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| How to Contact Outlook.com Support
When you have just licked frozen chocolate and are therefore (given what you have read about that chocolate's ill effects on health and stomach) understandably queasy, what should you do? The Earl of Sandwich knows. Great-great-grandfather to the Earl of sandwich fame and collecting chocolate recipes in the 1640s (before he became the first Earl of Sandwich), Edward Mountagu recommends: wait some 15 minutes and—" Drinke Hott chocolatti"! When you are queasy about Outlook.com (no matter what has happened before), what should you do? Somebody from Outlook.com support or the helpful users' community shall, hopefully, know. (Why not also a hot chocolate for the nerves and stomach while you wait the 15 minutes or so?) ›› Does Outlook.com behave oddly and in frustrating a manner? Do you feel sure something should be possible to do in Outlook.com, but how to do it is less than obvious? Do you long for help and support? You can contact and get answers from both support engineers at Microsoft and helpful users via Outlook.com's community help forums. | How to Restore Mail from the Archive in Zoho Mail | How to Access the Source for an Email Message in Outlook.com
Originally from Scotland, a physician has in short course become first professor for Practical and Theoretical chemistry at the Medical School of Melbourne University, Aussie rules football umpire, member of parliament and secretary to the Philosophical Society of Victoria (or one of its successor societies). It is in this last capacity that he appears in history connected to nuts. For when Sir Ferdinand Mueller first described scientifically a genus of nuts native to Australia, he not only mentioned his friend and "deserving secretary of our institute", he also named the nut after him: macadamia. So, Mueller and Dr. John Macadam are the sources for the name of one of earth's most beloved nuts. For even more sources—not for names this time and nuts but for emails and headers—, let us turn to peeking behind what is usually visible of emails in Outlook.com: ›› Find out more about an email (for troubleshooting its display, e.g., or learning more about its origin) by displaying its source in Outlook.com. | From the Archives: Zebras - IncrediMail Letter and E-Card | |
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