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I've been using Bitcoin Qt on my work computer (my only working computer at the moment) but last week Windows 7 decided that the program's bypassing the firewall to download the blockchain was a security risk and blocked it from doing so. I'm not the network administrator and fiddling with the firewall settings I can access hasn't done anything. While it is absolutely possible that I am missing some obvious solution, I've given up on fixing this. what I'd like to do now is download another offline wallet - one that does not need the entire blockchain - and import my Qt backup. I've tried MultiBit & Electrum, neither of which seem to work (although, again, it is possible that I'm missing something). Is there another program I can use? Should I wait until my laptop is fixed and just re-install BTC Qt on that? Am I out of luck?
fyi: Using the default (or semi-default) settings, when Windows 7 blocks Bitcoin-qt it will still be able to download the blockchain. – Tom van der Woerdt – 2013-04-22T19:51:34.627
@Tom van der Woerdt: But it won't sync. It says “0 active connections to bitcoin network.” – cyrana – 2013-04-22T20:10:07.477
see http://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/questions/2300/copy-wallet-to-electrum-or-multibit. - based on the info given by Gary Rowe, Multibit should support wallet.dat imports, although I couldn't find any evidence of this on their site. When I switched to Electrum, I dumped my old wallet using pywallet and then copied the relevant private keys over(only like 5 of them had any balance, and they were all labelled which made them easier to locate). If you choose an online wallet, I believe most of them can import using the pasted output of
– 7anner – 2013-04-23T01:02:58.540pywallet.py -dumpwallet.