J
Jim Walsh
I'm using Outlook 2003. The online documentation and the MSKB both say that
Outlook 2003 will convert outgoing mail to plain text with an accompanying
MS-TNEF encloded attachment if the sender has formatted the message using
Rich Text. But, that it will not do such encoding if the format is either
plain text or HTML.
That does not seem to be working for me. I have sent a message to my
web-based client from Outlook 2003. I have attached a Word document (with or
without the DOC extension) to the message. Regardless of whether I use HTML,
Plain Text, or RTF, my web-based client always receives the messge with an
attachment named "application.ms-tnef".
Seems to me that there ought to be a way to send messages with attachments
of arbitrary format to clients not using a MS e-mail program, and have them
receive them as a readable attachment, without having to use some special
tool to unpack the ms-tnef object.
Thanks for your help.
Jim
Outlook 2003 will convert outgoing mail to plain text with an accompanying
MS-TNEF encloded attachment if the sender has formatted the message using
Rich Text. But, that it will not do such encoding if the format is either
plain text or HTML.
That does not seem to be working for me. I have sent a message to my
web-based client from Outlook 2003. I have attached a Word document (with or
without the DOC extension) to the message. Regardless of whether I use HTML,
Plain Text, or RTF, my web-based client always receives the messge with an
attachment named "application.ms-tnef".
Seems to me that there ought to be a way to send messages with attachments
of arbitrary format to clients not using a MS e-mail program, and have them
receive them as a readable attachment, without having to use some special
tool to unpack the ms-tnef object.
Thanks for your help.
Jim