Adobe Reader Outlook For Mac Send To Email
All systems running current software. Reader DC 'send file as e-mail attachment' does not open a new outlook e-mail window and as a result does not attach file. I've already tried all available preference settings, how to fixes found. Reader is configured correctly.
Hi guys, Having an issue of not being able to send email using Adobe Reader, as it says there is 'no default client'. After looking at the file assosciations for the machine that is having the issues, it appears as though there are no associated files, (See image attached). File association reports to be all set as default. Best mac program for flyers. I have gone through the process of 'repairing' Office as well as completely uninstalling and reinstalling. However, there still seems to be no files assosciated to the program.
Any thoughts? The first image is showing us that it has all of it's defaults. The Second image is how it looks on a functioning machine. The third image is of the machine that we are having issues on, it seems that there are no file associations.
Create email2 as another mailbox 2. Assign full access with 'send as' permission to email1 3. Create redirection/forward rule that sends to email1 whatever email2 receives (or the other way around).
You may change this depending on how you want your incoming email behaves. I think creating email2 as another secondary SMTP address (from the same mailbox, email1) will not work as you cannot switch back and fort to both addresses (emai1 and email2 when they are from the same mailbox, so it has to be separate) as your 'from' field when sending an email. That might be a tall order to fill. The reason is, just coming from an ISV standpoint, there are too many variables to support when someone wants to work with SQL or some 3rd party database. About 15-20% of our tech support deals with helping users import or mass update AD data.
Having to work with a text file takes any data acquisition complexity out of the picture and it can be viewed or shared directly. Usually the problems come done to data formatting and other issues specific to what the user wants to do.
There may be solutions out there that do this, but I would imagine they would be pricey because of the high upfront development cost and support. Ryan_H wrote: Hi, Thanks for your response. Unfortunately that's had no effect. We were previously running Reader XI and have updated to DC in an attempt to resolve the issue. Still no joy however.
Important to note that we are still seeing 0 file associations on Outlook (32 Bit). Below is an image of the file association issue I'm referring to.  So let's try installing Mozilla Thunderbird just for testing the defaults of email, then test sending attachment to Thunderbird and see if that works. If it does then it is an issue with Windows and Outlook.
When I double click on a Word attachment, Outlook tries to open it with “Windows Photo Viewer” which obviously fails. Similarly, when I double click on a pdf-file, it tries to open it with Adobe Photo Shop. Eventually, this will work for most pdf-files but loading PhotoShop takes a while and only allows me to view a single page at once. As I want to read and not edit the pdf-file, I’d much rather open it with Adobe Reader instead. How can I tell Outlook which program to open the attachment with?
That is not something controlled by Outlook but by Windows. Outlook simply tries to open it with whatever application you have set as the default for that file extension in Windows Control Panel. Quickly change the default via Open With A quick way to change the default application a certain file type opens with is to right click on it (after saving your attachment to disk first) and choose “Open with”. When multiple applications are already associated with that file type, choose “Open with” and then select “Choose default program”. When you’ve selected the application that you want to open it with, make sure the option “Always the selected program to open this kind of file”. The next time you double click a file with that file extension in Outlook, it will directly open with the newly selected program.