Join the AMA (Ask Me Anything) with the Firefox leadership team to celebrate Firefox 20th anniversary and discuss Firefox’s future on Mozilla Connect. Mark your calendar on Thursday, November 14, 18:00 - 20:00 UTC!

Questo sito potrebbe offrire funzionalità limitate durante le operazioni di manutenzione per migliorare l'esperienza utente. Se un articolo non risolve il tuo problema e vuoi richiedere supporto, la nostra comunità di supporto è pronta ad aiutarti tramite @FirefoxSupport su Twitter e /r/firefox su Reddit.

Cerca nel supporto

Attenzione alle mail truffa. Mozilla non chiederà mai di chiamare o mandare messaggi a un numero di telefono o di inviare dati personali. Segnalare qualsiasi attività sospetta utilizzando l'opzione “Segnala abuso”.

Ulteriori informazioni

Questa discussione è archiviata. Inserire una nuova richiesta se occorre aiuto.

Can I import Outlook Express mail files on drive from a broken PC?

  • 4 risposte
  • 7 hanno questo problema
  • 1 visualizzazione
  • Ultima risposta di DrHow

more options

The XP system which I have been using for email for years died. The hard drive is OK. My mail is on it. I was wondering if I could import the mail folders into Thunderbird on my new Windows 8.1 PC by installing the hard drive from the old PC and pointing Thunderbird to the mail store of Outlook Express on the old drive. Clearly Outlook Express is not alive on the new PC, so the usual "import" instructions do not seem to apply. Nevertheless, what I seek to do seems like it should be possible.

The XP system which I have been using for email for years died. The hard drive is OK. My mail is on it. I was wondering if I could import the mail folders into Thunderbird on my new Windows 8.1 PC by installing the hard drive from the old PC and pointing Thunderbird to the mail store of Outlook Express on the old drive. Clearly Outlook Express is not alive on the new PC, so the usual "import" instructions do not seem to apply. Nevertheless, what I seek to do seems like it should be possible.

Soluzione scelta

You need to convert the DBX files using third party programs. I have a blog post here http://thunderbirdtweaks.blogspot.com.au/2011/07/outlook-express.html with links to undbx. It is free, but a command line tool. If you want a GUI, this is one of the better on offer in my experience. http://www.maildev.com/buy/ but it will cost you.

Leggere questa risposta nel contesto 👍 2

Tutte le risposte (4)

more options

Soluzione scelta

You need to convert the DBX files using third party programs. I have a blog post here http://thunderbirdtweaks.blogspot.com.au/2011/07/outlook-express.html with links to undbx. It is free, but a command line tool. If you want a GUI, this is one of the better on offer in my experience. http://www.maildev.com/buy/ but it will cost you.

more options

Thanks for the possible solution.

However, as it turns out, I eventually thought of another way which I implemented. I installed XP in a virtual machine using VMWare on my Windows 8 machine. (I wanted to do that anyway.) Then I copied the relevant mail files off of the old XP hard drive and over to the newly installed XP, where I could then import them into a working Outlook Express. (At this point, I also did a fairly thorough cleaning of the archived mail.) Then I installed Thunderbird and in the XP guest and did the mail-files-import in the working XP context. I could then copy the resulting Thunderbird profile to the host Windows 8 machine to work with Thunderbird there.

more options

You surely can import Outlook Express mails on Thunderbird but have to use the exterior tool like (removed) which is relevant app. It properly converts .dbx files in .eml file and then simply allows to access files on Thunderbird (on windows 8.1). I recommend you to try it-

Moderator removed link promoting paid software. Please see the forum spam section of Rules & Guidelines, thanks.

Modificato da Shawn il

more options

The DBX conversion program suggested by ariaevans0 cost $69, so it was appropriate that the moderator removed the link. Oddly, in addition to the free command line tool which Matt suggested, he also suggested a non-free (but more reasonable at $29) GUI solution, the link for which was not removed - I suppose because Matt's suggestion was almost certainly not spam.

Meanwhile, as I already stated, I had solved my problem using a newly installed XP.