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#1
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Get a few e-mail everyday with the "sent" date/time way off of correct
date/time. This started last week. The "funny" thing is that I have several from my son-in-law that are the correct date/time(2 this morning) but the one I just opened had wrong date/time, 5/20/2023 1:55AM. Just got back from lunch, opened OE, had 23 e-mails and 5 had wrong date/time. The ones that are off are all off with same date (i.e. 5/20/2023). Important or not? thanks, L. |
#2
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The time stamp is put on by the server. If it continues you could call them,
but it is probably known and being fixed. The only thing that would be important is if you save the messages by order of received, they will be out of order. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express ~IB-CA~ "L." wrote in message ... Get a few e-mail everyday with the "sent" date/time way off of correct date/time. This started last week. The "funny" thing is that I have several from my son-in-law that are the correct date/time(2 this morning) but the one I just opened had wrong date/time, 5/20/2023 1:55AM. Just got back from lunch, opened OE, had 23 e-mails and 5 had wrong date/time. The ones that are off are all off with same date (i.e. 5/20/2023). Important or not? thanks, L. |
#3
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Each mail messages has multiple time stamps. You can see these in File,
Properties, Details. When you look at the list of messages in Microsoft IE3 Internet Mail or IE4+ Outlook Express, the Received time is when the message was received by your ISP's mail server. The server supplies the time. This is the first (top most) of possibly several "Received:" lines in the message header. Each mail server that a message passes through adds its own Received line. These are in reverse order, so that the bottom most one listed is the first server that received the message from the sender. When you open or print a message, the time displayed is from the sender's PC when he wrote the message, not necessarily when he transmitted it (depends on the mail client). The time comes from his PC. This is the "Date:" line in the message header. -- Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm "L." wrote in message ... Get a few e-mail everyday with the "sent" date/time way off of correct date/time. This started last week. The "funny" thing is that I have several from my son-in-law that are the correct date/time(2 this morning) but the one I just opened had wrong date/time, 5/20/2023 1:55AM. Just got back from lunch, opened OE, had 23 e-mails and 5 had wrong date/time. The ones that are off are all off with same date (i.e. 5/20/2023). Important or not? thanks, L. |
#4
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Thanks.
Didn't happened yesterday or today so maybe it's fixed. L. "Michael Santovec" wrote in message ... Each mail messages has multiple time stamps. You can see these in File, Properties, Details. When you look at the list of messages in Microsoft IE3 Internet Mail or IE4+ Outlook Express, the Received time is when the message was received by your ISP's mail server. The server supplies the time. This is the first (top most) of possibly several "Received:" lines in the message header. Each mail server that a message passes through adds its own Received line. These are in reverse order, so that the bottom most one listed is the first server that received the message from the sender. When you open or print a message, the time displayed is from the sender's PC when he wrote the message, not necessarily when he transmitted it (depends on the mail client). The time comes from his PC. This is the "Date:" line in the message header. -- Mike - http://pages.prodigy.net/michael_santovec/techhelp.htm "L." wrote in message ... Get a few e-mail everyday with the "sent" date/time way off of correct date/time. This started last week. The "funny" thing is that I have several from my son-in-law that are the correct date/time(2 this morning) but the one I just opened had wrong date/time, 5/20/2023 1:55AM. Just got back from lunch, opened OE, had 23 e-mails and 5 had wrong date/time. The ones that are off are all off with same date (i.e. 5/20/2023). Important or not? thanks, L. |
#5
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![]() "L." wrote in message ... Get a few e-mail everyday with the "sent" date/time way off of correct date/time. This started last week. The "funny" thing is that I have several from my son-in-law that are the correct date/time(2 this morning) but the one I just opened had wrong date/time, 5/20/2023 1:55AM. Just got back from lunch, opened OE, had 23 e-mails and 5 had wrong date/time. The ones that are off are all off with same date (i.e. 5/20/2023). Important or not? thanks, L. |
#6
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![]() "L." wrote in message ... Get a few e-mail everyday with the "sent" date/time way off of correct date/time. This started last week. The "funny" thing is that I have several from my son-in-law that are the correct date/time(2 this morning) but the one I just opened had wrong date/time, 5/20/2023 1:55AM. Just got back from lunch, opened OE, had 23 e-mails and 5 had wrong date/time. The ones that are off are all off with same date (i.e. 5/20/2023). Important or not? thanks, L. |
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