©® said:
I am looking for a program that will allow me to input a different
signature or quote at the end of my emails. Using Outlook and also
Outlook Express at times.
I need it to work with quotes I have in a plain text file if at all
possible.
Any recommendations for an XP system?
Thanks
Maybe this
http://www.tranglos.com/free/kookiejar.html
Kookie Jar is a program for Windows 95, 98, ME, 2000 and XP which generates
signatures you may use with your favorite email or news program. A signature
is a small piece of text, automatically attached to every email message or
newsgroup posting. It typically includes a random quote — a so-called
tagline (a sample tagline file is included with the program).
For some strange reason, programmers have always been writing programs to
automate creating email signatures. I have no idea why, but it's something
of a tradition. Usually, signature managers simply go through a list of
taglines, select one at random, and append it to outgoing messages, so that
your signature is always different and never boring. KookieJar does that
too, but it can do a lot more.
Typically, KookieJar starts automatically with Windows, lives in the tray
(an icon is placed next to the system clock in the lower right-hand corner
of the screen), chooses a new random tagline at a predefined interval, e.g.
every 5 minutes, and stores it in your .sig file. Apart from this, KookieJar
can place many other pieces of information in your signature. To define the
layout of your signature and tell the program what to include in it, you
create a special template (sample included).
KookieJar can manage not just one signature, but as many as you need. For
example, you may wish to use one signature for office email, and another for
personal messages. If you speak more than one language, you can have
separate signatures for each. if you use more than one email account, you
can choose to have a different signature for each account. On top of that,
signatures can be generated in three formats: plain text, RTF, or HTML (if
your email program supports those formats, and if your recipients do not
mind non-text email