onegallant

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  • in reply to: O’ Connell Street, Dublin #731150
    onegallant
    Participant

    Is it possible to get pre-1916 plan of the internal layout the Freeman’s Journal, Evening Telegraph and Weekly Sport complex in Princes Street / Abbey Street?

    in reply to: O’ Connell Street, Dublin #731147
    onegallant
    Participant

    Is it possible to get pre-1916 plans of the internal layout the Freeman’s Journal, Evening Telegraph and Weekly Sport complex in Princes Street / Abbey Street?
    Eamonn.

    in reply to: anybodyknow what type of file this is? #777861
    onegallant
    Participant

    Many times you might receive an email with an attachment called winmail.dat. The file is sent from people using Microsoft Outlook as their email program. The file allows Outlook users to send Transport Neutral Encapsulation Format (TNEF) information along with the email so that it retains the look and feel of the document with formatting, fonts, and colors when its received by another Microsoft Outlook user.
    Unfortunately, the file is only relevant and used by Microsoft Outlook. Users of Outlook Express, Eudora, Netscape Messenger, and other email programs will receive the attachment called winmail.dat with the email.

    The file is attached to the email because the original sender is sending emails in Microsoft Outlook Rich Text Format instead of Plain Text format.

    How to Configure Outlook NOT to send Winmail.dat attachments

    To Turn off Rich Text sending for messages in Microsoft Outlook

    1) Click on Tools
    2) Click Options, and then click the Mail Format tab.
    3) In the Send in this Message Format list, select Plain Text, and then click OK.

    This will set your default sending method to Plain Text, which will lose your special formatting options with fonts, colors, etc. However everyone, no matter what email program they are using, will now be able to receive your email with no problems.

    There is more information on this topic in the Microsoft Knowledge Base

    What if I Want to View the WinMail.dat file?

    If you want to view the winmail.dat file and see the message, there are programs that decode the file and allow you to view it. Listed below you will find some of these programs.

    Fentun
    Will work on Win9X, NT, and 2000 computers. But does not work on Windows XP

    WMDecode
    Program using a simple drag and drop procedure to view winmail.dat contents

    TNEF’s Enough
    Macintosh program to decode winmail.dat TNEF attachments

    http://www.pchell.com/support/winmaildat.shtml

    I hope this helps.

    in reply to: The scaffolding dissappears… #751685
    onegallant
    Participant

    Hi all.
    This is my first post and I hope I am doing it right. My query is about St. George’s Church, Hardwicke Street. I would like to know what the old clock chimes sounded like. When I say old I mean pre-1951 when the old clock stopped working after 123 years (the present clock dates from the mid-sixties).

    My query arises from James Joyce’s Ulysses, where this clock strikes at 10.45 a.m., and Leopold Bloom interprets the sound as
    Heigho! Heigho!
    Heigho! Heigho!
    Heigho! Heigho!
    Some commentators think this represents Westminster Chimes, but I’m not too sure about this.

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