Click to expand.I haven't done this in years. I don't like Apple Mail anymore. But I do remember dealing with this years ago. I don't recall all the steps. But I can try to point you in the right direction.
From the Quality menu, choose the quality you want the file to be in. The first four options all export the song in the compressed AAC format for iTunes. The higher the quality, the larger the file size will be. You can also choose uncompressed to generate an AIF file, but that will also increase the file size significantly.
What you need to do, is find a program that is compatible with both email programs. I ended up using Mozilla Thunderbird.
Which was a free email program. What I found was that Entourage/Outlook was able to export to a format that Thunderbird could import. I then used Thunderbird to export to Apple Mail. Try doing some google searching for solutions like that, and see if that gets you closer to a workable solution. Best of luck to you. The Thunderbird solution requires installing Thunderbird on PC.
Thunderbird can import PST files as long as Outlook is installed on the same PC. Once all the mail is in Thundebird, you can use it to export to mbox files, which Apple Mail can read.
There are a lot of recent roadblocks to this method though, the big one being if you have a 64bit version of Outlook. Thunderbird is 32bit and Windows won't let 32bit and 64bit software to talk to each other. Internet explorer for macbook pro. It also tends to not work if the PSTs had folder structures that were complex and multiple levels deep. How much mail is in the PST files?
If it isn't a lot and you have decent broadband, the easy way might be to sign up for an email account that provides IMAP access, like Gmail. Set it up on Outlook on a PC and in Mail on the new Mac. Open the PSTs in Outlook and then right-click and copy the messages and folders up to the gmail account, IMAP will sync everything down to the Mac. For contacts and calendars, you can use Outlook to export vcard/csv and iCal files. This obviously isn't the fastest method, but I've used it a couple of times for users with less than 5GB of mail and it worked very well and is done in a couple hours usually. The Thunderbird solution requires installing Thunderbird on PC.
Thunderbird can import PST files as long as Outlook is installed on the same PC. Once all the mail is in Thundebird, you can use it to export to mbox files, which Apple Mail can read. There are a lot of recent roadblocks to this method though, the big one being if you have a 64bit version of Outlook. Thunderbird is 32bit and Windows won't let 32bit and 64bit software to talk to each other.
It also tends to not work if the PSTs had folder structures that were complex and multiple levels deep. How much mail is in the PST files? If it isn't a lot and you have decent broadband, the easy way might be to sign up for an email account that provides IMAP access, like Gmail. Set it up on Outlook on a PC and in Mail on the new Mac. Open the PSTs in Outlook and then right-click and copy the messages and folders up to the gmail account, IMAP will sync everything down to the Mac. For contacts and calendars, you can use Outlook to export vcard/csv and iCal files.