Compress Outlook file attachments to ZIP archives without configuring any settings, in order to increase email space using this add-in
| Version | 4.19.0 |
| Updated | November 29 2021 |
| Developer |
Relief Software
N/A
N/A
|
| User Rating |
866
4.5
|
| Original File Size | 308 KB |
| Downloads | 6766 |
| Systems | Windows XP 64 bit, Windows Vista, Windows Vista 64 bit, Windows 7, Windows 7 64 bit, Windows 8, Windows 8 64 bit, Windows 10, Windows 10 64 bit |
| Category | Office Tools |
If you're a Microsoft Outlook user looking for ways to free up email space, you can try Pack Attachments, a simple-to-use add-in that finds email attachments and compresses them to create ZIP archives. It requires minimum configuration and can be quickly integrated with MS Outlook.
To get started, it's necessary to set up your Outlook account and choose the folders that will be scanned for email attachments. You can pick anything when it comes to the inbox, drafts, sent, trash, archives, deleted messages, and any other locations.
In the following step, you just have to allow the utility time to find and process all attachments, in order to generate ZIP archives. A couple of settings can be changed before doing this, though, namely permitting Pack Attachments to proceed with the execution even after encountering errors and to decrypt secure messages.
Once the task is over, you can take a look at any email with attached messages to see that they are now packed in ZIP files instead. All ZIP archives are named "attachments.zip". Unfortunately, there are no options integrated for controlling the name of the new ZIPs.
Although there are options described by the developer for filtering attachments by mask and for creating separate archives if there are multiple files attached to one email, these features are, in fact, available in another, advanced edition of the tool, called ReliefJet Essentials.
Pack Attachments Crack compressed email attachments swiftly in our tests and worked smoothly with Microsoft Outlook 2016. We haven't experienced any issues. The tool is fast and easy to use by anyone. However, the free edition doesn't offer more configuration settings over the whole compression operation, which is likely to put off users looking for more control.
merci
i love your site, you are amazing
thank you soooo much
Your email will not be published. Required fields are marked as *
feature Inference at scale is much more complex than more GPUs, more tokens, more profits
'There's a naive techno-utopianism in Whitehall'
Meta supposidly considering untapped capacity in deal brokered by Nvidia
It's the end of the world as we know it, and AI feels fine
US unemployment ticked up to 4.4%
Now if only device makers would deliver higher quality components
Bad legislation, but an especially big headache for FOSS