That's correct, although I almost always go into Activity Monitor and
look for Database Daemon there just to be certain it is gone.

On 8/12/05, Barbara Hodge <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>  II recently did this recently and it worked perfectly – one important
> point, though: turn off Database Demon (in activities monitor, within
> Utilities, in Applications). IE quit D Demon on both computers first –
> otherwise the info won't transfer. Perhaps turning off Office Notifications
> does the same?
>  
>  Barbara
>  
>  ________________________________
> From: Jeff Abbott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>  Reply-To: "Entourage:mac Talk"
> <[email protected]>
>  Date: Fri, 12 Aug 2005 11:07:11 -0500
>  To: "Entourage:mac Talk"
> <[email protected]>
>  Subject: Taking Entourage on the road
>  
>  
> Hi:
>  
>  I am a recent convert to Entourage and really like how it allows you to
> link information. I have also become heavily reliant on the Project Manager
> for my work. I run Entourage 2004 on OS 10.3.9 on a G4 iMac. I'm not a
> techie.
>  
>  I write suspense novels and am about to leave on a book tour, and I would
> like to take all my project information with me on my travels. I have a
> Pismo PowerBook running 10.3.6. What is the best way to get my Entourage
> 2004 information up and running on my laptop? I consulted the Missing Manual
> for Office 2004 and couldn't find information on how to do this. I also
> couldn't find it on the Entourage help page, but that could easily be pilot
> error. (there was reference to copying a database, but I don't know where
> this file might be found—I located one file called "Entourage Data", but it
> was in a Palm folder and I thought it wasn't the right one.) Note: I also
> sync my Entourage tasks, contacts, and calendar to a Tungsten T3—what I
> really want to have on the laptop are my emails and my project center
> information.
>  
>  Ideally, I could move all my Entourage info from my desktop to my laptop,
> then move it back and not lose anything. I suspect there's one Database file
> to hold all email, calendar, project info, etc.? Is it dangerous to move it
> back and forth between two computers? I will only need to move it back and
> forth a few times during the next month or so. Or if this is a Bad Idea, I
> would be interested in knowing the perils as well.
>  
>  Thank you in advance for any information, and my apologies if this is an
> exceedingly dumb question with an obvious answer.
>  
>  Regards,
>  Jeff
>  -- 
>  Jeff Abbott
>  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  PANIC--available August 18, 2005 from Dutton
>  "Highly recommended."--Booklist (starred review)
>  "A superior, fast-paced thriller."--Publishers' Weekly
>  http://www.jeffabbott.com
>  
>
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