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#1
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Hello to all of you,
One of my customer as troubles receiving email from me. I'lm using Outlook 2003. My customer is also using Outlook 2003. Since a few weeks ago, she can no longer receive my email in Outlook 2003. However, she receives them fine in Outlook Express. The puzzling thing is that all was working fine until the end of may. I've looked at the SMTP in both Outlook and Outlook express and they are the same. I've tried sendinf a email from a different computer (with Outlook 2000 this time) with the same problem. I must admit to not understanding this problem! Any idea as to what to try next? Thanks! Annie |
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#2
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It's not likely on your end. First thing that comes to mind is have your
customer check her Junk e-mail folder. I have had Outlook "suddenly" decide that e-mail from someone should now be routed to Junk even after working fine for a period of time. Don't know what the cause was...I just added that address to the "Safe" list in Outlook and the problem went away. Tim wrote in message oups.com... Hello to all of you, One of my customer as troubles receiving email from me. I'lm using Outlook 2003. My customer is also using Outlook 2003. Since a few weeks ago, she can no longer receive my email in Outlook 2003. However, she receives them fine in Outlook Express. The puzzling thing is that all was working fine until the end of may. I've looked at the SMTP in both Outlook and Outlook express and they are the same. I've tried sendinf a email from a different computer (with Outlook 2000 this time) with the same problem. I must admit to not understanding this problem! Any idea as to what to try next? Thanks! Annie |
#3
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![]() -- Peter Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged. "Tim" tim_at_overthere.com wrote in message news ![]() It's not likely on your end. First thing that comes to mind is have your customer check her Junk e-mail folder. I have had Outlook "suddenly" decide that e-mail from someone should now be routed to Junk even after working fine for a period of time. Don't know what the cause was...I just added that address to the "Safe" list in Outlook and the problem went away. Tim wrote in message oups.com... Hello to all of you, One of my customer as troubles receiving email from me. I'lm using Outlook 2003. My customer is also using Outlook 2003. Since a few weeks ago, she can no longer receive my email in Outlook 2003. However, she receives them fine in Outlook Express. The puzzling thing is that all was working fine until the end of may. I've looked at the SMTP in both Outlook and Outlook express and they are the same. I've tried sendinf a email from a different computer (with Outlook 2000 this time) with the same problem. I must admit to not understanding this problem! Any idea as to what to try next? Thanks! Annie |
#4
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Tim
The problem is that the email is received at the client end but with Outlook Express. Since Outlook is not receiving it and is installed at the clients end but is being received by Outlook Express I suspect that this issue rests at the client end by the client having Outlook Express installed as their Default email client. They will need to switch the Default email client over to Outlook. Very hard to tell when there is not enough information as how the clients set up is set. -- Peter Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged. "Tim" tim_at_overthere.com wrote in message news ![]() It's not likely on your end. First thing that comes to mind is have your customer check her Junk e-mail folder. I have had Outlook "suddenly" decide that e-mail from someone should now be routed to Junk even after working fine for a period of time. Don't know what the cause was...I just added that address to the "Safe" list in Outlook and the problem went away. Tim wrote in message oups.com... Hello to all of you, One of my customer as troubles receiving email from me. I'lm using Outlook 2003. My customer is also using Outlook 2003. Since a few weeks ago, she can no longer receive my email in Outlook 2003. However, she receives them fine in Outlook Express. The puzzling thing is that all was working fine until the end of may. I've looked at the SMTP in both Outlook and Outlook express and they are the same. I've tried sendinf a email from a different computer (with Outlook 2000 this time) with the same problem. I must admit to not understanding this problem! Any idea as to what to try next? Thanks! Annie |
#5
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Peter and Tim,
I had already looked at her Junk mail and that's not the problem. Peter : I saw that you also reply on my french version of this email... thanks. I will indeed check to see which program is used by default. Fortunately, I can do all this from the confort of my home with a VPN connexion to her computer... makes it quite easier to do some testing! Do you thing it could be a that Outlook needs to be compacted? Thanks again! Annie On 5 juil, 17:10, "Peter Foldes" wrote: Tim The problem is that the email is received at the client end but with Outlook Express. Since Outlook is not receiving it and is installed at the clients end but is being received by Outlook Express I suspect that this issue rests at the client end by the client having Outlook Express installed as their Default email client. They will need to switch the Default email client over to Outlook. Very hard to tell when there is not enough information as how the clients set up is set. -- Peter Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged. "Tim" tim_at_overthere.com wrote in messagenews ![]() It's not likely on your end. First thing that comes to mind is have your customer check her Junk e-mail folder. I have had Outlook "suddenly" decide that e-mail from someone should now be routed to Junk even after working fine for a period of time. Don't know what the cause was...I just added that address to the "Safe" list in Outlook and the problem went away. Tim wrote in message roups.com... Hello to all of you, One of my customer as troubles receiving email from me. I'lm using Outlook 2003. My customer is also using Outlook 2003. Since a few weeks ago, she can no longer receive my email in Outlook 2003. However, she receives them fine in Outlook Express. The puzzling thing is that all was working fine until the end of may. I've looked at the SMTP in both Outlook and Outlook express and they are the same. I've tried sendinf a email from a different computer (with Outlook 2000 this time) with the same problem. I must admit to not understanding this problem! Any idea as to what to try next? Thanks! Annie- Masquer le texte des messages précédents - - Afficher le texte des messages précédents - |
#6
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"Tim" wrote in message
news ![]() It's not likely on your end. First thing that comes to mind is have your customer check her Junk e-mail folder. I have had Outlook "suddenly" decide that e-mail from someone should now be routed to Junk even after working fine for a period of time. Don't know what the cause was...I just added that address to the "Safe" list in Outlook and the problem went away. Ah, the benefits of using someone else's Bayesian database for junk mail filtering. Every so often Microsoft shoves another spam database as a Windows update. The database is obviously not one that you created that reflects your personal history of experience regarding spam but someone else's (i.e., a database that Microsoft built, not you). That means it is entirely possible that the externally generated Bayesian database has a set of weighted words or phrases that happens to trigger on what are good e-mails for you. I didn't bother upgrading to OL2003. No bang for the buck and I have better anti-spam solutions than what Microsoft stuck in OL2003. Isn't there a way in OL2003 to mark a mail that got shoved into the Junk folder as "not spam" to remove or reduce the weighting of the trigger words so that future similar mails don't get similar identified as spam (i.e., doesn't the user get an option to unmark a mail as spam and unweight the database)? Also, maybe the OP should check the Blocked Senders list. |
#7
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Annie
Compacting has nothing to do with this. First check what I asked and let me know. After we can see what else is the next step. -- Peter Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged. "AnnieCMA" wrote in message ps.com... Peter and Tim, I had already looked at her Junk mail and that's not the problem. Peter : I saw that you also reply on my french version of this email... thanks. I will indeed check to see which program is used by default. Fortunately, I can do all this from the confort of my home with a VPN connexion to her computer... makes it quite easier to do some testing! Do you thing it could be a that Outlook needs to be compacted? Thanks again! Annie On 5 juil, 17:10, "Peter Foldes" wrote: Tim The problem is that the email is received at the client end but with Outlook Express. Since Outlook is not receiving it and is installed at the clients end but is being received by Outlook Express I suspect that this issue rests at the client end by the client having Outlook Express installed as their Default email client. They will need to switch the Default email client over to Outlook. Very hard to tell when there is not enough information as how the clients set up is set. -- Peter Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged. "Tim" tim_at_overthere.com wrote in messagenews ![]() It's not likely on your end. First thing that comes to mind is have your customer check her Junk e-mail folder. I have had Outlook "suddenly" decide that e-mail from someone should now be routed to Junk even after working fine for a period of time. Don't know what the cause was...I just added that address to the "Safe" list in Outlook and the problem went away. Tim wrote in message roups.com... Hello to all of you, One of my customer as troubles receiving email from me. I'lm using Outlook 2003. My customer is also using Outlook 2003. Since a few weeks ago, she can no longer receive my email in Outlook 2003. However, she receives them fine in Outlook Express. The puzzling thing is that all was working fine until the end of may. I've looked at the SMTP in both Outlook and Outlook express and they are the same. I've tried sendinf a email from a different computer (with Outlook 2000 this time) with the same problem. I must admit to not understanding this problem! Any idea as to what to try next? Thanks! Annie- Masquer le texte des messages précédents - - Afficher le texte des messages précédents - |
#8
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Also, check the rules.
One other thing to check is if OE is set to delete email from the server then Outlook would not be able to get the message -- Neil "Vanguard" wrote in message ... "Tim" wrote in message news ![]() It's not likely on your end. First thing that comes to mind is have your customer check her Junk e-mail folder. I have had Outlook "suddenly" decide that e-mail from someone should now be routed to Junk even after working fine for a period of time. Don't know what the cause was...I just added that address to the "Safe" list in Outlook and the problem went away. Ah, the benefits of using someone else's Bayesian database for junk mail filtering. Every so often Microsoft shoves another spam database as a Windows update. The database is obviously not one that you created that reflects your personal history of experience regarding spam but someone else's (i.e., a database that Microsoft built, not you). That means it is entirely possible that the externally generated Bayesian database has a set of weighted words or phrases that happens to trigger on what are good e-mails for you. I didn't bother upgrading to OL2003. No bang for the buck and I have better anti-spam solutions than what Microsoft stuck in OL2003. Isn't there a way in OL2003 to mark a mail that got shoved into the Junk folder as "not spam" to remove or reduce the weighting of the trigger words so that future similar mails don't get similar identified as spam (i.e., doesn't the user get an option to unmark a mail as spam and unweight the database)? Also, maybe the OP should check the Blocked Senders list. |
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