Some hae meat and canna eat, and some wad eat that want it.But we hae meat, and we can eat,and sae the Lord be thankit. – R. Burns If you’ve become a regular reader of these Tips, you may have spotted that we’ve skipped a few from the numerical sequence. That’s because they were either Microsoft-specific (and not of much use for external consumption), or were in fact regurgitations of stuff I’d posted to this blog before. Like the bulk Outlook Contacts updater tool that makes all your Contacts’ phone numbers conform to the standard – here. So that I can keep the sequence the same for the internal and external versions of these tips, I’ll periodically skip a few numbers.
Some hae meat and canna eat, and some wad eat that want it.But we hae meat, and we can eat,and sae the Lord be thankit. – R. Burns
If you’ve become a regular reader of these Tips, you may have spotted that we’ve skipped a few from the numerical sequence. That’s because they were either Microsoft-specific (and not of much use for external consumption), or were in fact regurgitations of stuff I’d posted to this blog before. Like the bulk Outlook Contacts updater tool that makes all your Contacts’ phone numbers conform to the standard – here.
So that I can keep the sequence the same for the internal and external versions of these tips, I’ll periodically skip a few numbers.
Have you ever sent an email then wished you hadn’t? Or thought “whoops”, just spotted a mistake?
It’s easy to set Outlook to give you a safety net, where emails sit in your Outbox for a few minutes before being sent – you can fish them back out, make changes and resend if necessary.
In Outlook, go into the Rules & Alerts settings (in Outlook 2010, it’s on the File menu), and
On a Message-by-message basis, you can set delivery delays too – in Outlook 2010, when you’re writing a message and about to send, look on the ”Options” tab on the Ribbon …