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-   -   GIF files (http://www.outlookbanter.com/outlook-express/39022-gif-files.html)

Bill January 27th 07 03:29 AM

GIF files
 
I Need some help with settings in a new computer.

I have received an email that contains a number of illustrations as
attachments in gif format that do not resolve when I open the mail.

I've cleared temporary internet files to no avail.

Have also looked in Tools/Options/Read and can't see any relevant settings.

XP Home SP2 fully patched.
OE6










Bruce Hagen January 27th 07 03:42 AM

GIF files
 
Did you open the attachment as well as the mail?

Tools | Options | Security. Uncheck: " Do not allow
attachments.................".

Do you see a red X where the picture should be?
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~

"Bill" wrote in message
...
I Need some help with settings in a new computer.

I have received an email that contains a number of illustrations as
attachments in gif format that do not resolve when I open the mail.

I've cleared temporary internet files to no avail.

Have also looked in Tools/Options/Read and can't see any relevant
settings.

XP Home SP2 fully patched.
OE6











Bill January 27th 07 04:01 AM

GIF files
 
Hi Bruce

Yes had unchecked that "Do not allow etc"

Its not a red X but a small logo consisting of a red square, a green circle
and a blue triangle with the name of the file next to it.

The email was sent from a Hotmail Account - am wondering if that is the
reason?When I double click on the file it opens in Picture Manager and the
image is not what I would have expected.

Thanks

Bill

"Bruce Hagen" wrote in message
...
Did you open the attachment as well as the mail?

Tools | Options | Security. Uncheck: " Do not allow
attachments.................".

Do you see a red X where the picture should be?
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~

"Bill" wrote in message
...
I Need some help with settings in a new computer.

I have received an email that contains a number of illustrations as
attachments in gif format that do not resolve when I open the mail.

I've cleared temporary internet files to no avail.

Have also looked in Tools/Options/Read and can't see any relevant
settings.

XP Home SP2 fully patched.
OE6













Bruce Hagen January 27th 07 04:09 AM

GIF files
 
QP
Its not a red X but a small logo consisting of a red square, a green circle
and a blue triangle with the name of the file next to it.
/QP

I have not had the pleasure of seeing this before. It may be /how/ it was
sent, but other than that, I have no idea.

Please keep checking back here. Someone else may well have an answer for
you.
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Hi Bruce

Yes had unchecked that "Do not allow etc"

Its not a red X but a small logo consisting of a red square, a green
circle
and a blue triangle with the name of the file next to it.

The email was sent from a Hotmail Account - am wondering if that is the
reason?When I double click on the file it opens in Picture Manager and the
image is not what I would have expected.

Thanks

Bill

"Bruce Hagen" wrote in message
...
Did you open the attachment as well as the mail?

Tools | Options | Security. Uncheck: " Do not allow
attachments.................".

Do you see a red X where the picture should be?
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~

"Bill" wrote in message
...
I Need some help with settings in a new computer.

I have received an email that contains a number of illustrations as
attachments in gif format that do not resolve when I open the mail.

I've cleared temporary internet files to no avail.

Have also looked in Tools/Options/Read and can't see any relevant
settings.

XP Home SP2 fully patched.
OE6














Bill January 27th 07 04:22 AM

GIF files
 
Bruce

Your very own copy:



BTW what is "IB-CA"?

"Bruce Hagen" wrote in message
...
QP
Its not a red X but a small logo consisting of a red square, a green
circle
and a blue triangle with the name of the file next to it.
/QP

I have not had the pleasure of seeing this before. It may be /how/ it was
sent, but other than that, I have no idea.

Please keep checking back here. Someone else may well have an answer for
you.
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~






Bruce Hagen January 27th 07 04:40 AM

GIF files
 
Bill,

Tried to open it with a dozen programs. Checked the properties also. I
believe it was not sent in a way that is compatible with OE and any Windows
program I have. I only see what you did.

Can you get in touch with the sender and narrow it down?
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express

~IB-CA~ = Imperial Beach, CA

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Bruce

Your very own copy:



BTW what is "IB-CA"?

"Bruce Hagen" wrote in message
...
QP
Its not a red X but a small logo consisting of a red square, a green
circle
and a blue triangle with the name of the file next to it.
/QP

I have not had the pleasure of seeing this before. It may be /how/ it was
sent, but other than that, I have no idea.

Please keep checking back here. Someone else may well have an answer for
you.
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~






Bill January 27th 07 04:50 AM

GIF files
 
Bruce

Thanks for all your troubles, I'll get onto the sender - the text seems to
indicate a good joke - but need the graphics!

Bill

Hunter Valley, NSW - red wine country


"Bruce Hagen" wrote in message
...
Bill,

Tried to open it with a dozen programs. Checked the properties also. I
believe it was not sent in a way that is compatible with OE and any
Windows program I have. I only see what you did.

Can you get in touch with the sender and narrow it down?
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express

~IB-CA~ = Imperial Beach, CA




Bruce Hagen January 27th 07 04:58 AM

GIF files
 
This is all I got. At least you got some text. w

begin 666 Snippy0001.jpg
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0*?B*U***^N2LK(_GFI-U)NMV[A1113,S_V0``
`end
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~


"Bill" wrote in message
...
Bruce

Thanks for all your troubles, I'll get onto the sender - the text seems to
indicate a good joke - but need the graphics!

Bill

Hunter Valley, NSW - red wine country


"Bruce Hagen" wrote in message
...
Bill,

Tried to open it with a dozen programs. Checked the properties also. I
believe it was not sent in a way that is compatible with OE and any
Windows program I have. I only see what you did.

Can you get in touch with the sender and narrow it down?
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express

~IB-CA~ = Imperial Beach, CA





Bruce Hagen January 27th 07 05:05 AM

GIF files
 

"Bruce Hagen" wrote in message
...
This is all I got. At least you got some text. w



Hmmm. Pasted the message code, (Ctrl+F3) and it ended up showing the /lousy/
picture. Let me try this again.

Paste

begin 666 Snippy0001.jpg
M_]C_X `02D9)1@`!`0$`8 !@``#_VP!#``,"`@,"`@,#`P,$`P,$!0@%!00$
M!0H'!P8(# H,# L*"PL-#A(0#0X1#@L+$!80$1,4%145# \7&!84&!(4%13_
MVP!#`0,$! 4$!0D%!0D4#0L-%!04%!04%!04%!04%!04%!04%!04%!04%!04
M%!04%!04%!04%!04%!04%!04%!04%!3_P `1" `X`)$#`2(``A$!`Q$!_\0`
M'P```04!`0$!`0$```````````$"`P0%!@("0H+_\0`M1 ``@$#`P($`P4%
M! 0```%]`0(#``01!1(A,4$&$U%A!R)Q%#*!D:$((T*QP152T? D,V)R@@D*
M%A8&1HE)BH*2HT-38W.#DZ0T1%1D=(24I35%565UA96F-D969G:&EJW1U
M=G=X7J#A(6&AXB)BI*3E)66EYB9FJ*CI*6FIZBIJK*SM+6VM[BYNL+#Q,7&
MQ\C)RM+3U-76U]C9VN'BX^3EYN?HZKQ\O/T]?;W^/GZ_\0`'P$``P$!`0$!
M`0$!`0````````$"`P0%!@("0H+_\0`M1$``@$"! 0#! %! 0``0)W``$"
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-$149'2$E*4U155E=865IC9&5F9VAI:G-T=79W'EZ@H.$
MA8:'B(F*DI.4E9:7F)F:HJ.DI::GJ*FJLK.TM;:WN+FZPL/$Q;'R,G*TM/4
MU=;7V-G:XN/DY;GZ.GJ\O/T]?;W^/GZ_]H`# ,!``(1`Q$`/P#]4Z**YSQI
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0*?B*U***^N2LK(_GFI-U)NMV[A1113,S_V0``

/Paste
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~


Bill January 27th 07 05:31 AM

GIF files
 
Bruce

The whole message is quite long and contains ten gifs - I only "snippy'd"
one for illustration purposes. My correspondent will get back to me over the
next day or two. I suspect he has cut and pasted his original source and
lost the gifs in the process, rather than just forwarding the message. Make
sense?

Bill




Bruce Hagen January 27th 07 05:39 AM

GIF files
 
QP
I suspect he has cut and pasted his original source and lost the gifs in the
process, rather than just forwarding the message. Make sense?
/QP

More sense than I have come up with.

I'm not a Hotmail person, but with OE, you cannot copy/paste a picture into
an e-mail and expect the recipient to see it. You have to save it to your
HDD and then either insert it, or attach it. Betcha that's the problem.
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Bruce

The whole message is quite long and contains ten gifs - I only "snippy'd"
one for illustration purposes. My correspondent will get back to me over
the next day or two. I suspect he has cut and pasted his original source
and lost the gifs in the process, rather than just forwarding the message.
Make sense?

Bill





C.Wilder January 27th 07 09:35 AM

GIF files
 
Bill wrote:
Bruce

The whole message is quite long and contains ten gifs - I only
"snippy'd" one for illustration purposes. My correspondent will get
back to me over the next day or two. I suspect he has cut and pasted
his original source and lost the gifs in the process, rather than
just forwarding the message. Make sense?

Bill


Bill. If you attempt to forward a faulty message can you then see all the
graphics before you actually send it off?

CW



Bill January 27th 07 05:46 PM

GIF files
 

"C.Wilder" wrote in message
erio.net...
Bill


Bill. If you attempt to forward a faulty message can you then see all the
graphics before you actually send it off?

CW

No - just message about images not being found.

Thanks for input

Bill






Michael Santovec January 27th 07 08:12 PM

GIF files
 
That's an Active-X logo. It means that the HTML code needs to run an
Active-X program to display the image and it can't due to security
settings or other problems.

If you just want to see the images, then select Tools, Options, Read,
Read All messages in plain text. Then switch to another message and
back to the problem one. The images should appear as attachments.

Or you could try changing the security zone for OE to Internet and see
if that works.

--

Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm


"Bill" wrote in message
...
Bruce

Your very own copy:



BTW what is "IB-CA"?

"Bruce Hagen" wrote in message
...
QP
Its not a red X but a small logo consisting of a red square, a green
circle
and a blue triangle with the name of the file next to it.
/QP

I have not had the pleasure of seeing this before. It may be /how/ it
was
sent, but other than that, I have no idea.

Please keep checking back here. Someone else may well have an answer
for
you.
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~







Bill January 27th 07 09:16 PM

GIF files
 
Mike

OK Thanks - I can see as attachments - but when I change settings in
Tools|Options|Security I still can't get the images to display "inline".
Being a number of them its hard to relate the text to the images.

Any more ideas?

Bill


"Michael Santovec" wrote in message
...
That's an Active-X logo. It means that the HTML code needs to run an
Active-X program to display the image and it can't due to security
settings or other problems.

If you just want to see the images, then select Tools, Options, Read, Read
All messages in plain text. Then switch to another message and back to
the problem one. The images should appear as attachments.

Or you could try changing the security zone for OE to Internet and see if
that works.

--

Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm


"Bill" wrote in message
...
Bruce

Your very own copy:



BTW what is "IB-CA"?

"Bruce Hagen" wrote in message
...
QP
Its not a red X but a small logo consisting of a red square, a green
circle
and a blue triangle with the name of the file next to it.
/QP

I have not had the pleasure of seeing this before. It may be /how/ it
was
sent, but other than that, I have no idea.

Please keep checking back here. Someone else may well have an answer for
you.
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~









Michael Santovec January 29th 07 12:26 AM

GIF files
 
There's probably something screwy in the message HTML code.

If you do a Ctrl-F2 while viewing the message, that will open a Window
with the HTML code. You can copy/paste that here so that we can see it.

--

Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm


"Bill" wrote in message
...
Mike

OK Thanks - I can see as attachments - but when I change settings in
Tools|Options|Security I still can't get the images to display
"inline". Being a number of them its hard to relate the text to the
images.

Any more ideas?

Bill


"Michael Santovec" wrote in message
...
That's an Active-X logo. It means that the HTML code needs to run an
Active-X program to display the image and it can't due to security
settings or other problems.

If you just want to see the images, then select Tools, Options, Read,
Read All messages in plain text. Then switch to another message and
back to the problem one. The images should appear as attachments.

Or you could try changing the security zone for OE to Internet and
see if that works.

--

Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm


"Bill" wrote in message
...
Bruce

Your very own copy:



BTW what is "IB-CA"?

"Bruce Hagen" wrote in message
...
QP
Its not a red X but a small logo consisting of a red square, a
green circle
and a blue triangle with the name of the file next to it.
/QP

I have not had the pleasure of seeing this before. It may be /how/
it was
sent, but other than that, I have no idea.

Please keep checking back here. Someone else may well have an
answer for
you.
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~










Bill January 29th 07 01:08 AM

GIF files
 
Follows:

htmldiv style='background-color:'PBRBR/P
BLOCKQUOTE style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #a0c6e5
2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"FONT style="FONT-SIZE: 11px; FONT-FAMILY:
tahoma,sans-serif"BR
META content="Microsoft SafeHTML" name=Generator
STYLE
/STYLE

DIV /DIV
DIV dir=ltr align=leftFONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2/FONT /DIV
BLOCKQUOTE dir=ltr style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"
DIV class=OutlookMessageHeader lang=en-us dir=ltr align=leftFONT
face=Arial color=#0000ff size=2FONT color=#000000Does the statement
"Because we've always done it that way" ring any bells? /FONTFONT
size=3BR/FONT/FONT/DIV
DIV
PFONT face=ArialFONT
size=2BR      &nb sp;       &nbsp ;        & nbsp;     
IMG alt=184ac0.gif/FONTBRBRFONT size=2When you see a Space Shuttle
sitting on its launch pad, there are two big booster rockets/FONTFONT
color=blue size=2 /FONT/FONTFONT face=Arial size=2attached to the
sides of the main fuel tank. These are solid rocket boosters, or SRBs.
BRThe SRBs are made by Thiokol at their factory at Utah. The engineers who
designed the SRBs would have preferred to make them a bit fatter, but the
SRBs had to be shipped by train from the factory to the launch site. The
railroad line from the factory happens to run BRthrough a tunnel in the
mountains. The SRBs had to fit through     /FONTIMG
alt=184acf.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRthat tunnel. The tunnel is
slightly wider than the railroad track/FONT
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"FONT face="Times New Roman" size=3 /FONT
P
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"FONT face="Times New Roman" size=3 /FONT
PFONT face=Arial color=#0000ff size=2/FONTBR
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPANFONT face=Arial
color=#0000ff size=2/FONT/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPAN/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPAN/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPAN/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPAN/SPANBR/FONTIMG
alt=184a52.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBRThe US standard railroad
gauge (distance between the rails) is 4 feet, 8.5 inches. BRThat's an
exceedingly odd number. Why was that gauge used? BRBRBecause that's the
way they built them in England and English expatriates built the US
Railroads.               BR 
                 
 /FONTIMG alt=184a62.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBRBRWhy did
the English build them like that? BRBRBecause the first rail lines were
built by the same people who built the pre-railroad tramways and that's the
gauge they used. BRBRWhy did "they" use that gauge then?    
                     
       
           BRBRBecause the people who
built the tramways used the same jigs and tools that they used for building
wagons, which used that wheel spacing. BR     /FONTIMG
alt=184a71.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBROkay! Why did the wagons have
that particular odd wheel spacing? BRBRWell if they tried to use any
other spacing, the wagon wheels would break on some of the old, long
distance roads in England, because that's the spacing of the wheel ruts.
BRBRSo who built those old rutted roads? BRBR     
                  /FONTIMG
alt=184a81.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBRImperial Rome built the first
long distance roads in Europe (and England) for their legions. /FONTFONT
face=Arial size=3  /FONTFONT face=Arial size=2The roads have been
used
ever since. BRBRAnd the ruts in the roads? BRBR /FONTIMG
alt=184a91.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBRRoman war chariots formed the
initial ruts, which everyone else had to match for fear of destroying their
wagon wheels. /FONTFONT face=Arial size=3BR/FONTBRFONT face=Arial
size=2Since the chariots were made for Imperial Rome, they/FONTFONT
face=Arial color=blue size=2 /FONTFONT face=Arial size=2were all alike
in the matter of wheel spacing..    /FONTIMG
alt=184aa0.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRThe United States standard
railroad gauge of 4 feet, 8.5 inches is derived from the original
specifications for an Imperial Roman war chariot./FONT BRFONT
face=Arial size=2And bureaucracies live forever. BRBRSo the next time
you are handed a specification and wonder what horse's ass came up with it,
you may be exactly right, /FONT/DIV
PFONT face=Arial size=3 /FONTFONT face=Arial size=2because the
Imperial Roman army  /FONTIMG alt=184ab0.gifFONT face="Times New
Roman" size=3 /FONT/P
PFONT face=Arial size=2chariots were made just wide enough to
accommodate the back ends of two war horses. BRBR/FONTFONT
face=Arial size=2BR/FONTFONT face=Arial size=2 BRBRSo, a
major Space Shuttle design feature of what is arguably the world's most
advanced transportation system was determined over two thousand years ago by
the width of a horse's ass./FONTFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3
/FONT/P
PFONT face=Arial size=3 /FONTFONT face=Arial size=2  
    BR/FONTIMG alt=184adf.gifFONT face=Arial size=5BR...
and you thought being a HORSE'S BACKSIDE wasn't important!/FONTA
href="http://www.incredimail.com/index.asp?id=409&lang=9"/AFONT
face="Times New Roman" size=3
/FONT/P/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLEBRFONT face="Times New Roman"
size=3 /FONT/TD/TR
TR
TDBR/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/TD/TR
TR
TDBR/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/P/TD/TR
TR
TDBR/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/P/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/P/DIVBRPRE
/PRE/BLOCKQUOTEBR/FONT/BLOCKQUOTE/divbr clear=allhrExpress
yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! a
href="http://g.msn.com/8HMBEN/2734??PS=47575" target="_top"MSN
Messenger/a Download today it's FREE!/html
PHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{35C0E555-BFFB-45B0-A889-139B99CA1A08}/ATT1423665.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{A69EB07C-1256-4E02-A309-4EBBD4CACE35}/ATT1423666.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{C8A6E1F0-AA08-41E4-9B33-ED3DA232B6CB}/ATT1423658.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{BCB7A7BE-7021-4F52-A626-36840D3EE055}/ATT1423659.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{9D1D0992-9C9E-48EB-B268-D4341F48E0F4}/ATT1423660.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{885C7314-760E-4775-AF17-A14FFBFEC8E3}/ATT1423661.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{D986EE56-7E2B-40FB-9977-AF456116F160}/ATT1423662.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{121714B6-E560-46D8-9191-BAB11A56B469}/ATT1423663.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{F44BF3DF-033D-4110-8E63-4BB4E648C9C9}/ATT1423664.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{2AE233DC-38D6-4611-A778-B378CB8F7B26}/ATT1423667.gif"/CENTERPHR/PNo
virus found in this incoming message.BR
Checked by AVG Free Edition.BR
Version: 7.5.432 / Virus Database: 268.17.12/653 - Release Date: 26/01/2007
11:11 AMBR



Thanks Bill



"Michael Santovec" wrote in message
...
There's probably something screwy in the message HTML code.

If you do a Ctrl-F2 while viewing the message, that will open a Window
with the HTML code. You can copy/paste that here so that we can see it.

--

Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm


"Bill" wrote in message
...
Mike

OK Thanks - I can see as attachments - but when I change settings in
Tools|Options|Security I still can't get the images to display "inline".
Being a number of them its hard to relate the text to the images.

Any more ideas?

Bill


"Michael Santovec" wrote in message
...
That's an Active-X logo. It means that the HTML code needs to run an
Active-X program to display the image and it can't due to security
settings or other problems.

If you just want to see the images, then select Tools, Options, Read,
Read All messages in plain text. Then switch to another message and
back to the problem one. The images should appear as attachments.

Or you could try changing the security zone for OE to Internet and see
if that works.

--

Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm


"Bill" wrote in message
...
Bruce

Your very own copy:



BTW what is "IB-CA"?

"Bruce Hagen" wrote in message
...
QP
Its not a red X but a small logo consisting of a red square, a green
circle
and a blue triangle with the name of the file next to it.
/QP

I have not had the pleasure of seeing this before. It may be /how/ it
was
sent, but other than that, I have no idea.

Please keep checking back here. Someone else may well have an answer
for
you.
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~












Jim Pickering January 29th 07 01:52 AM

GIF files
 
The code suggests your correspondent is sending mail using Windows Live mail
(the proposed replacement for Hotmail) and that program is not correctly
indicating a filepath to any image file, and the net result of that is that
when the message is sent, no image file is included. As an example, one gif
file is indicated by this tag IMG alt=184ac0.gif and is not found when the
message is sent since no drive/folder path to "184ac0.gif" is indicated.
The same problem exists throughout the code for all images.
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.



"Bill" wrote in message
...
Follows:

htmldiv style='background-color:'PBRBR/P
BLOCKQUOTE style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT:
#a0c6e5 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"FONT style="FONT-SIZE: 11px;
FONT-FAMILY: tahoma,sans-serif"BR
META content="Microsoft SafeHTML" name=Generator
STYLE
/STYLE

DIV /DIV
DIV dir=ltr align=leftFONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2/FONT /DIV
BLOCKQUOTE dir=ltr style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"
DIV class=OutlookMessageHeader lang=en-us dir=ltr align=leftFONT
face=Arial color=#0000ff size=2FONT color=#000000Does the statement
"Because we've always done it that way" ring any bells? /FONTFONT
size=3BR/FONT/FONT/DIV
DIV
PFONT face=ArialFONT
size=2BR      &nb sp;       &nbsp ;        & nbsp;     
IMG alt=184ac0.gif/FONTBRBRFONT size=2When you see a Space
Shuttle sitting on its launch pad, there are two big booster
rockets/FONTFONT color=blue size=2 /FONT/FONTFONT face=Arial
size=2attached to the sides of the main fuel tank. These are solid rocket
boosters, or SRBs. BRThe SRBs are made by Thiokol at their factory at
Utah. The engineers who designed the SRBs would have preferred to make
them a bit fatter, but the SRBs had to be shipped by train from the
factory to the launch site. The railroad line from the factory happens to
run BRthrough a tunnel in the mountains. The SRBs had to fit through
    /FONTIMG alt=184acf.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRthat
tunnel. The tunnel is slightly wider than the railroad track/FONT
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"FONT face="Times New Roman" size=3 /FONT
P
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"FONT face="Times New Roman" size=3 /FONT
PFONT face=Arial color=#0000ff size=2/FONTBR
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPANFONT face=Arial
color=#0000ff size=2/FONT/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPAN/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPAN/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPAN/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPAN/SPANBR/FONTIMG
alt=184a52.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBRThe US standard railroad
gauge (distance between the rails) is 4 feet, 8.5 inches. BRThat's an
exceedingly odd number. Why was that gauge used? BRBRBecause that's
the way they built them in England and English expatriates built the US
Railroads.               BR 
                 
 /FONTIMG alt=184a62.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBRBRWhy
did the English build them like that? BRBRBecause the first rail lines
were built by the same people who built the pre-railroad tramways and
that's the gauge they used. BRBRWhy did "they" use that gauge then?
                   
             
           BRBRBecause the people who
built the tramways used the same jigs and tools that they used for
building wagons, which used that wheel spacing. BR   
 /FONTIMG alt=184a71.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBROkay! Why
did the wagons have that particular odd wheel spacing? BRBRWell if
they tried to use any other spacing, the wagon wheels would break on some
of the old, long distance roads in England, because that's the spacing of
the wheel ruts. BRBRSo who built those old rutted roads?
BRBR                 
      /FONTIMG alt=184a81.gifFONT face=Arial
size=2BRBRImperial Rome built the first long distance roads in Europe
(and England) for their legions. /FONTFONT face=Arial size=3 
/FONTFONT face=Arial size=2The roads have been used
ever since. BRBRAnd the ruts in the roads? BRBR /FONTIMG
alt=184a91.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBRRoman war chariots formed
the initial ruts, which everyone else had to match for fear of destroying
their wagon wheels. /FONTFONT face=Arial size=3BR/FONTBRFONT
face=Arial size=2Since the chariots were made for Imperial Rome,
they/FONTFONT face=Arial color=blue size=2 /FONTFONT face=Arial
size=2were all alike in the matter of wheel spacing..  
 /FONTIMG alt=184aa0.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRThe United
States standard railroad gauge of 4 feet, 8.5 inches is derived from the
original specifications for an Imperial Roman war chariot./FONT
BRFONT face=Arial size=2And bureaucracies live forever. BRBRSo the
next time you are handed a specification and wonder what horse's ass came
up with it, you may be exactly right, /FONT/DIV
PFONT face=Arial size=3 /FONTFONT face=Arial size=2because
the Imperial Roman army  /FONTIMG alt=184ab0.gifFONT face="Times
New Roman" size=3 /FONT/P
PFONT face=Arial size=2chariots were made just wide enough to
accommodate the back ends of two war horses. BRBR/FONTFONT
face=Arial size=2BR/FONTFONT face=Arial size=2 BRBRSo, a
major Space Shuttle design feature of what is arguably the world's most
advanced transportation system was determined over two thousand years ago
by the width of a horse's ass./FONTFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3
/FONT/P
PFONT face=Arial size=3 /FONTFONT face=Arial size=2  
    BR/FONTIMG alt=184adf.gifFONT face=Arial
size=5BR... and you thought being a HORSE'S BACKSIDE wasn't
important!/FONTA
href="http://www.incredimail.com/index.asp?id=409&lang=9"/AFONT
face="Times New Roman" size=3
/FONT/P/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLEBRFONT face="Times New Roman"
size=3 /FONT/TD/TR
TR
TDBR/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/TD/TR
TR
TDBR/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/P/TD/TR
TR
TDBR/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/P/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/P/DIVBRPRE
/PRE/BLOCKQUOTEBR/FONT/BLOCKQUOTE/divbr clear=allhrExpress
yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! a
href="http://g.msn.com/8HMBEN/2734??PS=47575" target="_top"MSN
Messenger/a Download today it's FREE!/html
PHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{35C0E555-BFFB-45B0-A889-139B99CA1A08}/ATT1423665.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{A69EB07C-1256-4E02-A309-4EBBD4CACE35}/ATT1423666.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{C8A6E1F0-AA08-41E4-9B33-ED3DA232B6CB}/ATT1423658.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{BCB7A7BE-7021-4F52-A626-36840D3EE055}/ATT1423659.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{9D1D0992-9C9E-48EB-B268-D4341F48E0F4}/ATT1423660.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{885C7314-760E-4775-AF17-A14FFBFEC8E3}/ATT1423661.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{D986EE56-7E2B-40FB-9977-AF456116F160}/ATT1423662.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{121714B6-E560-46D8-9191-BAB11A56B469}/ATT1423663.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{F44BF3DF-033D-4110-8E63-4BB4E648C9C9}/ATT1423664.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{2AE233DC-38D6-4611-A778-B378CB8F7B26}/ATT1423667.gif"/CENTERPHR/PNo
virus found in this incoming message.BR
Checked by AVG Free Edition.BR
Version: 7.5.432 / Virus Database: 268.17.12/653 - Release Date:
26/01/2007 11:11 AMBR



Thanks Bill



"Michael Santovec" wrote in message
...
There's probably something screwy in the message HTML code.

If you do a Ctrl-F2 while viewing the message, that will open a Window
with the HTML code. You can copy/paste that here so that we can see it.

--

Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm


"Bill" wrote in message
...
Mike

OK Thanks - I can see as attachments - but when I change settings in
Tools|Options|Security I still can't get the images to display "inline".
Being a number of them its hard to relate the text to the images.

Any more ideas?

Bill


"Michael Santovec" wrote in message
...
That's an Active-X logo. It means that the HTML code needs to run an
Active-X program to display the image and it can't due to security
settings or other problems.

If you just want to see the images, then select Tools, Options, Read,
Read All messages in plain text. Then switch to another message and
back to the problem one. The images should appear as attachments.

Or you could try changing the security zone for OE to Internet and see
if that works.

--

Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm


"Bill" wrote in message
...
Bruce

Your very own copy:



BTW what is "IB-CA"?

"Bruce Hagen" wrote in message
...
QP
Its not a red X but a small logo consisting of a red square, a green
circle
and a blue triangle with the name of the file next to it.
/QP

I have not had the pleasure of seeing this before. It may be /how/ it
was
sent, but other than that, I have no idea.

Please keep checking back here. Someone else may well have an answer
for
you.
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~












Jim Pickering January 29th 07 03:18 AM

GIF files
 
Sorry, my error in my first reply. I didn't scroll down far enough to see
images properly embedded. What you might do, if you wish, is forward the
mail to me and let me look at it to see if any obvious error can be found in
its handling. Without that, it's really hard to tell. If you wish to
forward it, please do as an attachment (I.e., right click on the message in
the list, and select Forward as attachment) and send it to jim @ mvps.org
removing the spaces from the address.

--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.



"Bill" wrote in message
...
Follows:

htmldiv style='background-color:'PBRBR/P
BLOCKQUOTE style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT:
#a0c6e5 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"FONT style="FONT-SIZE: 11px;
FONT-FAMILY: tahoma,sans-serif"BR
META content="Microsoft SafeHTML" name=Generator
STYLE
/STYLE

DIV /DIV
DIV dir=ltr align=leftFONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2/FONT /DIV
BLOCKQUOTE dir=ltr style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"
DIV class=OutlookMessageHeader lang=en-us dir=ltr align=leftFONT
face=Arial color=#0000ff size=2FONT color=#000000Does the statement
"Because we've always done it that way" ring any bells? /FONTFONT
size=3BR/FONT/FONT/DIV
DIV
PFONT face=ArialFONT
size=2BR      &nb sp;       &nbsp ;        & nbsp;     
IMG alt=184ac0.gif/FONTBRBRFONT size=2When you see a Space
Shuttle sitting on its launch pad, there are two big booster
rockets/FONTFONT color=blue size=2 /FONT/FONTFONT face=Arial
size=2attached to the sides of the main fuel tank. These are solid
rocket boosters, or SRBs. BRThe SRBs are made by Thiokol at their
factory at Utah. The engineers who designed the SRBs would have preferred
to make them a bit fatter, but the SRBs had to be shipped by train from
the factory to the launch site. The railroad line from the factory
happens to run BRthrough a tunnel in the mountains. The SRBs had to fit
through     /FONTIMG alt=184acf.gifFONT face=Arial
size=2BRthat tunnel. The tunnel is slightly wider than the railroad
track/FONT
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"FONT face="Times New Roman" size=3 /FONT
P
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"FONT face="Times New Roman" size=3 /FONT
PFONT face=Arial color=#0000ff size=2/FONTBR
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPANFONT face=Arial
color=#0000ff size=2/FONT/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPAN/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPAN/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPAN/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPAN/SPANBR/FONTIMG
alt=184a52.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBRThe US standard railroad
gauge (distance between the rails) is 4 feet, 8.5 inches. BRThat's an
exceedingly odd number. Why was that gauge used? BRBRBecause that's
the way they built them in England and English expatriates built the US
Railroads.               BR 
                 
 /FONTIMG alt=184a62.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBRBRWhy
did the English build them like that? BRBRBecause the first rail
lines were built by the same people who built the pre-railroad tramways
and that's the gauge they used. BRBRWhy did "they" use that gauge
then?                  
               
           BRBRBecause the people who
built the tramways used the same jigs and tools that they used for
building wagons, which used that wheel spacing. BR   
 /FONTIMG alt=184a71.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBROkay!
Why did the wagons have that particular odd wheel spacing? BRBRWell
if they tried to use any other spacing, the wagon wheels would break on
some of the old, long distance roads in England, because that's the
spacing of the wheel ruts. BRBRSo who built those old rutted roads?
BRBR                 
      /FONTIMG alt=184a81.gifFONT face=Arial
size=2BRBRImperial Rome built the first long distance roads in
Europe (and England) for their legions. /FONTFONT face=Arial
size=3  /FONTFONT face=Arial size=2The roads have been used
ever since. BRBRAnd the ruts in the roads? BRBR /FONTIMG
alt=184a91.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBRRoman war chariots formed
the initial ruts, which everyone else had to match for fear of destroying
their wagon wheels. /FONTFONT face=Arial size=3BR/FONTBRFONT
face=Arial size=2Since the chariots were made for Imperial Rome,
they/FONTFONT face=Arial color=blue size=2 /FONTFONT face=Arial
size=2were all alike in the matter of wheel spacing..  
 /FONTIMG alt=184aa0.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRThe United
States standard railroad gauge of 4 feet, 8.5 inches is derived from the
original specifications for an Imperial Roman war chariot./FONT
BRFONT face=Arial size=2And bureaucracies live forever. BRBRSo
the next time you are handed a specification and wonder what horse's ass
came up with it, you may be exactly right, /FONT/DIV
PFONT face=Arial size=3 /FONTFONT face=Arial size=2because
the Imperial Roman army  /FONTIMG alt=184ab0.gifFONT
face="Times New Roman" size=3 /FONT/P
PFONT face=Arial size=2chariots were made just wide enough to
accommodate the back ends of two war horses. BRBR/FONTFONT
face=Arial size=2BR/FONTFONT face=Arial size=2 BRBRSo, a
major Space Shuttle design feature of what is arguably the world's most
advanced transportation system was determined over two thousand years ago
by the width of a horse's ass./FONTFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3
/FONT/P
PFONT face=Arial size=3 /FONTFONT face=Arial size=2  
    BR/FONTIMG alt=184adf.gifFONT face=Arial
size=5BR... and you thought being a HORSE'S BACKSIDE wasn't
important!/FONTA
href="http://www.incredimail.com/index.asp?id=409&lang=9"/AFONT
face="Times New Roman" size=3
/FONT/P/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLEBRFONT face="Times New Roman"
size=3 /FONT/TD/TR
TR
TDBR/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/TD/TR
TR
TDBR/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/P/TD/TR
TR
TDBR/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/P/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/P/DIVBRPRE
/PRE/BLOCKQUOTEBR/FONT/BLOCKQUOTE/divbr
clear=allhrExpress yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! a
href="http://g.msn.com/8HMBEN/2734??PS=47575" target="_top"MSN
Messenger/a Download today it's FREE!/html
PHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{35C0E555-BFFB-45B0-A889-139B99CA1A08}/ATT1423665.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{A69EB07C-1256-4E02-A309-4EBBD4CACE35}/ATT1423666.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{C8A6E1F0-AA08-41E4-9B33-ED3DA232B6CB}/ATT1423658.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{BCB7A7BE-7021-4F52-A626-36840D3EE055}/ATT1423659.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{9D1D0992-9C9E-48EB-B268-D4341F48E0F4}/ATT1423660.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{885C7314-760E-4775-AF17-A14FFBFEC8E3}/ATT1423661.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{D986EE56-7E2B-40FB-9977-AF456116F160}/ATT1423662.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{121714B6-E560-46D8-9191-BAB11A56B469}/ATT1423663.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{F44BF3DF-033D-4110-8E63-4BB4E648C9C9}/ATT1423664.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{2AE233DC-38D6-4611-A778-B378CB8F7B26}/ATT1423667.gif"/CENTERPHR/PNo
virus found in this incoming message.BR
Checked by AVG Free Edition.BR
Version: 7.5.432 / Virus Database: 268.17.12/653 - Release Date:
26/01/2007 11:11 AMBR



Thanks Bill



"Michael Santovec" wrote in message
...
There's probably something screwy in the message HTML code.

If you do a Ctrl-F2 while viewing the message, that will open a Window
with the HTML code. You can copy/paste that here so that we can see it.

--

Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm


"Bill" wrote in message
...
Mike

OK Thanks - I can see as attachments - but when I change settings in
Tools|Options|Security I still can't get the images to display
"inline". Being a number of them its hard to relate the text to the
images.

Any more ideas?

Bill


"Michael Santovec" wrote in message
...
That's an Active-X logo. It means that the HTML code needs to run an
Active-X program to display the image and it can't due to security
settings or other problems.

If you just want to see the images, then select Tools, Options, Read,
Read All messages in plain text. Then switch to another message and
back to the problem one. The images should appear as attachments.

Or you could try changing the security zone for OE to Internet and see
if that works.

--

Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm


"Bill" wrote in message
...
Bruce

Your very own copy:



BTW what is "IB-CA"?

"Bruce Hagen" wrote in message
...
QP
Its not a red X but a small logo consisting of a red square, a green
circle
and a blue triangle with the name of the file next to it.
/QP

I have not had the pleasure of seeing this before. It may be /how/
it was
sent, but other than that, I have no idea.

Please keep checking back here. Someone else may well have an answer
for
you.
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~












Bill January 29th 07 04:46 AM

GIF files
 
Sent


"Jim Pickering" wrote in message
...
Sorry, my error in my first reply. I didn't scroll down far enough to see
images properly embedded. What you might do, if you wish, is forward the
mail to me and let me look at it to see if any obvious error can be found
in its handling. Without that, it's really hard to tell. If you wish to
forward it, please do as an attachment (I.e., right click on the message
in the list, and select Forward as attachment) and send it to jim @
mvps.org
removing the spaces from the address.

--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.



"Bill" wrote in message
...
Follows:

htmldiv style='background-color:'PBRBR/P
BLOCKQUOTE style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT:
#a0c6e5 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"FONT style="FONT-SIZE: 11px;
FONT-FAMILY: tahoma,sans-serif"BR
META content="Microsoft SafeHTML" name=Generator
STYLE
/STYLE

DIV /DIV
DIV dir=ltr align=leftFONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2/FONT /DIV
BLOCKQUOTE dir=ltr style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"
DIV class=OutlookMessageHeader lang=en-us dir=ltr align=leftFONT
face=Arial color=#0000ff size=2FONT color=#000000Does the statement
"Because we've always done it that way" ring any
bells? /FONTFONT size=3BR/FONT/FONT/DIV
DIV
PFONT face=ArialFONT
size=2BR      &nb sp;       &nbsp ;        & nbsp;     
IMG alt=184ac0.gif/FONTBRBRFONT size=2When you see a Space
Shuttle sitting on its launch pad, there are two big booster
rockets/FONTFONT color=blue size=2 /FONT/FONTFONT face=Arial
size=2attached to the sides of the main fuel tank. These are solid
rocket boosters, or SRBs. BRThe SRBs are made by Thiokol at their
factory at Utah. The engineers who designed the SRBs would have
preferred to make them a bit fatter, but the SRBs had to be shipped by
train from the factory to the launch site. The railroad line from the
factory happens to run BRthrough a tunnel in the mountains. The SRBs
had to fit through     /FONTIMG alt=184acf.gifFONT
face=Arial size=2BRthat tunnel. The tunnel is slightly wider than the
railroad track/FONT
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"FONT face="Times New Roman" size=3 /FONT
P
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"FONT face="Times New Roman" size=3 /FONT
PFONT face=Arial color=#0000ff size=2/FONTBR
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPANFONT face=Arial
color=#0000ff size=2/FONT/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman"
size=3SPAN/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman"
size=3SPAN/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman"
size=3SPAN/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPAN/SPANBR/FONTIMG
alt=184a52.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBRThe US standard railroad
gauge (distance between the rails) is 4 feet, 8.5 inches. BRThat's an
exceedingly odd number. Why was that gauge used? BRBRBecause that's
the way they built them in England and English expatriates built the US
Railroads.               BR 
                 
 /FONTIMG alt=184a62.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBRBRWhy
did the English build them like that? BRBRBecause the first rail
lines were built by the same people who built the pre-railroad tramways
and that's the gauge they used. BRBRWhy did "they" use that gauge
then?                  
               
           BRBRBecause the people who
built the tramways used the same jigs and tools that they used for
building wagons, which used that wheel spacing. BR   
 /FONTIMG alt=184a71.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBROkay!
Why did the wagons have that particular odd wheel spacing? BRBRWell
if they tried to use any other spacing, the wagon wheels would break on
some of the old, long distance roads in England, because that's the
spacing of the wheel ruts. BRBRSo who built those old rutted roads?
BRBR                 
      /FONTIMG alt=184a81.gifFONT face=Arial
size=2BRBRImperial Rome built the first long distance roads in
Europe (and England) for their legions. /FONTFONT face=Arial
size=3  /FONTFONT face=Arial size=2The roads have been used
ever since. BRBRAnd the ruts in the roads? BRBR /FONTIMG
alt=184a91.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBRRoman war chariots formed
the initial ruts, which everyone else had to match for fear of
destroying their wagon wheels. /FONTFONT face=Arial
size=3BR/FONTBRFONT face=Arial size=2Since the chariots were
made for Imperial Rome, they/FONTFONT face=Arial color=blue size=2
/FONTFONT face=Arial size=2were all alike in the matter of wheel
spacing..    /FONTIMG alt=184aa0.gifFONT face=Arial
size=2BRThe United States standard railroad gauge of 4 feet, 8.5
inches is derived from the original specifications for an Imperial Roman
war chariot./FONT BRFONT face=Arial size=2And bureaucracies live
forever. BRBRSo the next time you are handed a specification and
wonder what horse's ass came up with it, you may be exactly right,
/FONT/DIV
PFONT face=Arial size=3 /FONTFONT face=Arial size=2because
the Imperial Roman army  /FONTIMG alt=184ab0.gifFONT
face="Times New Roman" size=3 /FONT/P
PFONT face=Arial size=2chariots were made just wide enough to
accommodate the back ends of two war horses. BRBR/FONTFONT
face=Arial size=2BR/FONTFONT face=Arial size=2 BRBRSo, a
major Space Shuttle design feature of what is arguably the world's most
advanced transportation system was determined over two thousand years
ago by the width of a horse's ass./FONTFONT face="Times New Roman"
size=3 /FONT/P
PFONT face=Arial size=3 /FONTFONT face=Arial size=2  
    BR/FONTIMG alt=184adf.gifFONT face=Arial
size=5BR... and you thought being a HORSE'S BACKSIDE wasn't
important!/FONTA
href="http://www.incredimail.com/index.asp?id=409&lang=9"/AFONT
face="Times New Roman" size=3
/FONT/P/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLEBRFONT face="Times New Roman"
size=3 /FONT/TD/TR
TR
TDBR/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/TD/TR
TR
TDBR/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/P/TD/TR
TR
TDBR/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/P/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/P/DIVBRPRE
/PRE/BLOCKQUOTEBR/FONT/BLOCKQUOTE/divbr
clear=allhrExpress yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! a
href="http://g.msn.com/8HMBEN/2734??PS=47575" target="_top"MSN
Messenger/a Download today it's FREE!/html
PHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{35C0E555-BFFB-45B0-A889-139B99CA1A08}/ATT1423665.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{A69EB07C-1256-4E02-A309-4EBBD4CACE35}/ATT1423666.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{C8A6E1F0-AA08-41E4-9B33-ED3DA232B6CB}/ATT1423658.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{BCB7A7BE-7021-4F52-A626-36840D3EE055}/ATT1423659.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{9D1D0992-9C9E-48EB-B268-D4341F48E0F4}/ATT1423660.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{885C7314-760E-4775-AF17-A14FFBFEC8E3}/ATT1423661.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{D986EE56-7E2B-40FB-9977-AF456116F160}/ATT1423662.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{121714B6-E560-46D8-9191-BAB11A56B469}/ATT1423663.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{F44BF3DF-033D-4110-8E63-4BB4E648C9C9}/ATT1423664.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{2AE233DC-38D6-4611-A778-B378CB8F7B26}/ATT1423667.gif"/CENTERPHR/PNo
virus found in this incoming message.BR
Checked by AVG Free Edition.BR
Version: 7.5.432 / Virus Database: 268.17.12/653 - Release Date:
26/01/2007 11:11 AMBR



Thanks Bill



"Michael Santovec" wrote in message
...
There's probably something screwy in the message HTML code.

If you do a Ctrl-F2 while viewing the message, that will open a Window
with the HTML code. You can copy/paste that here so that we can see
it.

--

Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm


"Bill" wrote in message
...
Mike

OK Thanks - I can see as attachments - but when I change settings in
Tools|Options|Security I still can't get the images to display
"inline". Being a number of them its hard to relate the text to the
images.

Any more ideas?

Bill


"Michael Santovec" wrote in message
...
That's an Active-X logo. It means that the HTML code needs to run an
Active-X program to display the image and it can't due to security
settings or other problems.

If you just want to see the images, then select Tools, Options, Read,
Read All messages in plain text. Then switch to another message and
back to the problem one. The images should appear as attachments.

Or you could try changing the security zone for OE to Internet and
see if that works.

--

Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm


"Bill" wrote in message
...
Bruce

Your very own copy:



BTW what is "IB-CA"?

"Bruce Hagen" wrote in message
...
QP
Its not a red X but a small logo consisting of a red square, a
green circle
and a blue triangle with the name of the file next to it.
/QP

I have not had the pleasure of seeing this before. It may be /how/
it was
sent, but other than that, I have no idea.

Please keep checking back here. Someone else may well have an
answer for
you.
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~














Jim Pickering January 29th 07 05:17 AM

GIF files
 
Hi Bill: Haven't received it and it's now some 30 minutes later. Want to
try resending it? ( )
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Sent


"Jim Pickering" wrote in message
...
Sorry, my error in my first reply. I didn't scroll down far enough to
see images properly embedded. What you might do, if you wish, is forward
the mail to me and let me look at it to see if any obvious error can be
found in its handling. Without that, it's really hard to tell. If you
wish to forward it, please do as an attachment (I.e., right click on the
message in the list, and select Forward as attachment) and send it to
jim @ mvps.org
removing the spaces from the address.

--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.




Bill January 29th 07 05:57 AM

GIF files
 
Sent again Jim


"Jim Pickering" wrote in message
...
Hi Bill: Haven't received it and it's now some 30 minutes later. Want to
try resending it? ( )
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Sent


"Jim Pickering" wrote in message
...
Sorry, my error in my first reply. I didn't scroll down far enough to
see images properly embedded. What you might do, if you wish, is
forward the mail to me and let me look at it to see if any obvious error
can be found in its handling. Without that, it's really hard to tell.
If you wish to forward it, please do as an attachment (I.e., right click
on the message in the list, and select Forward as attachment) and send
it to jim @ mvps.org
removing the spaces from the address.
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.






Bill January 29th 07 07:30 AM

GIF files
 
Did you get the file Jim?

Bill
"Bill" wrote in message
...
Sent again Jim


"Jim Pickering" wrote in message
...
Hi Bill: Haven't received it and it's now some 30 minutes later. Want
to try resending it? ( )
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Sent


"Jim Pickering" wrote in message
...
Sorry, my error in my first reply. I didn't scroll down far enough to
see images properly embedded. What you might do, if you wish, is
forward the mail to me and let me look at it to see if any obvious
error can be found in its handling. Without that, it's really hard to
tell. If you wish to forward it, please do as an attachment (I.e.,
right click on the message in the list, and select Forward as
attachment) and send it to jim @ mvps.org
removing the spaces from the address.
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.








Steve Cochran January 29th 07 02:01 PM

GIF files
 

It looks like its been forwarded mutiple times as there are shades of
Outlook as well as Incredimail in there and their HTML is often
non-standard, as Jim indicated with the image that had the alt tag and
nothing else. I suspect its the sender of the message that has messed it up
and its not an OE problem per se.

In addition, you need to turn off email scanning with your antivirus
software. With AVG you have to uninstall it and then reinstall it and
disable the email scanning option when you do the reinstall. see
www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#3

steve

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Did you get the file Jim?

Bill
"Bill" wrote in message
...
Sent again Jim


"Jim Pickering" wrote in message
...
Hi Bill: Haven't received it and it's now some 30 minutes later. Want
to try resending it? ( )
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Sent


"Jim Pickering" wrote in message
...
Sorry, my error in my first reply. I didn't scroll down far enough to
see images properly embedded. What you might do, if you wish, is
forward the mail to me and let me look at it to see if any obvious
error can be found in its handling. Without that, it's really hard to
tell. If you wish to forward it, please do as an attachment (I.e.,
right click on the message in the list, and select Forward as
attachment) and send it to jim @ mvps.org
removing the spaces from the address.
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.








Jim Pickering January 29th 07 07:19 PM

GIF files
 
No message received Bill. Sorry. Checked all spam filters to see if it
might have been trapped, but no go. It's stuck somewhere else.
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Did you get the file Jim?

Bill
"Bill" wrote in message
...
Sent again Jim


"Jim Pickering" wrote in message
...
Hi Bill: Haven't received it and it's now some 30 minutes later. Want
to try resending it? ( )
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Sent


"Jim Pickering" wrote in message
...
Sorry, my error in my first reply. I didn't scroll down far enough to
see images properly embedded. What you might do, if you wish, is
forward the mail to me and let me look at it to see if any obvious
error can be found in its handling. Without that, it's really hard to
tell. If you wish to forward it, please do as an attachment (I.e.,
right click on the message in the list, and select Forward as
attachment) and send it to jim @ mvps.org
removing the spaces from the address.
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.







Bill January 29th 07 09:16 PM

GIF files
 
Jim

Oh well - neither of the two I sent were bounced, so as you say they are
stuck somewhere!

I think what Steve has said is true - since it was one of those jokes that
do the rounds.

Unfortunately my source had deleted it from his Hotmail; I might try to
reconstruct it in Word sometime. Weather too nice for indoors - going to be
35C today.

Thanks for your interest.

Bill


"Jim Pickering" wrote in message
...
No message received Bill. Sorry. Checked all spam filters to see if it
might have been trapped, but no go. It's stuck somewhere else.
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Did you get the file Jim?

Bill
"Bill" wrote in message
...
Sent again Jim


"Jim Pickering" wrote in message
...
Hi Bill: Haven't received it and it's now some 30 minutes later. Want
to try resending it? ( )
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Sent


"Jim Pickering" wrote in message
...
Sorry, my error in my first reply. I didn't scroll down far enough
to see images properly embedded. What you might do, if you wish, is
forward the mail to me and let me look at it to see if any obvious
error can be found in its handling. Without that, it's really hard
to tell. If you wish to forward it, please do as an attachment (I.e.,
right click on the message in the list, and select Forward as
attachment) and send it to jim @ mvps.org
removing the spaces from the address.
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.









Bill January 29th 07 09:18 PM

GIF files
 
Steve

Thanks for your advice.

Have fixed AVG - all the things to do when breaking in a new computer!

Bill


"Steve Cochran" wrote in message
...

It looks like its been forwarded mutiple times as there are shades of
Outlook as well as Incredimail in there and their HTML is often
non-standard, as Jim indicated with the image that had the alt tag and
nothing else. I suspect its the sender of the message that has messed it
up and its not an OE problem per se.

In addition, you need to turn off email scanning with your antivirus
software. With AVG you have to uninstall it and then reinstall it and
disable the email scanning option when you do the reinstall. see
www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#3

steve

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Did you get the file Jim?

Bill
"Bill" wrote in message
...
Sent again Jim


"Jim Pickering" wrote in message
...
Hi Bill: Haven't received it and it's now some 30 minutes later. Want
to try resending it? ( )
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Sent


"Jim Pickering" wrote in message
...
Sorry, my error in my first reply. I didn't scroll down far enough
to see images properly embedded. What you might do, if you wish, is
forward the mail to me and let me look at it to see if any obvious
error can be found in its handling. Without that, it's really hard
to tell. If you wish to forward it, please do as an attachment (I.e.,
right click on the message in the list, and select Forward as
attachment) and send it to jim @ mvps.org
removing the spaces from the address.
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.










Jim Pickering January 29th 07 09:44 PM

GIF files
 
OK. Enjoy the nice weather in Canberra. Sorry we couldn't help more and
thanks for the feedback.
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Jim

Oh well - neither of the two I sent were bounced, so as you say they are
stuck somewhere!

I think what Steve has said is true - since it was one of those jokes that
do the rounds.

Unfortunately my source had deleted it from his Hotmail; I might try to
reconstruct it in Word sometime. Weather too nice for indoors - going to
be 35C today.

Thanks for your interest.

Bill


"Jim Pickering" wrote in message
...
No message received Bill. Sorry. Checked all spam filters to see if it
might have been trapped, but no go. It's stuck somewhere else.
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Did you get the file Jim?

Bill
"Bill" wrote in message
...
Sent again Jim


"Jim Pickering" wrote in message
...
Hi Bill: Haven't received it and it's now some 30 minutes later.
Want to try resending it? ( )
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.

"Bill" wrote in message
...
Sent


"Jim Pickering" wrote in message
...
Sorry, my error in my first reply. I didn't scroll down far enough
to see images properly embedded. What you might do, if you wish, is
forward the mail to me and let me look at it to see if any obvious
error can be found in its handling. Without that, it's really hard
to tell. If you wish to forward it, please do as an attachment
(I.e., right click on the message in the list, and select Forward as
attachment) and send it to jim @ mvps.org
removing the spaces from the address.
--
Jim Pickering
MVP-Windows Mail applications
Please reply only to the newsgroup.









Michael Santovec January 29th 07 10:45 PM

GIF files
 
The sending program did screw up the HTML code.

The little boxes you saw with the 3 colored objects and the image name
are caused by the

IMG alt=184acf.gif

tags. There are 10 of those scatter in the message. They are all
missing the actual SRC field specifying the actual image file. So
somewhere along the way, the images got lost.

At the bottom of the message are 10 tags such as

IMG SRC="CID:{35C0E555-BFFB-45B0-A889-139B99CA1A08}/ATT1423665.gif"

That's a suitable syntax provided that at the bottom of the message are
the encoded images with matching Content-ID along the lines of

------=_NextPart_xxxx
Content-Type: image/gif;
name="ATT1423665"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64
Content-ID: {35C0E555-BFFB-45B0-A889-139B99CA1A08}/ATT1423665.gif

fkdsljflkdsfjl;ksdjf;lksjl;kjfhgjI
..... the rest of the encoded attachment.

In that case, the 10 images should have been displayed at the bottom of
the message. However, if the encoded attachments are missing, or the
IMG SRC CID doesn't match the Content-ID:, then you'd get just the
little box with the red X in it.


--

Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm


"Bill" wrote in message
...
Follows:

htmldiv style='background-color:'PBRBR/P
BLOCKQUOTE style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT:
#a0c6e5 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"FONT style="FONT-SIZE: 11px;
FONT-FAMILY: tahoma,sans-serif"BR
META content="Microsoft SafeHTML" name=Generator
STYLE
/STYLE

DIV /DIV
DIV dir=ltr align=leftFONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2/FONT /DIV
BLOCKQUOTE dir=ltr style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"
DIV class=OutlookMessageHeader lang=en-us dir=ltr align=leftFONT
face=Arial color=#0000ff size=2FONT color=#000000Does the statement
"Because we've always done it that way" ring any
bells? /FONTFONT size=3BR/FONT/FONT/DIV
DIV
PFONT face=ArialFONT
size=2BR      &nb sp;       &nbsp ;        & nbsp;     
IMG alt=184ac0.gif/FONTBRBRFONT size=2When you see a Space
Shuttle sitting on its launch pad, there are two big booster
rockets/FONTFONT color=blue size=2 /FONT/FONTFONT face=Arial
size=2attached to the sides of the main fuel tank. These are solid
rocket boosters, or SRBs. BRThe SRBs are made by Thiokol at their
factory at Utah. The engineers who designed the SRBs would have
preferred to make them a bit fatter, but the SRBs had to be shipped by
train from the factory to the launch site. The railroad line from the
factory happens to run BRthrough a tunnel in the mountains. The SRBs
had to fit through     /FONTIMG alt=184acf.gifFONT
face=Arial size=2BRthat tunnel. The tunnel is slightly wider than
the railroad track/FONT
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"FONT face="Times New Roman" size=3 /FONT
P
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"FONT face="Times New Roman" size=3 /FONT
PFONT face=Arial color=#0000ff size=2/FONTBR
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"
TABLE width="100%"
TBODY
TR
TD width="100%"
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPANFONT face=Arial
color=#0000ff size=2/FONT/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman"
size=3SPAN/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman"
size=3SPAN/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman"
size=3SPAN/SPAN/FONT /DIV
DIVFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3SPAN/SPANBR/FONTIMG
alt=184a52.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBRThe US standard
railroad gauge (distance between the rails) is 4 feet, 8.5 inches.
BRThat's an exceedingly odd number. Why was that gauge used?
BRBRBecause that's the way they built them in England and English
expatriates built the US Railroads.          
    BR             
       /FONTIMG alt=184a62.gifFONT face=Arial
size=2BRBRBRWhy did the English build them like that?
BRBRBecause the first rail lines were built by the same people who
built the pre-railroad tramways and that's the gauge they used.
BRBRWhy did "they" use that gauge then?      
                   
       
           BRBRBecause the people
who built the tramways used the same jigs and tools that they used for
building wagons, which used that wheel spacing. BR   
 /FONTIMG alt=184a71.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBROkay!
Why did the wagons have that particular odd wheel spacing?
BRBRWell if they tried to use any other spacing, the wagon wheels
would break on some of the old, long distance roads in England,
because that's the spacing of the wheel ruts. BRBRSo who built
those old rutted roads? BRBR         
              /FONTIMG
alt=184a81.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRBRImperial Rome built the
first long distance roads in Europe (and England) for their legions.
/FONTFONT face=Arial size=3  /FONTFONT face=Arial
size=2The roads have been used
ever since. BRBRAnd the ruts in the roads?
BRBR /FONTIMG alt=184a91.gifFONT face=Arial
size=2BRBRRoman war chariots formed the initial ruts, which
everyone else had to match for fear of destroying their wagon wheels.
/FONTFONT face=Arial size=3BR/FONTBRFONT face=Arial
size=2Since the chariots were made for Imperial Rome,
they/FONTFONT face=Arial color=blue size=2 /FONTFONT face=Arial
size=2were all alike in the matter of wheel spacing..  
 /FONTIMG alt=184aa0.gifFONT face=Arial size=2BRThe
United States standard railroad gauge of 4 feet, 8.5 inches is derived
from the original specifications for an Imperial Roman war
chariot./FONT BRFONT face=Arial size=2And bureaucracies live
forever. BRBRSo the next time you are handed a specification and
wonder what horse's ass came up with it, you may be exactly right,
/FONT/DIV
PFONT face=Arial size=3 /FONTFONT face=Arial
size=2because the Imperial Roman army  /FONTIMG
alt=184ab0.gifFONT face="Times New Roman" size=3 /FONT/P
PFONT face=Arial size=2chariots were made just wide enough to
accommodate the back ends of two war horses. BRBR/FONTFONT
face=Arial size=2BR/FONTFONT face=Arial size=2 BRBRSo,
a major Space Shuttle design feature of what is arguably the world's
most advanced transportation system was determined over two thousand
years ago by the width of a horse's ass./FONTFONT face="Times New
Roman" size=3 /FONT/P
PFONT face=Arial size=3 /FONTFONT face=Arial size=2
      BR/FONTIMG alt=184adf.gifFONT face=Arial
size=5BR... and you thought being a HORSE'S BACKSIDE wasn't
important!/FONTA
href="http://www.incredimail.com/index.asp?id=409&lang=9"/AFONT
face="Times New Roman" size=3
/FONT/P/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLEBRFONT face="Times New Roman"
size=3 /FONT/TD/TR
TR
TDBR/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/TD/TR
TR
TDBR/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/P/TD/TR
TR
TDBR/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/P/TD/TR/TBODY/TABLE/P/DIVBRPRE
/PRE/BLOCKQUOTEBR/FONT/BLOCKQUOTE/divbr
clear=allhrExpress yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! a
href="http://g.msn.com/8HMBEN/2734??PS=47575" target="_top"MSN
Messenger/a Download today it's FREE!/html
PHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{35C0E555-BFFB-45B0-A889-139B99CA1A08}/ATT1423665.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{A69EB07C-1256-4E02-A309-4EBBD4CACE35}/ATT1423666.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{C8A6E1F0-AA08-41E4-9B33-ED3DA232B6CB}/ATT1423658.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{BCB7A7BE-7021-4F52-A626-36840D3EE055}/ATT1423659.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{9D1D0992-9C9E-48EB-B268-D4341F48E0F4}/ATT1423660.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{885C7314-760E-4775-AF17-A14FFBFEC8E3}/ATT1423661.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{D986EE56-7E2B-40FB-9977-AF456116F160}/ATT1423662.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{121714B6-E560-46D8-9191-BAB11A56B469}/ATT1423663.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{F44BF3DF-033D-4110-8E63-4BB4E648C9C9}/ATT1423664.gif"/CENTERPHR/PP

CENTERIMG
SRC="CID:{2AE233DC-38D6-4611-A778-B378CB8F7B26}/ATT1423667.gif"/CENTERPHR/PNo
virus found in this incoming message.BR
Checked by AVG Free Edition.BR
Version: 7.5.432 / Virus Database: 268.17.12/653 - Release Date:
26/01/2007 11:11 AMBR



Thanks Bill



"Michael Santovec" wrote in message
...
There's probably something screwy in the message HTML code.

If you do a Ctrl-F2 while viewing the message, that will open a
Window with the HTML code. You can copy/paste that here so that we
can see it.

--

Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm


"Bill" wrote in message
...
Mike

OK Thanks - I can see as attachments - but when I change settings in
Tools|Options|Security I still can't get the images to display
"inline". Being a number of them its hard to relate the text to the
images.

Any more ideas?

Bill


"Michael Santovec" wrote in message
...
That's an Active-X logo. It means that the HTML code needs to run
an Active-X program to display the image and it can't due to
security settings or other problems.

If you just want to see the images, then select Tools, Options,
Read, Read All messages in plain text. Then switch to another
message and back to the problem one. The images should appear as
attachments.

Or you could try changing the security zone for OE to Internet and
see if that works.

--

Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm


"Bill" wrote in message
...
Bruce

Your very own copy:



BTW what is "IB-CA"?

"Bruce Hagen" wrote in message
...
QP
Its not a red X but a small logo consisting of a red square, a
green circle
and a blue triangle with the name of the file next to it.
/QP

I have not had the pleasure of seeing this before. It may be
/how/ it was
sent, but other than that, I have no idea.

Please keep checking back here. Someone else may well have an
answer for
you.
--
Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
~IB-CA~




Bill January 30th 07 12:31 AM

GIF files
 

"Michael Santovec" wrote in message
...
The sending program did screw up the HTML code.

The little boxes you saw with the 3 colored objects and the image name are
caused by the

IMG alt=184acf.gif

tags. There are 10 of those scatter in the message. They are all missing
the actual SRC field specifying the actual image file. So somewhere along
the way, the images got lost.

At the bottom of the message are 10 tags such as

IMG SRC="CID:{35C0E555-BFFB-45B0-A889-139B99CA1A08}/ATT1423665.gif"

That's a suitable syntax provided that at the bottom of the message are
the encoded images with matching Content-ID along the lines of

------=_NextPart_xxxx
Content-Type: image/gif;
name="ATT1423665"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64
Content-ID: {35C0E555-BFFB-45B0-A889-139B99CA1A08}/ATT1423665.gif

fkdsljflkdsfjl;ksdjf;lksjl;kjfhgjI
.... the rest of the encoded attachment.

In that case, the 10 images should have been displayed at the bottom of
the message. However, if the encoded attachments are missing, or the IMG
SRC CID doesn't match the Content-ID:, then you'd get just the little box
with the red X in it.


--

Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm


snip

Mike

Thanks for your input - I've got myself a nice little 'jigsaw puzzle' to try
and match the text with the images! One for a rainy day - if only it would
rain around here.

Bill




Steve Cochran January 30th 07 01:30 AM

GIF files
 
Its not worth it. Most of those forwarded messages are not funny in the
first place.

I know. I get tons of them from people with a sense of humor that isn't
quite their own. I'd be thankful they didn't display in some circumstances.
G

cheers,

steve


"Bill" wrote in message
...

"Michael Santovec" wrote in message
...
The sending program did screw up the HTML code.

The little boxes you saw with the 3 colored objects and the image name
are caused by the

IMG alt=184acf.gif

tags. There are 10 of those scatter in the message. They are all
missing the actual SRC field specifying the actual image file. So
somewhere along the way, the images got lost.

At the bottom of the message are 10 tags such as

IMG SRC="CID:{35C0E555-BFFB-45B0-A889-139B99CA1A08}/ATT1423665.gif"

That's a suitable syntax provided that at the bottom of the message are
the encoded images with matching Content-ID along the lines of

------=_NextPart_xxxx
Content-Type: image/gif;
name="ATT1423665"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64
Content-ID: {35C0E555-BFFB-45B0-A889-139B99CA1A08}/ATT1423665.gif

fkdsljflkdsfjl;ksdjf;lksjl;kjfhgjI
.... the rest of the encoded attachment.

In that case, the 10 images should have been displayed at the bottom of
the message. However, if the encoded attachments are missing, or the IMG
SRC CID doesn't match the Content-ID:, then you'd get just the little box
with the red X in it.


--

Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm


snip

Mike

Thanks for your input - I've got myself a nice little 'jigsaw puzzle' to
try and match the text with the images! One for a rainy day - if only it
would rain around here.

Bill






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