Domino Upgrade

VersionSupport end
5.0
6.0
6.5
7.0
Upgrade to 8.5x now!
(see the full Lotus lifcyle) To make your upgrade a success use the Upgrade Cheat Sheet. Contemplating to replace Notes? You have to read this!

Search

Reference

1. Learn XPages online
2. Communicate with IBMers and Lotus Experts using Sametime

About Me

I am the "IBM Collaboration & Productivity Advisor" for IBM Asia Pacific. I'm based in Singapore.
Reach out to me via:
Follow notessensei on Twitter
(posts)
Skype
Sametime
IBM
Facebook
LinkedIn
XING
Amazon Store
Amazon Kindle

Mobile tag

Twitter

Languages

Other languages on request.

Visitors

Useful Tools

Get Firefox
Use OpenDNS
The support for Windows XP is coming to an end and has . Time to consider an alternative to move on. sounds like a lot of time, but, like an object in a mirror, it is closer than you think.

« Heart(disk) transplant* | Main| ADSL2 - ADSL2+ and customer service »

NSF to PST converter

In the last 5 month I got about 1000 search referrer hits with the search topic. My short answer to that question would be: Don't do it! However as the Buddha says: "You pick the level of your suffering yourself", there is a long answer too. I can understand, that people don't know where Hannover is or can/want to wait for it. Instead of "pouring out the baby with the bath", one can stick with Domino backends and use the Outlook connector for Domino to have it both ways: Outlook on the front end and Domino as reliable, cost effective and scalable infrastructure behind. Both IBM/Lotus and Microsoft offer a flavour of it.
But if you have to go:  There are a number of 3rd party vendors who offer migration products and services: are some examples. Microsoft also provides tools and advice.
 
My personal take: Stick with Domino. Just try to get that old email backup (was it a pst?) from your Outlook/95 backup opened in Outlook 2003 or use the build in fulltext search in the Outlook client. Use the connector provided by IBM if you must have Outlook.... or wait for Hannover. upgrade to Notes 8 (You also can enjoy yourself with R7 and the OpenNTF eMail template until then).

If you want to change something for the sake of changing why not implement "Getting Things Done with Lotus Notes"?

Update:
It cuts both ways. If you came to your senses and want to move Microsoft stuff to Notes (stuff as in Outlook, Office and Sharepoint) you have plenty of help too:

Comments

Gravatar Image1 - No. DXL is XML and Outlook is -- not documented? At least the documentation says use the Outlook APIs, don't tamper with the PSD files. If you have to you could recreate the Domino document from the DominoDXL and use a migration tool.
As stated before: you pick the level of your suffering yourself!
stw

Gravatar Image2 - You Can use Recover Data for NSF tool to get back your nsf emails easily from { Link }

Gravatar Image3 - Is there a way in which I can insert a set of messages which are in Domino XML format into an existing PST file with out invoking the Outlook mail client(without using the outlook application)

Gravatar Image4 - Outlook to Lotus Notes provides vast features in its component like contacts. However, when you convert PST to NSF file with Outlook to Notes software, software transfers not only contacts but other components too with least modifications in data.

Gravatar Image5 - Stellar Phoenix NSF to PST Converter is one of the most impressive and effective tool I have found for the conversion of emails and other data of Lotus Notes into .PST file. The software is very easy to use and supports all version of Lotus notes. Apart from NSF to PST conversion the tool also provides the option to save the items as .eml and .msg. For detail features, please visit:{ Link }

Post A Comment

Please note: Comments without a valid and working eMail address will be removed. This is my site, so I decide what stays here and what goes.

:-D:-o:-p:-x:-(:-):-\:angry::cool::cry::emb::grin::huh::laugh::rolleyes:;-)

Disclaimer

This site is in no way affiliated, endorsed, sanctioned, supported, nor enlightened by Lotus Software nor IBM Corporation. I may be an employee, but the opinions, theories, facts, etc. presented here are my own and are in now way given in any official capacity. In short, these are my words and this is my site, not IBM's - and don't even begin to think otherwise. (Disclaimer shamelessly plugged from Rocky Oliver)
© 2003 - 2012 Stephan H. Wissel - all rights reserved as listed here: Creative Commons License
Unless otherwise labeled by its originating author, the content found on this site is made available under the terms of an Attribution/NonCommercial/ShareAlike Creative Commons License, with the exception that no rights are granted -- since they are not mine to grant -- in any logo, graphic design, trademarks or trade names of any type.