N
ngreen
Hi.
We have a client who has passed us a form they use for corporate emails.
Alongside the usual signature details (name, address, phone nos, email
address), there is a panel with their "offer" of the month, which they change
monthly.
Below the signature, is a standard legal disclaimer.
At the bottom, there is a coloured panel containing the business address and
contact details.
What they would like us to do, is adapt the form so that the user details
are extracted from Active Directory, so that everyone's email footers look
the same.
The .oft file we have been passed from the client as an example, is dynamic
in relation to resizing the email window.
We have found a VBScript online (from Spiceworks), that extracts user
details from AD and puts them into a Word file and then adds it into the
signature area of Outlook. This is meant to go in to users' logon scripts.
Adapting .oft details to go into a signature in this manner looks very
tricky indeed!
The questions boil down to: Is this a viable thing at all ? Is the .oft file
the best method ? If not, is there a better one ?
I hope my explanation of the problem makes sense. If not, I can try and
clarify.
Thanks!
Nick.
We have a client who has passed us a form they use for corporate emails.
Alongside the usual signature details (name, address, phone nos, email
address), there is a panel with their "offer" of the month, which they change
monthly.
Below the signature, is a standard legal disclaimer.
At the bottom, there is a coloured panel containing the business address and
contact details.
What they would like us to do, is adapt the form so that the user details
are extracted from Active Directory, so that everyone's email footers look
the same.
The .oft file we have been passed from the client as an example, is dynamic
in relation to resizing the email window.
We have found a VBScript online (from Spiceworks), that extracts user
details from AD and puts them into a Word file and then adds it into the
signature area of Outlook. This is meant to go in to users' logon scripts.
Adapting .oft details to go into a signature in this manner looks very
tricky indeed!
The questions boil down to: Is this a viable thing at all ? Is the .oft file
the best method ? If not, is there a better one ?
I hope my explanation of the problem makes sense. If not, I can try and
clarify.
Thanks!
Nick.