If this is the case, there is nothing you can do except ask the sender to share pictures to you via email instead or try things like Facebook Messenger, Dropbox, or Google Drive. This can be common if you're texting someone who lived in the country/out-of-town/out of city limits. If you're only having trouble seeing pictures from one particular sender over and over and over again, and you can sometimes see pictures, but not at other times, it may be the person works or lives somewhere that has a block or throttle on the network. If the person sending you pictures is on a slow network, it is likely the issue is coming from their end.
If not, move on to step 3.Īt the end of the day, this problem might not actually be on your end. If the problem was an old corrupt file, your issue is likely solved. Signing out of iMessage will delete all those old pesky files and re-download them onto your iPhone as new from Apple's servers. Is it possible that you have a corrupt file somewhere in your iMessage system? Maybe.
Close Outlook in Safe Mode, start Outlook normally and check to see if the problem persists.
#MESSAGES ON MAC WILL NOT OPEN LINK WINDOWS#
Set Windows to Always Open Links in macOS. Now if you click a link in macOS, it will open in the selected Windows browser. From the Default web browser menu, select a Windows browser. Your Mail app and every email should be accessible again. Now re-check account settings and delete and re-add your Mail account to reset this. This will show whether there are problems with connecting to the Mail app. 4 hours ago When trying to open a link from an email in Postbox (3.0.11) Safari 8 (OS. Go to the Window in the top menu and click on Connection Doctor. In the COM Add-in window, deselect all available Add-ins and click OK. In macOS, open System Preferences > General. See Also: Email will not open message(56 People Used) Visit Login. If MMS Messaging was on, move on to step 2. In the View and manage Microsoft Office add-ons option, go to the Manage option and select the COM add-ins option and click the GO button. If MMS Messaging was off, that's probably what was causing the problem, so be happy! That's an easy fix. Scroll down and check to see if the MMS Messaging switch is toggled on. If you have MMS disabled on your iPhone, you won't be able to send or receive multimedia messages like photos, videos, or audio clips. You know when you see those green bubbles but you should really be seeing the blue ones? That's when iMessage is unavailable. Your iPhone supports MMS, as well as SMS - or Short Message Service - which is a more simplified way to send a text message, for times when iMessage is unavailable.