Mac Users...
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The ironic part was this was generated because she sent a company wide email telling people to use the right signature format... Her email didn't have the signature formatted correctly because of that.
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@Jason said:
@BBigford said:
@Dashrender said:
Why does this user get to dictate what they use for email access?
They are a favorite from higher ups. So I have to explain to the CEO why Exchange handles that scenario that way. I haven't come up with anything yet...
Why would this even involve the CEO..
Because she is a favorite and complains to higher ups.
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@BBigford said:
@Jason said:
@BBigford said:
@Dashrender said:
Why does this user get to dictate what they use for email access?
They are a favorite from higher ups. So I have to explain to the CEO why Exchange handles that scenario that way. I haven't come up with anything yet...
Why would this even involve the CEO..
Because she is a favorite and complains to higher ups.
So? Management should stop that shit. That's going out of chain of command and escalating things that don't need to be. Everyone here gets the same treatment. From the maintenance guy to the CEO.
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@BBigford said:
I thought it might be related because of how the application gets handled. Shitty programming might get handled differently on Exchange I figured.
It interfaces at the protocol. The language and implementation are totally hidden. It's like saying you would not understand words from one typewriter versus another. But no matter how nice and crappy a typewriter is, it doesn't change the words around.
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@BBigford said:
I'm just trying to generate as much info as possible so I can do research. For instance, if Microsoft posted an article "Apple Mail is programmed in Swift. Inline attachments will be handled as htm documents and rich text thereafter." That would be something I could explain.
Languages don't impose limitations like that. All programming languages can do all things.
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@BBigford said:
@Dashrender said:
Why does this user get to dictate what they use for email access?
They are a favorite from higher ups. So I have to explain to the CEO why Exchange handles that scenario that way. I haven't come up with anything yet...
Why not explain that Apple Mail just doesn't work properly?
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@Jason said:
@BBigford said:
@Dashrender said:
Why does this user get to dictate what they use for email access?
They are a favorite from higher ups. So I have to explain to the CEO why Exchange handles that scenario that way. I haven't come up with anything yet...
Why would this even involve the CEO..
If I were NetworkNerd I'd say something very vulgar right now.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@BBigford said:
@Dashrender said:
Why does this user get to dictate what they use for email access?
They are a favorite from higher ups. So I have to explain to the CEO why Exchange handles that scenario that way. I haven't come up with anything yet...
Why not explain that Apple Mail just doesn't work properly?
It really should be as simple as that. Apple Mail does not work properly with Exchange - I can't explain why because I can't see into the communication stacks well enough to explain it, but the evidence is apparent. Oh and the solution is for the user to use another compatible email client. lol
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@scottalanmiller said:
@BBigford said:
I thought it might be related because of how the application gets handled. Shitty programming might get handled differently on Exchange I figured.
It interfaces at the protocol. The language and implementation are totally hidden. It's like saying you would not understand words from one typewriter versus another. But no matter how nice and crappy a typewriter is, it doesn't change the words around.
Makes sense. Thanks. If you had to come up with one logical guess, what would that be? It should be as simple as it doesn't work properly, but I need something. :l
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@BBigford said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@BBigford said:
I thought it might be related because of how the application gets handled. Shitty programming might get handled differently on Exchange I figured.
It interfaces at the protocol. The language and implementation are totally hidden. It's like saying you would not understand words from one typewriter versus another. But no matter how nice and crappy a typewriter is, it doesn't change the words around.
Makes sense. Thanks. If you had to come up with one logical guess, what would that be? It should be as simple as it doesn't work properly, but I need something. :l
Nope, it simply doesn't work properly. There isn't another answer. Whatever format it sends to Exchange isn't correct. It's an Exchange protocol and it works for everyone else, so we know that the issue is that Apple Mail simply sends garbage to Exchange. Garbage in, garbage out.
The messed up format that you see IS what Apple Mail is sending. That's all the more there is to it.
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If you need a good analogy to use, try this...
You have an English speaker and hundreds of French speakers. You have decided that the lingua Franca (ha ha) in the office is French. Whenever the English speaker tries to speak French, he tends to say the right words but pronounce them wrong or get them in the wrong order - he just doesn't quite know French completely.
Now the manager keeps asking the French speakers why the English speaker keeps getting it wrong.
There is no answer other than... he doesn't speak French fluently and gets it wrong.
Apple Mail is getting the language wrong, not enough for the mail to fail, but enough that it doesn't look right.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@BBigford said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@BBigford said:
I thought it might be related because of how the application gets handled. Shitty programming might get handled differently on Exchange I figured.
It interfaces at the protocol. The language and implementation are totally hidden. It's like saying you would not understand words from one typewriter versus another. But no matter how nice and crappy a typewriter is, it doesn't change the words around.
Makes sense. Thanks. If you had to come up with one logical guess, what would that be? It should be as simple as it doesn't work properly, but I need something. :l
Nope, it simply doesn't work properly. There isn't another answer. Whatever format it sends to Exchange isn't correct. It's an Exchange protocol and it works for everyone else, so we know that the issue is that Apple Mail simply sends garbage to Exchange. Garbage in, garbage out.
The messed up format that you see IS what Apple Mail is sending. That's all the more there is to it.
That makes sense... I didn't know what area the garbage was. Garbage programming? Garbage protocol? You already said it isn't related to garbage programming, it's part of the protocol. I'm guessing something in the application layer where it would be handled, or...?
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@BBigford said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@BBigford said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@BBigford said:
I thought it might be related because of how the application gets handled. Shitty programming might get handled differently on Exchange I figured.
It interfaces at the protocol. The language and implementation are totally hidden. It's like saying you would not understand words from one typewriter versus another. But no matter how nice and crappy a typewriter is, it doesn't change the words around.
Makes sense. Thanks. If you had to come up with one logical guess, what would that be? It should be as simple as it doesn't work properly, but I need something. :l
Nope, it simply doesn't work properly. There isn't another answer. Whatever format it sends to Exchange isn't correct. It's an Exchange protocol and it works for everyone else, so we know that the issue is that Apple Mail simply sends garbage to Exchange. Garbage in, garbage out.
The messed up format that you see IS what Apple Mail is sending. That's all the more there is to it.
That makes sense... I didn't know what area the garbage was. Garbage programming? Garbage protocol? You already said it isn't related to garbage programming, it's part of the protocol. I'm guessing something in the application layer where it would be handled, or...?
Well yes, the protocol is generated by the Apple Mail application's code. So when Apple wrote it, they wrote it wrong.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@BBigford said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@BBigford said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@BBigford said:
I thought it might be related because of how the application gets handled. Shitty programming might get handled differently on Exchange I figured.
It interfaces at the protocol. The language and implementation are totally hidden. It's like saying you would not understand words from one typewriter versus another. But no matter how nice and crappy a typewriter is, it doesn't change the words around.
Makes sense. Thanks. If you had to come up with one logical guess, what would that be? It should be as simple as it doesn't work properly, but I need something. :l
Nope, it simply doesn't work properly. There isn't another answer. Whatever format it sends to Exchange isn't correct. It's an Exchange protocol and it works for everyone else, so we know that the issue is that Apple Mail simply sends garbage to Exchange. Garbage in, garbage out.
The messed up format that you see IS what Apple Mail is sending. That's all the more there is to it.
That makes sense... I didn't know what area the garbage was. Garbage programming? Garbage protocol? You already said it isn't related to garbage programming, it's part of the protocol. I'm guessing something in the application layer where it would be handled, or...?
Well yes, the protocol is generated by the Apple Mail application's code. So when Apple wrote it, they wrote it wrong.
Like most of their interfaces they write. ActiveSync on iDevices causes sync issues for my docs at least once a year. I have to completely delete Exchange from their device, run a calendar cleanup on Exchange, then readd it to the mobile.
Sux!
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@BBigford said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@BBigford said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@BBigford said:
I thought it might be related because of how the application gets handled. Shitty programming might get handled differently on Exchange I figured.
It interfaces at the protocol. The language and implementation are totally hidden. It's like saying you would not understand words from one typewriter versus another. But no matter how nice and crappy a typewriter is, it doesn't change the words around.
Makes sense. Thanks. If you had to come up with one logical guess, what would that be? It should be as simple as it doesn't work properly, but I need something. :l
Nope, it simply doesn't work properly. There isn't another answer. Whatever format it sends to Exchange isn't correct. It's an Exchange protocol and it works for everyone else, so we know that the issue is that Apple Mail simply sends garbage to Exchange. Garbage in, garbage out.
The messed up format that you see IS what Apple Mail is sending. That's all the more there is to it.
That makes sense... I didn't know what area the garbage was. Garbage programming? Garbage protocol? You already said it isn't related to garbage programming, it's part of the protocol. I'm guessing something in the application layer where it would be handled, or...?
Well yes, the protocol is generated by the Apple Mail application's code. So when Apple wrote it, they wrote it wrong.
Like most of their interfaces they write. ActiveSync on iDevices causes sync issues for my docs at least once a year. I have to completely delete Exchange from their device, run a calendar cleanup on Exchange, then readd it to the mobile.
Sux!
Yup, they wrote their own SMB implementation and broke that too in Finder.
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@BBigford You have a hammer. The hammer is designed to hammer nails into a wall. You can hammer screws into the wall but is it going to be as effective? No. Screws are not designed to be used in that way. It'll sort of work just like Apple Mail sort of works.
I can't believe you have to have this conversation. I feel for you dude.
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@wirestyle22 said:
@BBigford You have a hammer. The hammer is designed to hammer nails into a wall. You can hammer screws into the wall but is it going to be as effective? No. Screws are not designed to be used in that way. It'll sort of work just like Apple Mail sort of works.
I can't believe you have to have this conversation. I feel for you dude.
Thanks. I'm also the type that brings everything to the table in a conversation. When people are extremely difficult and won't accept "It just doesn't work that way" I try and be prepared rather than say "I'll go back and do research..."
Some people just won't accept certain truths.
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Why doesn't diesel fuel work in my gasoline car? they are both liquid and come from oil, right? lol
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@BBigford said:
@wirestyle22 said:
@BBigford You have a hammer. The hammer is designed to hammer nails into a wall. You can hammer screws into the wall but is it going to be as effective? No. Screws are not designed to be used in that way. It'll sort of work just like Apple Mail sort of works.
I can't believe you have to have this conversation. I feel for you dude.
Thanks. I'm also the type that brings everything to the table in a conversation. When people are extremely difficult and won't accept "It just doesn't work that way" I try and be prepared rather than say "I'll go back and do research..."
Some people just won't accept certain truths.
The reality is that you are a sysadmin, not a programmer. You are there to maintain the infrastructure and it's designed to be a windows shop. If they want to move to an Apple shop then offer them the figures. There are a good amount of things you can't do with an apple product on a windows domain. I wish I could give you some ammo but I literally deal with this by saying "I don't support personal devices" and "use a windows machine".
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@wirestyle22 said:
@BBigford said:
@wirestyle22 said:
@BBigford You have a hammer. The hammer is designed to hammer nails into a wall. You can hammer screws into the wall but is it going to be as effective? No. Screws are not designed to be used in that way. It'll sort of work just like Apple Mail sort of works.
I can't believe you have to have this conversation. I feel for you dude.
Thanks. I'm also the type that brings everything to the table in a conversation. When people are extremely difficult and won't accept "It just doesn't work that way" I try and be prepared rather than say "I'll go back and do research..."
Some people just won't accept certain truths.
The reality is that you are a sysadmin, not a programmer.
Exactly. Which is why I was having a tough time grasping precisely what was being handled wrong. I am not a programmer, but didn't want to just point the ugly finger at "COOOOOOODE!!!!"