Well, I didn't want to answer my own question, but...
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/287816
Tools/Options/Preferences/Email Options, and clear the 'Remove extra line
breaks' checkbox. Works like a charm.
--
Tim Boyer
Director IT and Engineering Projects
Denman Tire Corporation
(330) 675-4249
Tim, I have noticed the same problem when dealing with Outlook
recipients. Unfortunately, it means that my emails are often hard to
read for those people. I too think its an Outlook problem, but at the
same time, since I can't fix Outlook, I wonder if there's anything can
do in Mutt to make Outlo
Just to try to appear _slightly_ less stupid...
When I sent this email to the list, it was formatted correctly. When I'm
reading it on the list, it's not. Which obviously means it's an Outlook
problem. Which serves me right.
I'll slink away now...
--
Tim Boyer
Director IT and Engineering Pro
=- Marc Vaillant wrote on Thu 1.Feb'07 at 15:59:51 -0500 -=
> "{...} ... only thing is, you know that feature that everyone in
> the office loves to use with their clients, well you have to
> tell them not to use it."
How do you know they "love it"?
There is active love/ choice and passive (mean
I use mutt on a bunch of Linux and Unix systems primarily to toss files from
one system to another, and I've run into an odd problem.
I'm trying to send a file with the following rsync results:
Number of files: 8944
Number of files transferred: 3455
Total file size: 2702230825 bytes
Total transfe
On Wed, Jan 31, 2007 at 09:54:39AM +0100, Stefano Sabatini wrote:
Dear list
> On date Wednesday 2007-01-31 01:31:40 +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] muttered:
> Are you sure that when you're composing mails you're using the
> mail-mode?
That was indeed the problem. A simple add-to-list didn't do the wor