HTML Does Not Load in Outlook 2003

  • Thread starter Thread starter MalcolmH
  • Start date Start date
M

MalcolmH

Two days ago received email started not displaying web content. I no longer
get the message to right click to display pictures. The emails dispaly
correctly if I do a forward or reply. The usual solutions for this problem -
checking Options settings, deleting OLK files - have not worked. I recently
ran a registry and system performance scan and update (Registry Booster and
SpeedUpMyPC software from Uniblue) and it strted about that time. Any ideas?
 
MalcolmH said:
Two days ago received email started not displaying web content. I no longer
get the message to right click to display pictures. The emails dispaly
correctly if I do a forward or reply. The usual solutions for this problem -
checking Options settings, deleting OLK files - have not worked. I recently
ran a registry and system performance scan and update (Registry Booster and
SpeedUpMyPC software from Uniblue) and it strted about that time. Any ideas?

Oh god, more snakeoilware. Unless you have something broken that gets
fixed by changing registry entries, don't go running registry cleaners.
Did you yet try using a System Restore to return to BEFORE you applied
those registry utilities?

- What is currently wrong or failing with the registry?
- What convinced you that the registry needs to be "cleaned" up?
- What constitutes the "cleaning" actions?
- What do you expect to gain from the cleanup?
- What are you going to do if the registry changes hose over
your computer since a restore may not be possible?
- What is your recovery strategy from the registry changes?

*_Why the uneducated or lazy should never use registry cleaners_*

If YOU are not adept at *manually* editing the registry, don't use a
tool that you don't understand regarding its proposed changes.
Regardless of relinquishing the task to software, YOU are the final
authority in allowing it to make the changes. Any registry cleaner that
does not request for YOU to give permission to make its proposed changes
along with listing each proposed change should be discarded.

Do you have a backup & restore plan in place? When (and not if) the
registry cleaner corrupts your registry and when you can no longer boot
into Windows, just how are you going to restore that OS partition so it
is usable again? Even if you use a registry cleaner that provides for
backups of its changes so you can revert back to the prior state, how
are you going to perform that restore if you cannot boot the OS after
hosing over its registry? What about entries in the registry that look
to be orphaned under the current OS load instance but are used under a
different OS environment? You delete what looks orphaned only to find
out that they are required under a different environment.

Say there was an unusually high amount of orphaned entries in your
registry, like 4MB. By deleting the orphaned entries, you would speed
up how long it takes Windows to load the registry's files when it starts
up - by all of maybe 1 second. Oooh, aaah. All that risk of modifying
the registry to save maybe a second, or less, during the Windows
startup. Most folks that clean the registry end up deleting only 10KB,
or less. They are doing nothing to improve their Windows load time.
Since the registry is only read from the memory copy of it, and since
memory is random access, there is no difference to read one byte of the
registry (in memory) from the another byte in the registry (also in
memory). The extra data in memory for orphaned entries has no effect on
the time to retrieve items from the memory copy of the registry because
orphaned entries are never retrieved (if they were, they aren't
orphaned).

Cleaning the registry will NOT improve performance in reading from the
memory copy of the registry. The reduced size of the registry's .dat
files might reduce the load time of Windows by all of a second and
probably much less. And you want to risk the stability of your OS for
inconsequential changes to its registry? The same boobs that get
suckered into these registry cleanup "tools" are the same ones that get
suckered into the memory defragment "tools".

A registry cleaner should only be used if you by yourself can correctly
cleanup the registry. The cleaner is just a tool to automate the same
process but you should know every change that it intends to make and
understand each of those changes. After all, and regardless of the
stagnant expertise that is hard coded into the utility, *YOU* are the
final authority in what registry changes are performed whether you do it
manually or with a utility. If YOU do not understand the proposed
change (which requires the product actually divulge the proposed change
before committing that change), how will you know whether or not to
allow that change?
 
Two days ago received email started not displaying web content. I no longer
get the message to right click to display pictures. The emails dispaly
correctly if I do a forward or reply. The usual solutions for this
problem -
checking Options settings, deleting OLK files - have not worked. I recently
ran a registry and system performance scan and update (Registry Booster and
SpeedUpMyPC software from Uniblue) and it strted about that time. Any ideas?

Vanguard gives some good reasons why you shouldn't use registry cleaners and
makes one good suggestion to try to fix the problem (i.e., use a System
Restore point from prior to the "cleanup"), but have you tried starting
Outlook once in safe mode? The usual cause of what you see is scanning
incoming messages wiht an antivirus or -spam scanner. Safe mode can help you
check that. It won't test conditions for messages you've received already,
but it allows you to test new HTML messages that arrive. Hold Ctrl while you
start Outlook to allow the selection of safe mode, then test the receiving of
an HTML message. Does it make a difference?
 
Back
Top