NCDHelpdesk
Technical User
Hi folks,
Does anyone know how I can get Inbox mail which has been forwarded to show up as the original sender?
To explain, my new corporate email client is an awful webmail client called Teamware Office. I want to circumvent it and have got as far as having it forward all mail successfully to a new 'private webmail' account which can synch nicely with Outlook 2003. The last hurdle is that all the mail is of course listed in the 'From' field as being from myself. So how can I make it show as though it is from the original sender?
Our organisations mail system (Teamware) does not use SMTP or POP3 and Outlook 2003 does not allow Rules to be configured when using HTTP accounts.
Thanks in advance.
P.S. I've just noted that the original emails (which come in as attachments) can be saved into the Inbox and show up in there as Unread which is cool. All I need then is a lump of script or trick that can automate this task on the arrival of the forwarded mail and delete the original. Macro or VB script perhaps?
Does anyone know how I can get Inbox mail which has been forwarded to show up as the original sender?
To explain, my new corporate email client is an awful webmail client called Teamware Office. I want to circumvent it and have got as far as having it forward all mail successfully to a new 'private webmail' account which can synch nicely with Outlook 2003. The last hurdle is that all the mail is of course listed in the 'From' field as being from myself. So how can I make it show as though it is from the original sender?
Our organisations mail system (Teamware) does not use SMTP or POP3 and Outlook 2003 does not allow Rules to be configured when using HTTP accounts.
Thanks in advance.
P.S. I've just noted that the original emails (which come in as attachments) can be saved into the Inbox and show up in there as Unread which is cool. All I need then is a lump of script or trick that can automate this task on the arrival of the forwarded mail and delete the original. Macro or VB script perhaps?