T
thricipio
I've recently re-installed OL-2000 on a newly refreshed laptop (DELL Inspiron
8600) -- refreshed meaning: a new harddrive and re-install of WinXP·Home, and
all my applications.
Now, when I view old messages I created (authored) on my previous laptop
(Inspiron 1000); i.e., messages from my restored <outlook.pst> or other
archived <*.pst> files, in almost all cases, the displayed font is {Times New
Roman · Regular · 10}. However, the font used to compose these messages (and
subsequently displayed) on my old system was {Verdana · Regular · 10}.
Here's what might be a clue as to what the problem may be: I just created
an automatic signature using [Signature Picker]. Even though the font used
to create the signature was Verdana (and if I go back into Signature Picker,
it displays as Verdana), when I go to create a new message, the displayed
signature text is — you guessed it — Times New Roman.
I sure would like to fix this. If anyone can point me in the right
direction, I'd be very grateful.
Thanks ahead of time for whatever help you can provide.
—MG
8600) -- refreshed meaning: a new harddrive and re-install of WinXP·Home, and
all my applications.
Now, when I view old messages I created (authored) on my previous laptop
(Inspiron 1000); i.e., messages from my restored <outlook.pst> or other
archived <*.pst> files, in almost all cases, the displayed font is {Times New
Roman · Regular · 10}. However, the font used to compose these messages (and
subsequently displayed) on my old system was {Verdana · Regular · 10}.
Here's what might be a clue as to what the problem may be: I just created
an automatic signature using [Signature Picker]. Even though the font used
to create the signature was Verdana (and if I go back into Signature Picker,
it displays as Verdana), when I go to create a new message, the displayed
signature text is — you guessed it — Times New Roman.
I sure would like to fix this. If anyone can point me in the right
direction, I'd be very grateful.
Thanks ahead of time for whatever help you can provide.
—MG