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MS Office Forum / Outlook / General MS Outlook Questions / July 2007

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How to retreive mails deleted by shift +delete?

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rajpreetsidhu@gmail.com - 26 Jul 2007 04:53 GMT
Greetings,

I am using Microsoft Outlook 2000, and have acidently deleted some of
my important mails from my inbox, (not my pst folder), using Shift +
delete. As I work on a remote server, so we donot have "RUN" also to
use the usual steps of recovery of permanently deleted mails.

Can someone please help?Quick response will be appreciated.

TIA
Vanguard - 26 Jul 2007 05:39 GMT
rajpreetsidhu wrote in message
news:1185422028.070865.77540@o61g2000hsh.googlegroups.com...

> I am using Microsoft Outlook 2000, and have acidently deleted some of
> my important mails from my inbox, (not my pst folder),

Your Inbox is just a "folder" concept for hierarchical data storage in
your .pst file.  The Inbox is indeed *in* the PST file.  Unless you are
talking about the Inbox presented for your mailbox on the mail server
when you use your e-mail provider's webmail interface.  In the latter
case, and if they support Shift+Del then the mail is gone permanently.

> using Shift + delete.

That's the permanent delete.  Same as if you delete items from the
Deleted Items folder.  It's gone.  That is why it called a PERMANENT
delete.

Items that are in the 'Deleted Items' folder really haven't been
deleted.  They've just been moved under this folder.  Permanently
deleted items will become hidden because, well, they've been permanently
deleted and are not to ever be displayed.  However, in fact, they are
just marked with a "deleted" status which is what makes them hidden.  If
you or Outlook hasn't yet performed a compaction on your PST file then
it is possible to extract the delete-marked items by using DBxtract or
DBxpress (Google for them).

Of course, if your data was actually important to you then you could
restore from your backups.  Then you could just restore yesterday's .pst
file.  If you don't backup your data then you deemed it unimportant.

> As I work on a remote server, so we donot have "RUN" also to
> use the usual steps of recovery of permanently deleted mails.

Haven't a clue what you were trying to say here.
Pat Willener - 26 Jul 2007 07:03 GMT
If your Inbox is on an Exchange Server, you may ask the mail admin to
retrieve your deleted messages.

> Greetings,
>
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>
> TIA
Peter Foldes - 26 Jul 2007 08:45 GMT
Please do not multipost. Check the other group where you also posted for the answers

Signature

Peter

Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others
Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged.

> Greetings,
>
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>
> TIA
Brian Tillman - 26 Jul 2007 20:04 GMT
> I am using Microsoft Outlook 2000, and have acidently deleted some of
> my important mails from my inbox, (not my pst folder), using Shift +
> delete. As I work on a remote server, so we donot have "RUN" also to
> use the usual steps of recovery of permanently deleted mails.

Please don't multipost.
Signature

Brian Tillman

Vanguard - 26 Jul 2007 21:19 GMT
<snip - repeated SAME message *multiposted* to different newsgroups>

Learn to CROSS-POST!
Go read replies to your other repeated but disconnected SAME post in
other newsgroups.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crossposting
http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/usenet/xpost.html

A point not made is that N multiposted copies will consume N times the
space for separate copies of the same post.  Crossposted messages have
just *one* copy on the server and the groups simply have pointers back
to that same single copy.  Multiposting wastes disk space on the server.
Yes, your post is small but remember that you consume N times the space
on one server and then do so on all the newsgroups servers worldwide.

Crossposting helps readers in one group see the replies from those in
another RELATED newsgroup to which you copied your post.  That way, they
don't waste their time duplicating similar replies that already exist.
 
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