Obviously Outlook shares some settings with Outlook. A few of the older ones were not complete but all the new emails worked fine. Unchecked that and Whammo I now get HTML in my Outlook emails. SpiceWorld continues to focus on connecting IT pros with the tools, content. Had a look at Outlook Express which comes as part of Office, opened the program and found a setting there that barred HTML content in received emails. Hello SpiceHeads! We’re excited to announce that the SpiceWorld 2022 Call for Speakers is open! Now that we’re hybrid, we’ll be accepting both virtual and in-person presentations.
I had to get the user back to production so I just recreated her Windows profile like the other two cases. I forgot to test the "save and then send" that you asked me to do. Doing this resulted in a slightly different error message of "the operation failed". I took a screenshot, saved it as a png, and tried to attach it as a file to the email (not just a copy/paste into the body content). I can recreate the same behavior on an original new email by simply pasting an image from clipboard into the email.Īnother thing to note is that with these messed up profiles, you can't attach a file to send either. Now that that email has an image on it, you cannot reply to it.
In the HtmlText property of the HTML text control, we can combine the application’s data with HTML tags to format into a nice-looking report with the tabular data in the Cart Collection.
However, when an email hits our Exchange server, it gets a signature applied to it from Exclaimer Signature Manager that includes our company logo. Use the ‘HTML text’ control to preview what you can send as an input to the Office 365 Outlook connector (under Insert > Text > HTML text). So, I could have that user send a test email to themselves and it would work. So, their new original emails were working because there was just text in them. What seems to matter is if the email has any graphical or file content. It seems to not matter so much that it's a new email or a reply.