Show Attached images Preview in email

A

Amon-Ra

I just updated my Outlook to 2003. My old version showed the attached images
when I opened it..

I mean, someone sent me 10 pictures.. I could just open the email and see
all the images preview in sequence..

The old Outlook I could do this, this 2003 version I cant...

Is there a way to me make this?
 
G

Guest

I just updated my Outlook to 2003. My old version showed the attached images
when I opened it..

I mean, someone sent me 10 pictures.. I could just open the email and see
all the images preview in sequence..

The old Outlook I could do this, this 2003 version I cant...
Maybe Outlook Express worked that way (hint: it does) but Outlook has
never showed attached images in the body of the message unless they were
embedded into the message body by the sender.
 
S

Spediteur

Got to Outlook Tools|Options|Security tab, look at Change Automatic Download
Settings. In general, it's worth your while to poke around the options
settings to see what's in there.

Spediteur
 
G

Guest

Got to Outlook Tools|Options|Security tab, look at Change Automatic Download
Settings. In general, it's worth your while to poke around the options
settings to see what's in there.
Good advice but that will not allow the OP to see *attached* images in
the body of the message, which is what they were inquiring about.
 
S

Spediteur

I guess I misunderstood your question. In that case I believe that the image
has to be inserted into the body of the original HTML-format message.
Otherwise, it will be an attached file. Plain text formatted messages will
never show images inline.
 
T

t23augusto

sorry for my ignorance.. but why when I use the hotmail web mail i can see
the atachments without opening them sepparatly?
 
T

t23augusto

sorry for my ignorance.. but why when I use the hotmail web mail i can see
the atachments without opening them sepparatly?
 
S

SgtRich

sorry for my ignorance.. but why when I use the hotmail web mail i can see
the atachments without opening them sepparatly?

Because Hotmail and Outlook have absolutely nothing in common when it
comes to how they handle mail.
 

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