Oops. Sorry about the brain fart. I meant to say, send the message as HTML or 
plain text, using the standard attachment encoding for the attachment.


On May 15, 2015 9:08:46 AM CDT, "John F. Eldredge" <[email protected]> wrote:
> As far as I know, Microsoft has never publicly released the details of
> their proprietary email format. Certain companies have been able to
> license this information, but have no doubt had to pay a substantial
> amount of money and agree to non-disclosure agreements. If the full
> formatting needs to be preserved, the best solution would likely be to
> send the document as an attachment.
> 
> 
> 
> On May 13, 2015 6:24:31 AM CDT, Seth Holmes <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> > On 5/12/15 6:09 PM, Cindy wrote:
> > > I do a lot of MS word documents/contracts on my computer to send
> to
> > clients.
> > > I always send myself a copy of it too.  So when it is coming from
> > me, to me, I
> > > can guarantee it is leaving as a .doc, and it comes back as a .doc
> > online but
> > > on my phone it comes in as a winmail.dat.
> > >
> > >   I used to be able to open and read my own .doc contracts on my
> > phone but it
> > > changed a while back (can't tell you the exact date it changed)
> but
> > something
> > > has changed with k9 to cause this problem since the document is
> fine
> > out on
> > > the web and when it comes into my desktop.  Since k9 used to be
> able
> > to open
> > > these just fine, I know that they should be able to fix whatever
> is
> > causing
> > > the problem now.
> > >
> > > Even if no one has the answer at present, k9 needs to look into
> > changes they
> > > have made that might be causing the issue and fix it back to the
> way
> > it was.
> > > Are the k9 coders reading these posts to know of the problem?
> > 
> > The rest of the Internet recognizes that a winmail.dat file is a
> > specific 
> > Microsoft proprietary format and that Microsoft has gone through
> great
> > lengths 
> > to make it proprietary.
> > 
> > It really does depend on the client you are using and whether or not
> > it 
> > supports winmail.dat. The list is small. I know Outlook is on the
> > list. I 
> > don't know what you use to access your e-mail over the web, but
> > whatever it is 
> > probably supports winmail.dat files. Maybe is mchsi.com uses
> Exchange
> > on the 
> > back end, it can handle winmail.dat files for you. There are some
> > third party 
> > add-ons for Thunderbird that supposedly do this as well. But
> > Thunderbird 
> > (arguably one of the most popular desktop clients on the Internet)
> > does not 
> > support it.
> > 
> > Here's what Microsoft has to say on the subject:
> > 
> > https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/278061
> > 
> > SYMPTOMS
> > You receive an email message that contains a winmail.dat attachment.
> > This 
> > issue may occur if all of the following conditions are true:
> > The email message is sent to you by someone using Microsoft Outlook.
> > The format of the message is Rich Text format (RTF).
> > 
> > This issue is more common when the email message is sent to you over
> > the Internet.
> > 
> > CAUSE
> > The Winmail.dat file is used to preserve Rich Text formatting.
> Outlook
> > uses it 
> > when sending a Rich Text-formatted message. During transport, the
> > content of 
> > the message may be changed, preventing the receiving client from
> being
> > able to 
> > read the formatting instructions. In other cases, the receiving
> client
> > does 
> > not use or recognize the winmail.dat file.
> > 
> > RESOLUTION
> > The data in a winmail.dat file is not usable. To resolve this issue,
> > ask the 
> > sender to re-send the message in plain text format. The following
> > methods can 
> > be used by sender to prevent sending Rich Text messages encapsulated
> > in the 
> > Transport Neutral Encapsulation Format (TNEF).
> > 
> > Method 1: Change the default message format
> > 
> > The sender can change the format of the email messages that they
> send
> > by using 
> > the following steps:
> > On the Tools menu, click Options, and then click Mail Format.
> > In Compose in this message format, click to select Plain Text, and
> > then click OK.
> > NOTE: To send to certain recipients that use RTF format and others
> > recipients 
> > that use plain text format, the sender must set the option for the
> > recipient 
> > in either the Personal Address Book or the recipient's contact
> record.
> > 
> > Method 2: Modify the recipient's entry in the Personal Address Book
> > 
> > The sender can use the following steps to remove the RTF format from
> > the 
> > recipient attribute in the Personal Address Book:
> > On the Tools menu, click Address Book.
> > In Show Names From, click the Personal Address Book.
> > Select the addressee that you want to set as plain text, and then
> > click 
> > Properties on the File menu.
> > In the SMTP-General tab, click to clear the Always send to this
> > recipient in 
> > Microsoft Exchange rich text format check box, and then click OK.
> > 
> > Method 3: Change the specific contact format
> > 
> > The sender can use the following steps to set plain text in the
> > recipient's 
> > contact record:
> > Open the recipient's record in the Contacts folder.
> > Double-click the recipient's e-mail address.
> > In the E-Mail Properties dialog box, click Send Plain Text only
> under
> > Internet 
> > Format.
> > 
> > Method 4: Set the Outlook Rich Text Format Internet e-mail setting
> > 
> > In Outlook 2003 and Outlook 2007, click Options on the Tools menu.
> > Click the Mail Format tab.
> > Click Internet Format.
> > Under Outlook Rich Text options, click either Convert to HTML format
> > or 
> > Convert to Plain Text format.
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > But I think it's more likely something changed on your end than
> > something 
> > changed on K-9s end. I don't know that K-9 has ever supported
> > winmail.dat 
> > files. Anyone know? Since it's possible for an administrator on a
> > Windows 
> > network to modify your settings without your knowledge, it's very
> > possible 
> > something changed without your knowledge.
> > 
> > I'm a little more concerned you're sending legal documents to your
> > e-mail 
> > address outside of your organization's system.
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > But hey, the rest of the community could be wrong. I'm sure it's
> > happened before.

-- 
John F. Eldredge -- [email protected] (615) 299-6451
"Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive 
out hate; only love can do that." -- Martin Luther King, Jr.

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