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- #Attachment tamer for yosemite how to#
- #Attachment tamer for yosemite Pc#
- #Attachment tamer for yosemite mac#
At the moment I have had to boot up my old PC to send such emails to them so they are happy. They are clients who are too busy and just want to receive the attachments they are expecting from me.
#Attachment tamer for yosemite mac#
Please forgive me if I am slow catching up with you.Ī) I understand your advice that I should give to recipients who use Outlook on how they should best receive emails from Mac users, but this is not a solution for me, as I cannot teach all my recipients such things - 1) there are too many and 2) they won't listen or will choose not to listen. Hi Barney - thank you so much for your help and advice. SO - is there any way to ensure we can FORCE Mail to send as plain text? So my theory is that there is a bug in Mac Mail, in that if any text is put in the body of the email, the desire to sedn it as pain text is overwritten and the email is sent as RFT - hence Outlook does what it does and the problem exists. If I create a new email as plain text, attach the jgp files, but only type in a subject and do not type anything in the main body of the email, then then Outlook recipient recieves the enail with the jpgs as attachments - which is what we want.īut if I type anything (or have an automatic signature) in the body of the email, then the Outlook recipient does not receive any attachments, but has the poictures embedded in the body of the email instead. So I take back my comment that we cannot blame Outlook :-) OK - I do not know what was wrong originally, but after a complete close down and reboot, the emails going to other Macs and Thunderbird are OK with the file attached.
#Attachment tamer for yosemite how to#
You have the option to view it as HTML, but I don't know how to have Outlook show in plain text from the menus. Our work exchange server forces all email to plain text. The other option is to point your recipients to these:Īnother thing they can try is to view the email as plain text.
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Make your signature such that it also changes the font. Change your Font when you start composing the message.
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Force Outlook to recognize the email as an html message. Also, each version has different bugs that respond differently.īesides Attachment Tamer, you could try going the other direction on your format. It was designed to work completely within the Exchange server world, then modified to handled "internet" email. Outlook is likely the worlds crappiest email client. That "embedded" thing is a bug in the version of Outlook your recipients are using. Great!īUT since upgrading to Mountain Lion, this no longer works and the photos are ALWAYS embedded in the email and do not appear as attachments to the recipient. Thie email would then be received by the recipient (on a mac or in outlook on a PC) with the jpegs as attachements. With help from this forum I worked out that if I did the following, it would work:ġ) export the photos I want to send from iPhoto into a folder on my desktopĢ) within mail, make sure the preferences were set to a) always send windows friendly attachments and b) to send emails as plain text and c) have no signature attached to the email footģ) I would then compose my email, double check it was being sent as plain text by clicking the plain text icon in the ribbon and then click the "attach file" icon (paperclip), navigate to the folder on my desktop and select the jpg files to attach. They always went embedded and not as an "jpg attachment" that the recipient could then save and use. When I first got my iMac with Snow Leopard, I had a problem getting photos attached to emails.
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