how do i backup my contacts with Windows Mobile device and Microsoft Outlook?
Dec 21, 2008 by Sotana K | Posted in PDAs & Handhelds
i needfulness help.
i need to know how to back up my contacts from my Tmobile MDA phone to my computer.
Using point of view.
1. On the File menu, click Import and Export.
2. Click Export to a march, and then click Next.
3. In the Create a file of type list, click Personal Folder Portfolio (.pst), and then click Next.
4. In the Select a folder to export from list, click Contacts.
5. If you have subfolders below the Contacts folder that you prerequisite to include, select the Include subfolders check box.
6. Click Next.
7. Click Flick through, choose a location for the file, such as My Documents, and then type a name for your backup file, such as ContactsBackup.pst.
8. Click OK.
9. Click Exterminate.
10. In the Name box, type My Contacts Backup.
11. Type the encryption and password settings if you poverty them, and then click OK.
Ros L | Dec 21, 2008
How I can Backup my Windows Mobile 6 Pocket PC ( T-mobile Wing ) with Windows Mobile Device Center ?
Mar 01, 2008 by Foad | Posted in PDAs & Handhelds
I Be informed how to do it with Microsoft Active Sync but Windows Mobile Device Center ( for Vista users ) is completely differeny
Square Trick to backup and restore your files
Click here for more details :
http://www.sacatech.com/ar/backup-restor e-files.html
Nancy P | Mar 04, 2008
Why can't I get my Dell Axim x51v to download driver for Windows Mobile Device Center?
May 08, 2007 by Cat | Posted in PDAs & Handhelds
I have Windows Vista on my PC and Windows Mobile 5 on my handheld computer. I've tried disabling my firewall and also when I go to Windows Update, it doesn't even act like my device is there. Every age I try to install the driver it fails. Once it said that it had installed an unknown driver, but then when I tried to tie, it wouldn't. I've tried unintalling and installing and all the other lame ideas on the Microsoft site.
Ummmm...then it is something not correlated to Windows Mobile Device...all you need to do is install Windows Mobile DC, plug you Axim via the cradle and sync...
bigdaddy_longstroke_2000 | May 08, 2007
Windows Mobile Device Center overview
This is Windows Vista's WMDC. Proper an introduction. That's all!
Microsoft Working To Restore Sidekick Data -- Microsoft Certified ...
Ho now says that Microsoft is rebuilding the system, but it is alluring some in days of yore.
"We have firm that the outage was caused by a system non-starter that created figures sacrifice in the sum database and the back-up," she said in the missive. "We rebuilt the system component by component, recovering evidence along the way. This aware answer has entranced a critical amount of everything, but was imperative to jam the honour of the information."
An update on the in the works of the evidence restoration profession will be posted on Saturday at the T-Mobile Sidekick forum , she added. Meanwhile, a few lawsuits from users of the overhaul are starting to issue, as distinguished in a article .
T-Mobile sells the Sidekick mobile device and pledge, but Microsoft runs the help in the behind the scenes using technology it acquired in 2008 when it bought Hazard Inc. for $500 million. The Sidekick device features a humble natural keyboard and backs up text in the cloud. To some other mobile devices, it clearly does not endlessly conserve facts to the true device itself, which is why T-Mobile warned Sidekick users during the appointment outage not to kick out batteries from the device.
Microsoft did not describe verbatim how the usefulness outage occurred. Ho, as part of the Reward Mobile Experiences company, unquestionably spearheads Microsoft mobile consumer technologies, including a rumored "Bulge out Pink" aimed at challenging Apple's iPhone. Ho is recorded in a Pass 9 interview last year -- in her pink obligation -- alluding to some amicable of hidden throw that's part of her responsibilities.
The Sidekick accommodation outage represents a glowering eye for Microsoft's software-as-a-assignment efforts, championed strikingly by Microsoft's Chief Software Architect Ray Ozzie. However, it also reflects continued dilatory-prospering mobile efforts at Microsoft. Much of the trembling is depicted in two articles, which get ready for accounts from unnamed "insiders" who no doubt worked at Microsoft. They depict the Sidekick appointment outage as due to Microsoft's failure of the Jeopardy likely to be gain, as well as its managerial inadequacy.