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Max # of addressees
My friend told me that Outlook (I have O-2000 & he has O-2002) will only
send up to 100 addressees. That it will drop out any in excess of 100. He says that's what his computer guru told him. I have a group (150) of Aviation Cadet classmates and it appears to have sent to all the 150 addressees. Any ideas? |
Max # of addressees
This has nothing whatsoever to do with Outlook. Those limits are set my the
mail server, not Outlook. Someone needs a new guru. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Panic" wrote in message ... My friend told me that Outlook (I have O-2000 & he has O-2002) will only send up to 100 addressees. That it will drop out any in excess of 100. He says that's what his computer guru told him. I have a group (150) of Aviation Cadet classmates and it appears to have sent to all the 150 addressees. Any ideas? |
Max # of addressees
"Panic" wrote in message ...
My friend told me that Outlook (I have O-2000 & he has O-2002) will only send up to 100 addressees. That it will drop out any in excess of 100. He says that's what his computer guru told him. I have a group (150) of Aviation Cadet classmates and it appears to have sent to all the 150 addressees. Your friend. He says. So why do you care about his sending problems when trying to spew out bulk mail that exceeds the anti-spam quotas for the *personal* email account that your "friend" is using? You will have to find out what are the anti-spam quotas for YOUR email account, and only your email provider can answer that question since THEY are the ones that enforce that anti-spam quota. |
Max # of addressees
"VanguardLH" wrote in message
... "Panic" wrote in message ... My friend told me that Outlook (I have O-2000 & he has O-2002) will only send up to 100 addressees. That it will drop out any in excess of 100. He says that's what his computer guru told him. I have a group (150) of Aviation Cadet classmates and it appears to have sent to all the 150 addressees. Your friend. He says. So why do you care about his sending problems when trying to spew out bulk mail that exceeds the anti-spam quotas for the *personal* email account that your "friend" is using? You will have to find out what are the anti-spam quotas for YOUR email account, and only your email provider can answer that question since THEY are the ones that enforce that anti-spam quota. Thank you for your courteous response. I don't send spam. But I do handle the email for my Air Force pilot training group reunions. They (as I said in my initial post) are the ones I am emailing. This is "personal" email from my "personal" account. Russ' response confirms my suspicion that addressee limits are only set by ISPs, not by Outlook itself. |
Max # of addressees
Thanks, Russ. That's what I suspected. Perhaps his "guru" actually told
him that but he may have confused himself on what places any actual limit on addressees. We both have "senior moments" these days. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote in message ... This has nothing whatsoever to do with Outlook. Those limits are set my the mail server, not Outlook. Someone needs a new guru. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Panic" wrote in message ... My friend told me that Outlook (I have O-2000 & he has O-2002) will only send up to 100 addressees. That it will drop out any in excess of 100. He says that's what his computer guru told him. I have a group (150) of Aviation Cadet classmates and it appears to have sent to all the 150 addressees. Any ideas? |
Max # of addressees
Since you use Outlook, you might want to consider using a mail merge to
electronic mail instead of one message to so many recipients. That will get around any limitations your mail server might impose. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Panic" wrote in message ... Thanks, Russ. That's what I suspected. Perhaps his "guru" actually told him that but he may have confused himself on what places any actual limit on addressees. We both have "senior moments" these days. "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote in message ... This has nothing whatsoever to do with Outlook. Those limits are set my the mail server, not Outlook. Someone needs a new guru. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "Panic" wrote in message ... My friend told me that Outlook (I have O-2000 & he has O-2002) will only send up to 100 addressees. That it will drop out any in excess of 100. He says that's what his computer guru told him. I have a group (150) of Aviation Cadet classmates and it appears to have sent to all the 150 addressees. Any ideas? |
Max # of addressees
"Panic" wrote in message
... "VanguardLH" wrote in message ... "Panic" wrote in message ... My friend told me that Outlook (I have O-2000 & he has O-2002) will only send up to 100 addressees. That it will drop out any in excess of 100. He says that's what his computer guru told him. I have a group (150) of Aviation Cadet classmates and it appears to have sent to all the 150 addressees. Your friend. He says. So why do you care about his sending problems when trying to spew out bulk mail that exceeds the anti-spam quotas for the *personal* email account that your "friend" is using? You will have to find out what are the anti-spam quotas for YOUR email account, and only your email provider can answer that question since THEY are the ones that enforce that anti-spam quota. Thank you for your courteous response. I don't send spam. But I do handle the email for my Air Force pilot training group reunions. They (as I said in my initial post) are the ones I am emailing. This is "personal" email from my "personal" account. Russ' response confirms my suspicion that addressee limits are only set by ISPs, not by Outlook itself. Rather than sending out 1 email to hundreds of recipients, why not send 1 email to each of them? You can use MailMerge in Word (if you have Word) or some bulk mailing program (several are listed at www.slipstick.com). Outlook was designed to be a personal e-mail client (with support for corporate features), not a bulk mailing program. MailMerge might work but it has no control over how fast you send those individual emails. Some ISPs restrict how many emails you can send per minute and might also restrict how many mail sessions every 1 or 5 minutes. This is to reduce email traffic to what would be considered appropriate for a *personal* email service. Alternatively, your email provider may have other plans to which you can subscribe. Or you could check into listserver services for sending out bulk mailings. |
Max # of addressees
"VanguardLH" wrote in message
... "Panic" wrote in message ... "VanguardLH" wrote in message ... "Panic" wrote in message ... My friend told me that Outlook (I have O-2000 & he has O-2002) will only send up to 100 addressees. That it will drop out any in excess of 100. He says that's what his computer guru told him. I have a group (150) of Aviation Cadet classmates and it appears to have sent to all the 150 addressees. Your friend. He says. So why do you care about his sending problems when trying to spew out bulk mail that exceeds the anti-spam quotas for the *personal* email account that your "friend" is using? You will have to find out what are the anti-spam quotas for YOUR email account, and only your email provider can answer that question since THEY are the ones that enforce that anti-spam quota. Thank you for your courteous response. I don't send spam. But I do handle the email for my Air Force pilot training group reunions. They (as I said in my initial post) are the ones I am emailing. This is "personal" email from my "personal" account. Russ' response confirms my suspicion that addressee limits are only set by ISPs, not by Outlook itself. Rather than sending out 1 email to hundreds of recipients, why not send 1 email to each of them? You can use MailMerge in Word (if you have Word) or some bulk mailing program (several are listed at www.slipstick.com). Outlook was designed to be a personal e-mail client (with support for corporate features), not a bulk mailing program. MailMerge might work but it has no control over how fast you send those individual emails. Some ISPs restrict how many emails you can send per minute and might also restrict how many mail sessions every 1 or 5 minutes. This is to reduce email traffic to what would be considered appropriate for a *personal* email service. Alternatively, your email provider may have other plans to which you can subscribe. Or you could check into listserver services for sending out bulk mailings. Those are all good suggestions. I haved saved your post to consider later. I have Word 2007 which defaults to saving documents as .docx files. Maybe I can use the option to Save as (older) .doc files to insure everyone can read it. |
Max # of addressees
Panic wrote:
Those are all good suggestions. I haved saved your post to consider later. I have Word 2007 which defaults to saving documents as .docx files. Maybe I can use the option to Save as (older) .doc files to insure everyone can read it. You can configure Word 2007 to ALWAYS save in Word 2003 format. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] |
Max # of addressees
"Brian Tillman" wrote in message
... Panic wrote: Those are all good suggestions. I haved saved your post to consider later. I have Word 2007 which defaults to saving documents as .docx files. Maybe I can use the option to Save as (older) .doc files to insure everyone can read it. You can configure Word 2007 to ALWAYS save in Word 2003 format. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] Would that cause me to lose any important features allowed by Word 2007? |
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