me the
message "The location messages are delivered to has changed for this
user profile...Some of the shortcuts on the Outlook Bar may no longer
work. Do you want Outlook to recreate your shortcuts? All shortcuts you
have created will be removed."
I know from previous experience a "yes" will remove not only the a.pst
shortcuts, but also the b.pst shortcuts. I have tested the shortcuts,
and only one went bad, which I easilty recreated.
What part of "No" does Outlook not understand? How do I banish this
message until the next time I make a change, without having to answer "Yes"?
Charles Belov
message delivery from a.pst to the Microsoft Exchange Server, then back
to a.pst. I also have a second pst file open b.pst, which was not
affected by this change. a.pst has 3 shortcuts in my Outlook bar, b.pst
has about 30, which were quite a lot of work to create.
Since I did this, every time I start Outlook 2000, it gives me the
message "The location messages are delivered to has changed for this
user profile...Some of the shortcuts on the Outlook Bar may no longer
work. Do you want Outlook to recreate your shortcuts? All shortcuts you
have created will be removed."
I know from previous experience a "yes" will remove not only the a.pst
shortcuts, but also the b.pst shortcuts. I have tested the shortcuts,
and only one went bad, which I easilty recreated.
What part of "No" does Outlook not understand? How do I banish this
message until the next time I make a change, without having to answer "Yes"?
Charles Belov