Plusaddressing (also known as subaddressing) is enabled by default in Exchange Online. Subaddressing is an industry-defined way to support dynamic, disposable recipient (not sender) email addresses for mailboxes.
The original email address must be valid. The +tag value that you add is arbitrary, although regular character restrictions for SMTP email addresses apply (for example, no spaces). For more information about using plus addresses, see the Using plus addresses section.
Plus addressing allows users to use unique, receive-only email addresses that are extensions of their actual email address. It is useful for creating disposable addresses. The tag acts as a label and is useful for managing email and site registrations. Plus addressing can be used in any email client that sends emails and you can receive emails addressed to you using plus addresses as you would normal emails.
When Exchange receives an email for an address that contains a +, it will try to resolve the full email address (for example,
sean+ne...@contoso.com) to a known mailbox. If the first resolution attempt fails, Exchange does a second attempt to resolve the email address without the plus sign and tag (for example,
se...@contoso.com).
If inbound internet email for your on-premises organization is routed through Exchange Online, your on-premises mailboxes can also use plus addresses if those mailbox addresses are known in Exchange Online. If the on-premises mailbox addresses are unknown to Exchange Online, plus addressing won't work and message delivery will be affected.
Your users can create new plus addresses by adding a new tag to use them as unique addresses for services that they sign up for. However, they cannot send emails from plus addresses. To automatically identify and filter messages that are sent to plus addresses, use Inbox rules to act on those messages. Using the condition Recipient address includes, you can specify an action for messages sent to a particular plus address. For example, you can move messages sent to a plus address to a specific folder.
Plus addresses are not aliases that are configured on the mailbox, therefore they don't resolve to a user's name in Outlook. This limitation results in plus addresses not being easily identifiable in the To or CC fields of messages.
"Plus Addressing is a great way to quickly create custom (or disposable) email addresses based off your standard email address, by simply adding a "+" suffix string to an existing email address in Office 365. For example, a plus address for
kima...@contoso.com could be something like
kimakers+...@contoso.com that she could use to sign up for the newsletter at the Northwind web site. Then when Northwind sends a newsletter to
kimakers+...@contoso.com it will route directly to
kima...@contoso.com. Kim could create an Inbox rule that then moves messages sent to this + address into the "Northwind" folder. Plus addressing support in Office 365 is a great way to more easily manage your Inbox, and even track mail like marketing and sales campaigns."
@Robert WoodsI still get Undeliverable email errors when trying to use a plus address with a group email i setup. can you confirm if this was actually released in December 2020? The group email is
te...@versd.co and emails work for that, and the plus address was
test...@versd.co.
I got a Windows 98 PC off of ebay, and the person who installed 98 didn't click "themes" on the additional installation options when they installed 98. Is there any way to turn that on? If not, I remember on an old software collection CD I used to have that there was a program that allowed you to install plus themes without needing 98 plus. I do intend to reinstall windows 98, but I just want to use the current installation for a while, and it would be nice to know this in the future.
Just a note as it is not clear from the first post, "plus" is a separate/standalone thing you install that comes on a different cd than windows. So you don't need to reinstall windows, you can install (or re-install) ms plus only. I'm pretty sure you know already that there is no "windows 98 plus", just making sure because I got this idea from the title you used.
Yeah sorry, I'm a noob when it comes to computers from this era, the main I experience I have with win 98 was using it as a kid. I've forgotten a bit, and I'm trying to learn more. I don't really know too much about the editions of Microsoft Plus, and I thought 98SE was what "imported" theme support from Plus! for some reason.
If you are having problems running activation Plus!
because of a permissions error, then try this.Login to Windows as Administrator or another member of
the Administrators group. Open regedit.exe from the run
command, and navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Microsoft Plus!
\Plus! Digital Media Edition\Right click on that key and go to permissions. Grant
both Administrator and System full access to those keys.
Now in explorer navigate to %allusersprofile%\Application Data\Microsoft\Plus!
Digital Media Edition\data\Again, grant System and Administrator full access to this
folder and any files under it. You may need to go into
Control Panel\Folder Options and uncheck use simple file
sharing to grant permissions on files and folders.I'm not sure why the ACL's aren't being properly set when
Plus is installed, but if either Administrator or System
can't access the reg keys and files in read / write mode,
it will assume that you aren't logged in with high enough
privs to activate with MS. The problem seems widespread
enough that I would possibly think it was a bug in
Plus!'s installer that's being triggered by a setting
somewhere on the machines' configs.Again, I apologize if this has already been posted as I
don't have time to read through all of the threads right
now, but this *should* fix most, if not all, of the Plus
activation problems.Adam
Don't just change file permissions.. really and truly FIX the problem! Crack that sh*t. It's the only sure solution.>-----Original Message-----
>Another thought on this.....
>
>What's the possibility of people having activation problems after install
>having use simple file sharing cut off before they install, which gives them
>access to edit ACL's, and either they or a program modified the ACL on the
>all users profile or microsoft (sub) folder? I've had this problem a few
>times, and it only happened when I had simple file sharing disabled.
>
>I think it's probably the file more likely than the registry keys, because
>no matter what is going on systemwise unless a registry util has the
>registry in use at the time of install registry key perms should be set
>correctly regardless of file system.
>
>I've attached a zip file here that uses setacl and regdacl with a batch file
>called fixdme.bat that should set proper permissions on the file, directory,
>and registry keys for you if you're having problems. Extract all three
>files in the zip to the same folder and run fixdme.bat and it should work
>after that.
>
>
>
1. From the Start menu, select "Run...". Type "regedit.exe" and press
enter
2. From the tree view of registry keys on the left hand pane, right-click
on "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE" and select "Permissions..."
3. By default, Adminstrators should be listed with "Full Control" and
"Read" having their respective "Allow" checkboxes checked.
3a. If they are not checked, check them and click OK.
4. By default, Users should be listed with "Read" having it's "Allow"
checkbox checked.
4a. If it is not checked, check Allow and click OK.
5. Try launching a feature such as Plus! Audio Converter now. If this
fixed the issue, you should see a different product activation screen.Some questions you might be able to answer to help us narrow this down:
- Do you have network File Sharing enabled at all on your machine?
- Did or do you run any applications that may have caused file sharing
changes (such as virus protection software, security applications, system
optimizers?)
- Was this a fresh install of Windows XP or an upgrade from a previous
version of Windows?- Tony [MSFT]
This information is provided as-is without warranties and confers no rights."BASE NL" wrote in message
news:b0c8b1$2b$1...@reader10.wxs.nl...
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