![]() Untick “Show splash screen” and “Start Multi-sync”. Tick “Start Minimized” and “Connect on Startup”. We’re only interested in 3 pages “Startup”, “Sync” and “Multi-sync”. If it already works then you shouldn’t need to alter the “Connection” page. The first step is to get MPE setup correctly. My mini guide for that is UPGRADE YOUR OS! I’m running Windows 7 but this should work the same with Vista. We are going to use MPE, Windows Task Scheduler and Windows Event Viewer. This guide is just covering how to get it to do everything automatically. Took me like an hour to work it out and searching the depths of the interweb it seems nobody else on the planet has posted how to do this so I felt it would be a nice thing to share.Ī word of warning, this is a bit tricky and is not recommended for noobs ? I’m going to assume you have MPE installed and have it fully working with your phone already. The goal is to get MPE to load automatically when the phone is connected, do an automatic multi-sync and then close MPE. ![]() How much effort is that?! Ok, not much but it’s more than I can be bothered doing each time. That’s means loading it from the start menu and then clicking the multi-sync option. It works really well but you have to connect the phone and then manually load MyPhoneExplorer. I sync my contacts, calendar, notes, tasks and custom directories. What is the goal? I use a free application called MyPhoneExplorer (MPE) to sync Outlook 2010 x32 with my phone. Now I have a shiny new Samsung Galaxy Note I thought it was a good time to take another stab. As you can imagine that was a bit annoying. The problem I had back then was that MyPhoneExplorer would get launched when any USB device was connected, not just the phone. I think that title gets a +5 on the geek scale! So, I’ve tried to do this before with my old HTC HD2 and had mixed results.
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