The only way I can see is to export the spreadsheet to a text file, then import the text file into your address book, and then create the distribution list from your address book.
Simon ,'Safe'
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Apparently it can be easily done: In Microsoft Outlook, how can I import address information from an Excel workbook into my Contacts list?
I just found that and printed it out!
Whoot!
Google. Who knew? Besides everyone but me.
Also, here's instructions on how to do it Tom Scola's way: [link]
Edit: I seemed to have solved my own problem by googling. It looks like the image has to be sized to 96 dpi, not higher OR lower!
see: [link]
Does anyone know if Outlook resizes images?
This is my problem:
1. We have a logo that we use in an email signature
2. When I have not sent the email and I print it, it comes out beautifully
3. When I send the email to someone and they print it, it is fuzzy/pixelated.
4. This happened with all the logo sizes I have access to (46K JPEG, 586K microsoft document and 19K JPEG). THe GIFs won't import into outlook
5. Most importantly, my boss's boss is insisting that it be fixed even though it looks fine on the screen! (she prints out, reads, and either files or throw out all her email and thinks everyone else does the same) She does not care how big the file size has to be.
Does anyone know how to rid a word doucment of all the previous changes. I want to upload a resume as a Word doc, and I don't want there to be any chance of any seeing all the changes. And for some reason this file always opens for me showing the markup.
Under Track Changes, there's an Accept All Changes option.
Sophia, it sounds like the logo was probably created with a resolution meant for screen viewing, which is (I think 72 dpi) and that isn't always great for printing.
I don't understand why you and your boss print it out differently though. Could it be your boss just has a crappy printer or low-res settings on her printer?
Sophia, it sounds like the logo was probably created with a resolution meant for screen viewing, which is (I think 72 dpi) and that isn't always great for printing.
Thank you so much
That is what I thought too, but then it happened even with the files the designer gave us that are for offset printing!
I ended up googling, and coming up with a blog where someone mentioned that outlook 2003 assumes all images are 96 dpi, and actually enlarges them to that size, thus pixelateing them. I linked above
Thanks Ginger.