No email window ever appears but Word and Outlook both appear to be working
correctly.
If I try to exit out of Word, it does not let me until I terminate the
Outlook.exe process and then
I receive "Word coudn't send mail because of mapi failure: unspecified
error".
I have tried all recommendations found under google search without success.
-repaired office
-installed all updates
-verified settings were correct in word and outlook
-made sure outlook was default program
Still no luck..........any help appreciated.
Tom
"Tom" <vtp...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:uEFFdFT$JHA....@TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl...
This problem appears to be pretty common according to my google search
results.
Any other ideas?
Tom
"DL" <notv...@spoofaddress.co.uk> wrote in message
news:uvu6zmU$JHA....@TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl...
I'm running a pretty plain vanilla setup here - Vista Home Premium and the
Ultimate edition of Office 2007. I get the 'Word couldn't send mail because
of MAPI failure' error message (also applies to Excel with a slightly
different message). I tried changing the default mail program to Mail - this
*does *allow Word to operate correctly, but when I change back to Outlook I'm
no longer able to send direct from the application which strongly suggests
it's an Outlook setting at fault. There's no problem opening a new mail
message in Outlook and attaching a file.
I've tried so many things, including rewriting the mail section of win.ini,
stopping all COM add-ins in Outlook and, short of a blood sacrifice to Bill
Gates I'm prepared to do just about anything to sort this (maybe I should
just give up the struggle and go back to Office Pro 2003 or turn to
OpenOffice). I've had regular difficulty with Outlook 2007 failing to unload
from memory after it's closed - whether or not this is a symptom of the same
thing I don't know.
If anybody reading this can help, please mail me at s...@unforgettable.com
with suggestions. Many thanks in advance - Simon
The actual dll that is causing the problem is MSMAPI32.dll, which is located
at C:\Program Files\Common Files\System\MSMAPI\1033. Simply rename this file
to something else (e.g. MSMAPI32_OLD.dll), run Office diagnostics.
"Gibson335" <Gibs...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:0BDD6F86-68AA-4873...@microsoft.com...
If this shortcut is used to start Word, you can now send a document directly
to an email recipient without the MAPI error horror. The same applies to
PowerPoint - as these are the only two apps I email directly from, I haven't
tried any others.
All the best
Simon
The magic answer is, simply, to turn off User Account Control: EVERYTHING
now works as it should - you can email direct from an application or by
right-clicking on a file; you can also click on a Word doc and have it launch
the program properly.
Obviously there has to have been some trouble or corruption of my UAC
settings to have caused the problem - but my investigation on the net shows
that lots and lots of people have the same difficulty. Hopefully now that
the problem has been isolated, someone with a bigger brain than mine will be
able to suggest ways that UAC and Word can coexist in perfect harmony...
I hope this will work for others as well
Gibson335
I have always been a fervent believer in the old adage that there are only
two types of user - those who HAVE lost their data and those who WILL lose
their data; because of this, until now I have held my tongue about the rather
imperfect UAC in Vista - however I hope Windows 7 has a better implementation
of UAC than the (horse and) buggy version we've currently got.
> I have always been a fervent believer in the old adage that there are only
> two types of user - those who HAVE lost their data and those who WILL lose
> their data;
That's why you make backups. Anyone who is diligent in making backups will
fall into neither category you name.
> because of this, until now I have held my tongue about the rather
> imperfect UAC in Vista - however I hope Windows 7 has a better
> implementation
> of UAC than the (horse and) buggy version we've currently got.
I find the UAC in Windows 7 much less chatty.
--
Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook]