Search Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Learn More

Why doesn't sending in txt from Outlook help attached pdf files arriving as winmail.dat

more options

I send pdf files as attachments of Outlook email to a list that includes myself and my wife. We use gmail and both use T'bird as our client on our home computer. Hers end up as winmail.dat, while mine are fine. And hers is fine while it is still in gmail. I have tried sending these files using the plain txt format in Outlook but that does not help. What next?

I send pdf files as attachments of Outlook email to a list that includes myself and my wife. We use gmail and both use T'bird as our client on our home computer. Hers end up as winmail.dat, while mine are fine. And hers is fine while it is still in gmail. I have tried sending these files using the plain txt format in Outlook but that does not help. What next?

Chosen solution

I assume you mean Outlook, the program that is part of Office, rather than Outlook on the web, the new iteration of Hotmail and Live Mail.

There is an ancient setting in the address book from the early days of Outlook which allowed you to specify a sending format on a per-recipient basis. That is hard to find now, but if you hover the addressee in the message header area and open Outlook Properties, you can check that the addressee is not individually designated to get Outlook Rich Text Format. I have attached a screen shot for reference.

If that's not it, you might try Microsoft's support forums, as it might be too obscure for this one.

Ler a resposta no contexto 👍 1

All Replies (1)

more options

Chosen Solution

I assume you mean Outlook, the program that is part of Office, rather than Outlook on the web, the new iteration of Hotmail and Live Mail.

There is an ancient setting in the address book from the early days of Outlook which allowed you to specify a sending format on a per-recipient basis. That is hard to find now, but if you hover the addressee in the message header area and open Outlook Properties, you can check that the addressee is not individually designated to get Outlook Rich Text Format. I have attached a screen shot for reference.

If that's not it, you might try Microsoft's support forums, as it might be too obscure for this one.