T
todd
Here's an Outlook riddle for you:
I'm running into an issue where some incoming messages
seem to be converting into outgoing draft messages.
A quick example:
I received a message from John Smith last week. A few days
after I received the message I went to go find it in my
inbox...and couldn't. When I sorted by the 'from' column I
noticed quite a few mail items with blank 'from' fields
and the 'draft' icon instead of the standard 'e-mail'
icon. John Smith's e-mail was in this grouping. Somehow,
his message (and a lot of others) had been changed from a
standard received e-mail item to an outgoing draft. Very
strange.
It seems to be happening randomly. I haven't found any
type of pattern. It's happening to internally and
externally received items, items with and without
attachments, items received on different days at different
times, items I've replied to and items to which I havn't
replied.
The Microsoft Knowledge Base doesn't have anything listed
that's even remotely similar.
Has anybody seen this one or have any thoughts?
I'm running into an issue where some incoming messages
seem to be converting into outgoing draft messages.
A quick example:
I received a message from John Smith last week. A few days
after I received the message I went to go find it in my
inbox...and couldn't. When I sorted by the 'from' column I
noticed quite a few mail items with blank 'from' fields
and the 'draft' icon instead of the standard 'e-mail'
icon. John Smith's e-mail was in this grouping. Somehow,
his message (and a lot of others) had been changed from a
standard received e-mail item to an outgoing draft. Very
strange.
It seems to be happening randomly. I haven't found any
type of pattern. It's happening to internally and
externally received items, items with and without
attachments, items received on different days at different
times, items I've replied to and items to which I havn't
replied.
The Microsoft Knowledge Base doesn't have anything listed
that's even remotely similar.
Has anybody seen this one or have any thoughts?