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How Do I Move My Outlook Contacts to Address Book?
So you have years of data in your Outlook Contacts that you would hate to lose and shudder at the thought of typing it all in again by hand. I hear you. Let's look at two ways of getting that info into Address Book on your new Mac.
The Easy Way. The best way to do achieve this goal is to throw down $10 and buy Outlook2Mac from Little Machines. You can buy it right off their website. Not only will it transfer your contacts, but also any of your old email and calendar events you specify. You run the program on your PC and it holds your hand while creating files you will transfer your new Mac. One important note: Outlook2Mac is only for Outlook, not the free Outlook Express program that comes with Windows.
Because it translates your Outlook files into industry standard files, you can also import not only to Mail and Address Book, but also to Entourage if you are using that instead of Mail. So the quick and easy way is to:
- Purchase Outlook2Mac and load it on your PC.
- Run it to create a folder of files called My_Outlook_Files.
- Copy those files to your new Mac.
- Import the files into Address Book.
The Free Way. Now, if you have more time than money, you can download Netscape 7.2 on your PC for free and use it as an intermediary to convert your Outlook contacts into the right type of files. To do this, go here on Netscape's web site to download the program. Install it, open it and in the Window menu, choose Address Book. With the Address Book window open, click the Tools menu and select Import. This will bring up a series of screens to take you through the Import process. Once you are done, go ahead and test it by clicking on the relevant icon in the Address Books list to the left in the main window.
Now for the next step: exporting the contacts. Go back to the Tools menu in the Address Book window and select Export. From the Save As Type menu Select LDIF and give it a name and a location, preferably your desktop. Find this file and copy it to your Mac.
Importing. For both routes, all you need to do to import the contact data is to open Address Book on your Mac, click the File menu, select Import, then LDIF. Find your file and wha-lah, your contacts should now all be in Address Book.
What if I have Outlook Express, not Outlook? You can use the Netscape method, or if you can spare $50, you should buy Move2Mac, another PC to Mac utility. The upside of Move2Mac is that not only can you move your Outlook Express data, but Move2Mac lets you quickly and easily transfer music, photos, files, folders, and more from your PC. It's much more comprehensive than Outlook2Mac. Check out their website for the full story.
DIG DEEPER
If you don't have hundreds of contacts, try the Forward as vCard option outlined in Lucas Chan's blog
Netscape 7.2 for Windows
Outlook2Mac
Move2Mac
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Your Comments:
Check out <a href=http://www.snerdware.com>Snerdware</a>
They have Groupcal for exchanged served calendaring
as well as AddressX for Active Directory/Exchange Contact Management
Relatively cheap, my experience is one of pure joy since I don't have to interface with what is a little bit of entourage hell.
This is a great site. I train noobs at my university who've just switched. It's great to be able to send them to a site like this for additional help.
Stephen
07/14/2007 at 09:41 AM
http://www.plaxo.com
Zahid Mandhiry
07/19/2007 at 05:27 PM
I would recommend you send each "vCard" as a seperate e-mail as having to keep up with which contact has been opened and saved can get a little confusing.
http://lucaschan.com/.../
Kirk H
08/08/2007 at 12:10 AM
Dru Richman
08/23/2007 at 09:54 AM
Steve
09/18/2007 at 04:09 PM
Luther
09/25/2007 at 01:39 AM
Sachin
10/03/2007 at 10:25 AM