T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
196.1 | Try this | RUMOR::stanpc.ogo.dec.com::foster | Stan Foster @OGO | Fri Mar 08 1996 18:44 | 5 |
196.2 | Just what I was looking for... but... | AYJEN1::caly70.ayo.dec.com::Gordon | http://www.ayo.dec.com/ert/team/gordon.html | Mon Mar 11 1996 08:18 | 9 |
196.3 | Has anyone gotten this to work? | CSC32::LIVERMAN | Me upon my pony on my boat | Thu Mar 14 1996 15:49 | 20 |
196.4 | Must be the server...? | AYJEN1::caly70.ayo.dec.com::Gordon | http://www.ayo.dec.com/ert/team/gordon.html | Mon May 27 1996 13:44 | 17 |
196.5 | Any solutions? | OGOPW1::ogodhcp-125-64-52.ogo.dec.com::Diaz | | Fri Jan 31 1997 19:38 | 5 |
| Does anyone have a clean solution for this problem, when using NT
Exchange servers?
/OLD
|
196.6 | | BUSY::SLAB | Act like you own the company | Mon Mar 31 1997 15:02 | 4 |
|
Related to .3, why doesn't Exchange use my default font for a
forward or reply ... rather only on a new message?
|
196.7 | | ACISS1::aci1200_port4.chi.dec.com::Andrews | | Mon Mar 31 1997 18:02 | 8 |
| Umm, because you didn't tell it to? 8-)
There should be an option (probably buried in some dialog box) that allows
you to change the default font for forwarding, replyings and new message.
Look under the 'reading' tab in the tools/options dialog box. That's where
it is in outlook, and I'm pretty sure it'll be there in exchange.
|
196.8 | | BUSY::SLAB | And when one of us is gone ... | Mon Mar 31 1997 19:54 | 3 |
|
OK, I'll try it when I get home ... thanks.
|
196.9 | | BUSY::SLAB | Be gone - you have no powers here | Mon Apr 07 1997 22:18 | 9 |
|
It did work at home ... thanks.
But I just got upgraded to NT4.0 here and set both send/reply fonts
to green/bold and it still uses black/normal, even though I'm look-
ing at the set-up and it's clearly green/bold.
Is there some sort of "grayscale" option I set accidentally? 8^)
|
196.10 | | BUSY::SLAB | A Momentary Lapse of Reason | Fri Apr 11 1997 04:05 | 21 |
|
Well, a follow-up to my .9:
I asked the CS/IT group why Exchange wouldn't use my profile for
sending/replying and kept defaulting to Arial black [instead of
Britannica green], so one of them came over and re-installed the
entire Exchange utility for me. And it worked.
A couple other interesting side effects were:
<ctrl>k wouldn't work in the To: box when trying to match a wild-
card name in the GAL.
A bunch of my options weren't available in the pull-down menus
[IE, grayed out and unselectable].
But the re-install fixed all the problems that I knew about, and
maybe a few that I wasn't aware of at the time. The suggestion
was that Exchange might have been loaded onto the box before the
OS [NT4.0], and Exchange wasn't behaving properly as a result.
|
196.11 | Might be Wordmail | SNOFS1::OP_RT | RICHARD TOZER | Wed Apr 23 1997 02:33 | 8 |
| re -1
Sounds like you are now using Wordmail as your editor. Try ALT-K to
check names on the TO: line, if this works you are probably using Word
and that is why some menu options have changed.
Regards
Richard
|
196.12 | | MRPTH1::16.34.80.132::slab | [email protected] | Tue May 20 1997 19:03 | 16 |
|
RE: .11
Actually, I'm not using WordMail as an editor ... never was. But I
guess it doesn't really matter since it works.
But another question ... is there some sort of a toggle key that
Exchange uses to switch between insert/overstrike, much like <ctrl>a
in VMS?
A co-worker accidentally toggled to overstrike and couldn't figure
out how to go back to insert mode. I looked in all of the menus I
could find and there was nothing.
Thanks for any info.
|
196.13 | | PYRO::RON | Ron S. van Zuylen | Tue May 20 1997 19:27 | 5 |
| >But another question ... is there some sort of a toggle key that
>Exchange uses to switch between insert/overstrike, much like <ctrl>a
>in VMS?
How about the most obvious? The Insert key. :-)
|
196.14 | | MRPTH1::16.34.80.132::slab | [email protected] | Tue May 20 1997 20:31 | 10 |
|
Are you serious?
If so, I feel like such a fool. 8^)
Wow, you WERE serious. And I DO feel like a fool.
8^)
|