Wednesday, August 11, 2004

Have a question ?

Have a question or subject that you would like to see covered? Drop me a line and maybe I can include it in a future edition of my Blog. Send your question or thoughts to: jack@wb9otx.com

See some of the Web pages I do just for fun at:
DailyFoto Dot Com This is a great start page for you with lots of links and a new photo each day.
WB9OTX Dot Com Just a fun page I have been doing for many years.
RipleyCounty Dot Net See the sites from Southeast Indiana.

I also do Web Pages for businesses, I'd love to give you a quote.





Tuesday, August 10, 2004

Where did my pictures go ?

(Q)
I have about thirty photos I took with my new digital camera of at a family wedding over the weekend. I have a compact flash card and reader. I Read the directions that came with the software and reader very carefully and was able to see the photos. One of the options was to rename them. I did this but now when I try to view them a window pops up asking me what program I want to use. I am afraid to do anything further because I don’t want to delete or loose these photos. They are very important to our family. What do I do ?

(A)
I did not have enough information to tell this person how to fix this problem so I called on the phone to gain further clues.

What she did was rename the photos one at a time on the compact flash card from the camera. She did not put the extension after the file name. She changed the name from what the camera called them to a description of what the image was of. Like ‘DC123.jpg’
To ‘At the alter’ .

I scolded her for editing the photos on the camera’s flash card; this is a big No – No. Why? Because if you make a mistake you have no back up. Always download from the camera or flash card to your hard drive first. Do not delete the files on the flash card or camera till you are sure you will not need them again. Always do any editing from the copies on your hard drive and never on the camera or flash card. You are keeping a copy on the flash card as your back up.

Now back to answer. The reason the box popped up asking for the program to use is she
Changed the names of the photo files but failed to keep the extension. The extension is the last (usually three) figures after the period (.jpg). The extension associates the program that will be used to open the file, or in this case view the photo.

To fix this she must rename all the photos again but this time adding .jpg after each name. After doing this she will be back to normal and able to view her photos in the program that she used before the renaming process she went through.

Two thing to remember here. 1. Don’t edit the files before you have them safe on the hard drive. 2. Don’t change the extension or leave it off the renamed files.

I can't save any downloaded files

(Q)
I can't save any downloaded files to my hard drive from the Internet.
Why ?

(A)
If you could save files before but now you can't, I would bet you just
installed some program that changed the security Level. I think one
that will is, Norton Anti-Virus and there are others I'm sure. To fix
this you can try lowering the security to at least Medium or try the
following.



Open up Internet Explorer (not Windows Explorer)
Look at the top of the browser window and on the tool bar click on 'Tools'
Now click on 'Internet Options'.
You should see the below window:

Click on 'Security' and you will see the below window:

Now click on Custom Level


In this box scroll down till you see 'Downloads'.
Make sure 'Enable' is checked, if not change it.

Click OK and close out all open windows and close Internet
Explorer.

Now Try to save your downloaded files.

I hope this works for you. Thanks for your question.


Sunday, August 08, 2004

Back-up Outlook Express - again -

I know I keep harping on backing up files, but you should hear the customers cry when the drive crashes. All you can say is ‘you should have had it backed up’.
There are programs to do the job for you but you must pay the price. ($34.95). One of the many programs to back-up OE is ‘Express Assist.
Express Assist 7 is an easy to use utility to backup all of your Outlook Express mail folders as a single compressed, backup file. You can easily view messages in the backup; or restore one, all, or any selection of the mail folders. EA 7 also saves and restores all critical OE Settings as well as Internet Explorer Data.
You can find it here: http://www.soft32.com/download_6311.html There are more shareware programs to pick from, but the above is one of the best I have used.
The below information is another way to do the back-up. It’s a little harder and requires some basic computer skills, but it is a way to do it for free. Either way please do it, if you don’t you will be one of the criers I talked about above.
Jack
>>>>>>>>>>>>> <<<<<<<<<<<<<<

Back-up. That is a habit that is definitely worth the time and effort. Let's see how we can do it in Outlook Express.
First, we need to back up our messages, right? OK, go to Tools>Options>Maintenance and click on the 'store folder' button you'll find there. A window appears that informs you where your email messages are stored.
Copy that path to your windows clipboard by selecting it all and pressing Ctrl+C.
Open Windows Explorer (Windows button + E), place your pointer in the address bar, click Ctrl+V (paste) and then press the Go button. The folder where your messages are stored should open.

Select all the icons that appear and copy them to a safe back-up location (removable drive, CD-ROM, intranet, anything outside your hard disk). If you just back-up some of them selectively you may not be able to restore them, so better back them all up.
Second, it's our contacts' email addresses. We do need them too, right? That's easy. In your Windows taskbar select Start>Run, type "wab" (without the quotes) and press enter. The Windows Address Book appears.

Go File>Export>Address Book (WAB). A window appears asking you for the desired filename and back-up location.
Type a name, select a location outside your hard disk and click on Save.
Done!
What else would be worth backing up? Our email accounts. No problem: Just Go Tools>Accounts. In the Mail tab, select one by one all the accounts that appear there and click on the Export button. Type a filename and back-up location and click on Save. Done! You can do the same in the other tabs too (eg. "News") if you wish.
The last thing that can be backed up is the mail filters, but this procedure includes tinkering with the Windows Registry and this is certainly NOT recommended to inexperient users. One tiny little mistake and your whole Windows installation may pass away to history. If you're not experienced enough, please skip this step. You have been warned. To begin, open the registry editor of your choice. Navigate to the key HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Identities\(IDENTITY ID)\Software\Microsoft\Outlook Express\5.0\Rules\Mail where 'IDENTITY ID' is a long number that looks like this: {82HC0035-1435-4639-9Y76-F90806CR80GE} Select that key and go Registry>Export Registry File. In the window that appears type a descriptive filename (such as 'mail_filters'), select 'Selected Branch' in the 'Export Range' field and click on 'Save'.

Done! (If you select 'All' instead of 'Selected Branch', the whole Registry is exported).

Restore: Outlook Express

The best backup copy though is absolutely useless if you cannot restore it. Okay, suppose you just bought this brand new, super fast PC and you want to move your entire email system there from the old PC archives you just backed up. (If you just need to practice before doing the real thing, you could just create a new identity from within the menu File>Identities>Add New Identity. The rest of the procedure is exactly the same.) This can be done in 4 steps:

A. Email accounts, B. Contacts, C. Messages and D. Mail filters.
A. ACCOUNTS

Launch Outlook Express.
Bypass all the initial setup wizards that pop up by consecutively clicking on NO's and CANCEL's.
Go Tools>Accounts and select the Mail tab.
Click on the Import button.
Locate the .iaf file(s) you saved during the backup procedure and double-click on it.
Click OK to exit.

Your account settings were imported successfully! This means that you won't have to re-configure your server settings, user ID, password, preferences etc. from scratch.
B. CONTACTS

Piece of cake! Just go File>Import>Address Book, then through the window that appears locate and double-click on the .wab file you had saved during the backup procedure. Done! All your contacts are back!
C. MESSAGES

That can be tricky, so do it carefully.
Go Tools>Options, select the Maintenance tab and click on the Store Folder button.

A small window will pop up to inform you where the new email messages will be stored. Let's change this directory to something easier to remember and manage.
Click on the Change button.

From the window that appears, select a directory in your system. In my own PC, this directory is located at /My Documents/My Mail/2002/, but feel free to put yours wherever you see fit.
NOTE: make sure the new directory exists before clicking on the Change button.

Click on OK. You will be notified that changes will take effect after you shut down and restart OE. OK, let's do it now.
After you have restarted OE for the changes to take effect, shut it down again to be able to fiddle with its mail folders.
Locate the new directory you created in the previous step. In there you will see a few files automatically generated by OE. The .dbx ones are actually your mail folders and they're currently completely empty. But you don't really care about them, all you need to do is restore your own mail folders, so locate the bunch of .dbx etc. files you had saved during the back up procedure.
Select them all (including the .log etc. files that were in the original mail directory) and hit CTRL+C (copy).
Switch to the new mail directory and hit CTRL+V (paste).
You will be asked if you want to replace the existing files. Click on YES. (What you're actually replacing is the automatically generated, empty mail folders with your own, full mail folders).
This may take a few moments, depending on how powerful your system is and how large your mail folders were, so be patient.
When this is done, you may launch OE again.
Well, what do you know? All your mail is back, and it appears exactly as it did in your old PC! Tedious but effective procedure, isn't it?
The last part of the restoring process is
D. MAIL FILTERS
WARNING: This step requires fiddling with the Windows Registry and this is certainly NOT recommended to inexperienced users. One tiny little mistake and your whole Windows installation may pass away to history. If you're not experienced enough, please skip this last step and re-configure your mail filters manually. You have been warned.
Launch the Registry Editor (run > regedit).
Navigate to the key
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Identities\(IDENTITY ID\
where 'IDENTITY ID' is a long number that looks like this:
{82HC0035-1435-4639-9Y76-F90806CR80GE}
You have to copy that number including its {curly brackets} and paste it somewhere safe, supposedly in a new Notepad text file.
Now, locate the .reg file you created during the backup procedure.

Use Notepad to open it.
You will see that the IDENTITY ID that exists all over this file is different than the one you just copied from your Windows Registry. What you need to do now is replace your old ID with the new one. This is a safe way to do it:

Select an instance of the old ID in the .reg file, including the {curly brackets}.
Hit CTRL+C to copy it.
Hit CTRL+H (Find & Replace function), place your cursor in the Find What field and hit CTRL+V to paste your old ID there.
Switch to the new Notepad file where you have kept your new ID, select it and hit CTRL+C to copy it.

Switch back to the Find & Replace box, place your cursor in the Replace With field and hit CTRL+V to paste your new ID there.
Now, visually inspect the integrity of both ID's checking that they're correctly pasted, and then click on the Replace All button.
Save this file and close it.

You're now ready to import your mail filters. Just double-click on the .reg file you just modified, answer YES to the window that pops-up and you're done.

All your precious mail filters are back in place.

© Copyright 2002 Translatum Journal and the Author