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#1
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Hello All,
I've been maintaining a Windows 2000 system for some time because one element of OE works a bit differently in 2000 than in XP, and that difference has been very useful to me. I now have to replace that 2000 system (due to hardware failure) and am wondering if anyone knows how to replicate this particular behaviour under Windows 2000, in XP. Here's what it is: In an ordinary work day, I have to send an email notification to one person then another that a file has been uploaded to a particular FTP folder. In Windows 2000, an email message can be saved to the desktop or any other folder, and function as kind of a permanent draft template. It can be saved to the folder, and opened, edited and sent. So I will have two eml files on the desktop, one to each person, and just have to open the mail, change the FTP folder name. I send the mail, and the eml file is still there for the next time. In XP, doing the same thing results in a read-only message being saved, and it can't be edited OR sent. I can only use drafts in the Drafts folder, and the draft exists only until I click Send. In XP I have to create a complete new message for each notification, and there could be sixty over a day. So there is a time saving if I can get it to work as with Windows 2000. If there is no way to get OE to do this, I'd be glad to hear of other mail clients that do work this way. Thanks! Patrick Keenan |
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#2
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There was an update some while back that changed templates to appear as
being read and your options were only Forward or Reply. Assuming the XP machine is otherwise up to date, you just have to give the registry a little nudge to get things back to normal. To complete the fix for .eml templates, a registry change is needed. See: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/918766 Or do it the easy way. Tom Koch also has this information at his site, along with a downloadable Zip file to do the registry change for you. See: http://www.insideoe.com/#kb918651 -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express Imperial Beach, CA "Patrick Keenan" wrote in message ... Hello All, I've been maintaining a Windows 2000 system for some time because one element of OE works a bit differently in 2000 than in XP, and that difference has been very useful to me. I now have to replace that 2000 system (due to hardware failure) and am wondering if anyone knows how to replicate this particular behaviour under Windows 2000, in XP. Here's what it is: In an ordinary work day, I have to send an email notification to one person then another that a file has been uploaded to a particular FTP folder. In Windows 2000, an email message can be saved to the desktop or any other folder, and function as kind of a permanent draft template. It can be saved to the folder, and opened, edited and sent. So I will have two eml files on the desktop, one to each person, and just have to open the mail, change the FTP folder name. I send the mail, and the eml file is still there for the next time. In XP, doing the same thing results in a read-only message being saved, and it can't be edited OR sent. I can only use drafts in the Drafts folder, and the draft exists only until I click Send. In XP I have to create a complete new message for each notification, and there could be sixty over a day. So there is a time saving if I can get it to work as with Windows 2000. If there is no way to get OE to do this, I'd be glad to hear of other mail clients that do work this way. Thanks! Patrick Keenan |
#3
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"Bruce Hagen" wrote in message
... There was an update some while back that changed templates to appear as being read and your options were only Forward or Reply. Assuming the XP machine is otherwise up to date, you just have to give the registry a little nudge to get things back to normal. To complete the fix for .eml templates, a registry change is needed. See: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/918766 Or do it the easy way. Tom Koch also has this information at his site, along with a downloadable Zip file to do the registry change for you. See: http://www.insideoe.com/#kb918651 -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express Imperial Beach, CA Bruce, thanks! This worked great. I can now put away the W2K disks. Thanks again. Patrick Keenan "Patrick Keenan" wrote in message ... Hello All, I've been maintaining a Windows 2000 system for some time because one element of OE works a bit differently in 2000 than in XP, and that difference has been very useful to me. I now have to replace that 2000 system (due to hardware failure) and am wondering if anyone knows how to replicate this particular behaviour under Windows 2000, in XP. Here's what it is: In an ordinary work day, I have to send an email notification to one person then another that a file has been uploaded to a particular FTP folder. In Windows 2000, an email message can be saved to the desktop or any other folder, and function as kind of a permanent draft template. It can be saved to the folder, and opened, edited and sent. So I will have two eml files on the desktop, one to each person, and just have to open the mail, change the FTP folder name. I send the mail, and the eml file is still there for the next time. In XP, doing the same thing results in a read-only message being saved, and it can't be edited OR sent. I can only use drafts in the Drafts folder, and the draft exists only until I click Send. In XP I have to create a complete new message for each notification, and there could be sixty over a day. So there is a time saving if I can get it to work as with Windows 2000. If there is no way to get OE to do this, I'd be glad to hear of other mail clients that do work this way. Thanks! Patrick Keenan |
#4
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![]() "Patrick Keenan" wrote in message ... "Bruce Hagen" wrote in message ... There was an update some while back that changed templates to appear as being read and your options were only Forward or Reply. Assuming the XP machine is otherwise up to date, you just have to give the registry a little nudge to get things back to normal. To complete the fix for .eml templates, a registry change is needed. See: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/918766 Or do it the easy way. Tom Koch also has this information at his site, along with a downloadable Zip file to do the registry change for you. See: http://www.insideoe.com/#kb918651 -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express Imperial Beach, CA Bruce, thanks! This worked great. I can now put away the W2K disks. Thanks again. Patrick Keenan You're welcome & thanks for posting back. -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express Imperial Beach, CA |
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