Another simple trick is to open a new email, attach all the emails you want
to store in the same folder and then send it to yourself with a subject
relevant to the information.
On receipt, you can save this as a .msg file and it can be opened to reveal
all related emails and attachments.
Have fun - it's Friday
David Aspinall
Senior Consultant - Information Management
Tribal Group
Tribal House, Hawthorn Park, Coal Road, Leeds LS14 1PQ
T 0113 306 0306 M 07785 234 322
E [log in to unmask]
www.tribalgroup.co.uk
Passionate about improvement Stronger together Inspiring people
Unleashing talent Prepared to be different
This e-mail and any attachments are not guaranteed to be free from viruses,
and are for the intended addressee(s) only and may contain confidential
and/or privileged material, so if you are not a named or intended addressee,
do not use, retain or disclose such information. Any opinions expressed are
those of the sender and not necessarily the company's.
Tribal Technology Ltd. Registered office: 87-91 Newman Street, London W1T
3EY. Company registered in England and Wales No.4269915
-----Original Message-----
From: The UK Records Management mailing list
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Peter Kurilecz
Sent: 02 February 2007 13:11
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Converting emails into documents
On 2/2/07, Steve Norris <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Another Microsoft "Feature" !!!!
>
> I haven't looked at this - are you trying the Explorer Search Companion or
> Windows Desktop Search ?
>
> The .msg format is enormously complicated and isn't the easiest thing to
> search, but you would have thought Microsoft could handle their own
format.
one thing I did with my .msg files was to organize them into folders
related to the project I was working on, helped to cut down on the
search. if you use Windows explorer you can search the content IIRC
peterk
|