Subscribe to Windows IT Pro

 

Get Newsletters

  • Get the Latest News
  • Product Updates
  • Helpful Tricks
  • Productivity Tips

Subscribe Now!

March 20, 2006 12:00 AM

More Outlook Self-Help

Windows IT Pro
InstantDoc ID #49731
Rating: (0)

So you didn't get enough of the Microsoft Outlook tips I provided in "Outlook Self-Help"? Well, here's some more sage advice that you can give your Outlook users.

Tip #1: Color-code your calendar.
I was initially skeptical about the usefulness of the calendar color-coding introduced in Outlook 2002, but now it's one of my favorite features. In the Day/Week/Month view, I can see a separate color for each family member, plus colors for deadlines, appointments that need advance preparation, and dates that involve travel. To mark an appointment with a color label, right-click it in the view, then choose Label and the desired color label. On an open appointment, you'll find the Label drop-down list to the right of the Location field.

To change the text associated with any color, from the main Outlook menu, choose Edit, Label, Edit Labels. Write down a list of your customized calendar color labels, what they mean, and the label's original text. If you want to use the color labels to filter a calendar view, for example, so that you can print all your travel dates, you'll need to know the original label text because Outlook won't show your custom labels in its Filter dialog box.

Tip #2: Use the Query Builder tool to power your filters and searches.
The Query Builder tool lets you use advanced filters and search criteria in Outlook. You can add a Query Builder tab to the Filter and Advanced Find dialog boxes. To do so, in the registry editor, navigate to the HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Office\11.0\Outlook subkey (use 10.0 for Outlook 2002 and 9.0 for Outlook 2000) and add a new key named QueryBuilder. In Microsoft Office Outlook 2003, you'll see the Query Builder tab on three different dialog boxes: Filter (View, Arrange By, Current View, Customize Current View, Filter); Advanced Find (Tools, Find, Advanced Find); and the dialog box for search-folder conditions (see tip #4 in "Outlook Self-Help," InstantDoc ID 49730). Like the Filter and Advanced Find dialog boxes, the Query Builder lets you choose Outlook fields that you want to search on. However, the Query Builder lets you use a logical OR, not just a logical AND, to connect conditions, thus letting you create more complex queries than Filter and Advanced Find allow.

Tip #3: Run rules on demand.
Sometimes Outlook rules don't work as expected. Maybe too many messages arrived at one time, or maybe the Outlook 2003 Junk E-mail Filter classified the items as junk, which means that no rules run automatically against those items. But you can still run any rule manually against all the items in a folder. Go to the folder whose items you want to process, choose Tools, Rules and Alerts, then click the Run Rules Now button. (In Outlook 2002, the commands are Tools, Rules Wizard, and Run Now.)

Related Content:

ARTICLE TOOLS

Comments
    There are no comments to display. Be the first one!
You must log on before posting a comment.

Are you a new visitor? Register Here

advertisement

advertisement

White Papers

Get your Windows 7 deployment off to the right start by implementing PC lockdown. A locked-down environment is easier and cheaper to support since users are less likely to make unnecessary changes to the core system configuration - read more here!

Essential Guides

Is your iSCSI "lossy"? The reality is that most off-the-shelf Ethernet hardware deployed for iSCSI can lose packets, resulting in slow performance or application downtime. Learn how to assess your current iSCSI infrastructure and engineer an advanced iSCSI SAN infrastructure.

Web Seminars

What's the best way to keep your network safe from malware? In this web seminar, security expert Greg Shields suggests an alternative method to the traditional blacklisting approach that is common with anti-virus and anti-malware solutions.

eLearning Series

We bring the experts direct to you to share their real-world perspective and expertise. During each event, three sessions stream in real time, so you can learn, ask questions, and get solutions.
Upcoming event: Getting the Most with Exchange 2010 with Paul Robichaux

Subscribe to Windows IT Pro!

Windows is a trademark of the Microsoft group of companies. Windows IT Pro is used by Penton Media Inc. under license from owner.