acarolinensis
Member
- Local time
- 1:40 PM
- Posts
- 1
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro 24H2
Have been mainly using Excel & Word 2021 after prolonged transition from Win 7 to Win 11. Decided to import some appointments to the Outlook calendar.
Don't want to run my POP email thru Outlook so had to get past the not-configuring-email hurdle by running CMD: outlook.exe PIM <username>. That seemed to complete fine.
Legacy Outlook 2010 PST file lives at C: \users \<username> \Program_Data \Outlook Files so I did File tab > Open & Export > Open Outlook Data File. It opened to \users \<username> \Documents \Outlook Files Outlook Data File - <username>.pst (265 KB). Navigated over to Program_Data and opened Outlook.pst (1,505 KB) without any noticed complaint.
In Outlook, going from Email (empty) to Calendars - under My Calendars, see two entries:
When an ics file was then imported, it appeared in the default calendar rather than the historic one.
HOW TO CHANGE THE DEFAULT PST FILE
1. Navigate to File tab > Info > Account Settings > Account Settings
2. Peruse displayed tabs for indeterminate future reference (FIFR):
Email, Data Files, RSS Feeds, SharePoint Lists, Internet Calendars, Published Calendars, Address Books
2. Click Data Files tab, behold data (PST) files and their location
3. Peruse displayed icons FIFR:
Add..., Settings..., Set as Default, Remove, Open file Location...
4. Change default PST from Outlook Data File to Outlook.
5. We'll leave renaming for another day - DuckDuckGo is your friend.
In the process of writing this up some memory cells got jostled enough to provoke some searching that led to the solution. Obviously, there is a lot about Outlook fundamentals I don't know that going to the library and spending an afternoon with a recent edition of Outlook for Dummies would improve. Hope this helps someone out there.
Don't want to run my POP email thru Outlook so had to get past the not-configuring-email hurdle by running CMD: outlook.exe PIM <username>. That seemed to complete fine.
Legacy Outlook 2010 PST file lives at C: \users \<username> \Program_Data \Outlook Files so I did File tab > Open & Export > Open Outlook Data File. It opened to \users \<username> \Documents \Outlook Files Outlook Data File - <username>.pst (265 KB). Navigated over to Program_Data and opened Outlook.pst (1,505 KB) without any noticed complaint.
In Outlook, going from Email (empty) to Calendars - under My Calendars, see two entries:
Calendar - Outlook Data File - appears to be the default created by initialization of Outlook 2021.
Calendar - Outlook - contains historic entries from 2010 (and earlier versions) PST file.
When an ics file was then imported, it appeared in the default calendar rather than the historic one.
HOW TO CHANGE THE DEFAULT PST FILE
1. Navigate to File tab > Info > Account Settings > Account Settings
2. Peruse displayed tabs for indeterminate future reference (FIFR):
Email, Data Files, RSS Feeds, SharePoint Lists, Internet Calendars, Published Calendars, Address Books
2. Click Data Files tab, behold data (PST) files and their location
3. Peruse displayed icons FIFR:
Add..., Settings..., Set as Default, Remove, Open file Location...
4. Change default PST from Outlook Data File to Outlook.
5. We'll leave renaming for another day - DuckDuckGo is your friend.
In the process of writing this up some memory cells got jostled enough to provoke some searching that led to the solution. Obviously, there is a lot about Outlook fundamentals I don't know that going to the library and spending an afternoon with a recent edition of Outlook for Dummies would improve. Hope this helps someone out there.
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 11 Pro 24H2AMD Ryzen Pro 5850U32 GBAMD Radeon Graphics
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro 24H2
- Computer type
- Laptop
- Manufacturer/Model
- Lenovo T14G2
- CPU
- AMD Ryzen Pro 5850U
- Motherboard
- yes
- Memory
- 32 GB
- Graphics Card(s)
- AMD Radeon Graphics
- Sound Card
- DolbyAPO SWC Device
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Samsung 24"
- Screen Resolution
- 1920 x 1080
- Hard Drives
- 1 TB SSD
- PSU
- yes
- Case
- yes
- Cooling
- somewhat notorious
- Keyboard
- Dell generic USB
- Mouse
- Compaq generic USB
- Internet Speed
- 100? mbs cable
- Browser
- Vivaldi current
- Antivirus
- MS Defender
- Other Info
- transitioning from Win 7




