From: TerryGH on 3 Apr 2010 11:02 I saw ithe basic answer n a 2007 forum post to this question from Sue Mosher ("If you want the new folder to be archived, just make sure its Properties dialog shows the archiving feature turned on and pointing to the right archive" ....but a few things are still not clear: 1: If I have moved email from another folder to the new folder will this change be reflected in the archive file? 2: On the Default Archive Settings there is a box checked by default called "Delete expired items (email folders only) -- what does this refer to, i.e. what is an expired item 3: Is there any reason that after a major Personal Folder reorganization where many folders are re-named and some folders are under the newly renamed folders as subfolders, does it not make sense to start a new archive file? 4: If I do want to start a new archive file (e.g., archiveAprl10.pst) am I correct that I just change the file name via "move old items to.." in the default settings and that will create a new archive with copies of all the selected folder email as of that date? Thanks in advance ...
From: Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] on 5 Apr 2010 10:09 "TerryGH" <TerryGH(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:D9F7DD83-BEBB-4563-8C1D-5306B3D75040(a)microsoft.com... > 1: If I have moved email from another folder to the new folder will this > change be reflected in the archive file? Since archive PSTs don't contain anything currently in your active folders, no, moving a message in the active folders has no effect on the archive's contents. If something is in your archive PST, it's usually NOT in your active folders, since AutoArchive's job is to remove it from your active folders. > 2: On the Default Archive Settings there is a box checked by default called > "Delete expired items (email folders only) -- what does this refer to, i.e. > what is an expired item An expired item is an item for which you've set an expiration date. RIght-click any item and choose Options. You'll see the expiration date selection there. You can also set expiration by rule. Most people I know don't use the expiration date, so the option you describe has no effect. If you choose to use it and set the expiration date on items, AutoArchive can delete them instead of move them to the archive PST. > 3: Is there any reason that after a major Personal Folder reorganization > where many folders are re-named and some folders are under the newly renamed > folders as subfolders, does it not make sense to start a new archive file? Since Archive PSTs are meant to contain historical data, it's up to you. Usually, archive PSTs aren't even visible in the folder list. If you'd feel better having the archive folders reflect the active folders, with Outlook closed, rename the old archive PST to another name and then when Outlook creates a new one at its next archive run, the new folder structure will reflect the structure of the active folders. > 4: If I do want to start a new archive file (e.g., archiveAprl10.pst) am I > correct that I just change the file name via "move old items to.." in the > default settings and that will create a new archive with copies of all the > selected folder email as of that date? Archiving doesn't make a copy of your active items. It is not a backup process. However, yes, if you change the name of the archive PST that way, then the next time AutoArchive runs (or you deliberately run archiving), a new archive PST will be created with folders that match the active folders. Unless you have items in those folders that match your archive criteria, however, the folders that get created in the archive PST wil be empty. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook]
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