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On Joining Khan Academy Developing anti-SLAPP policies for A11y Slack with Harvard Cyberlaw Clinic Focus on What Matters Celebrating One Year of Independence as Modern Sole Design, LLC Evinced is Pushing the Limits of Automated Accessibility Testing Content-visibility and Accessible Semantics Finding accessibility jobs in specialized companies and the mainstream Outsider Leverage and Accessibility Encouraging Open Source Contributions with Docs: a Self-Fulfilling Prophecy Remote Work and Van Life Salary and Career Growth Prototype Testing for Accessible Client-Side Routing On Great Leadership, Gatsby & Girl Develop It The Deal with Developer Advocacy Live Coding Accessibility Chapter Two at Deque 2017, in Music Writing winning abstracts Accessibility is a Civil Right 2016, a Year of Milestones Best of 2016 Music Links vs. Buttons in Modern Web Applications Accessibility and Performance I won an O Web Accessibility Resources This is what a developer looks like. What Wally On writing better captions for images What I’ve Learned Working on a Large Open-Source Framework Speak at your local elementary school. Button Focus Hell Page Scrolling in Mobile Safari & VoiceOver Accessibility Wins Notes from CSUN 2015 Protractor Accessibility Plugin Riding a bicycle to an accessibility conference 2014: One to Remember AngularJS Material Design & ngAria Summing Up JSConf EU 2014 How I Audit a Website for Accessibility Accessibility and the Shadow DOM: JSConf Australia 2014 CSUN 2014 Conference Recap Accessibility and the Shadow DOM Favorite Music 2013 Girl Develop It Web Accessibility Mobile Web Accessibility with VoiceOver Webstock & NZ 2013 Favorite Music 2012 Target Corporate Site Redesign: Accessible & Responsive Web Development Decibel Festival Recap 2012 Favorite Music 2011 Spiceboard: Wordpress Recipes for iPad POP Clock Favorite Music 2010 CSS + JS + Accessibility Christmas JS1k Zend Framework. NACCC Urban Type Sutton RV Simplexml in php 5 AS3 Load Workflow AS3 Mouse Events Holiday 2009
Why Outlook Sucks
2009-12-02 · via MarcySutton.com RSS Feed

December 2, 2009

Fix Outlook 2010!

I work endlessly to make my web-pages and HTML emails work across platforms, browsers, and email clients. I have learned about the quirks of each publishing outlet and try to anticipate inconsistencies when laying out a specific design. However, I am reminded daily of why I dislike Microsoft — Outlook 2007 (and now Outlook 2010) cannot render even the most basic HTML in an email, when the same email looks great nearly everywhere else.

For example, on a recent HTML email campaign, I had my HTML perfect in what I thought were all major email clients. I tested in Outlook 2003, Outlook Express, Mac Mail, Gmail, GoDaddy webmail, Yahoo and more. I should have already known this, but a “problem child” emerged, forever an infinite thorn in my side: Outlook 2007. It cannot render the simplest of CSS attributes (like width + height), and completely ignores many others; background colors drop out, margins are meaningless, and a lot of CSS does not actually cascade. Even Outlook 2003 can get it right, since it uses the Internet Explorer engine (IE being desirable – imagine that!). However, Outlook 2007 and 2010 both use the Word engine. That’s right, Microsoft is using WORD to render HTML, and they are continuing the practice with the newest release of Outlook. It makes my blood boil just thinking about all the redundant HTML/CSS hand-holding required to make Outlook play ball.

The current state of CSS in HTML emails on the Campaign Monitor website says it all. Have a look at the Outlook 07/10 column, particularly the sections on the Box Model and Positioning & Display:

Guide to CSS support in email clients

The article below from Email on Acid discusses this issue, and the future of Outlook is just as infuriating:

Microsoft Not Playing Nice with Office 2010

“It doesn’t appear that Microsoft is going to play nice with HTML rendering in Office 2010. They are continuing down the ‘07 path by using Word to render HTML. Are you surprised? Honestly, we aren’t. We have recently received a beta version of Outlook 2010 and through our tests we have noted the same rendering problems from Outlook 07.

“Why are they so stubborn? Microsoft’s reasoning behind using Word to render HTML is that emails composed in Outlook 07+ will look consistent when viewed by other Outlook 07+ recipients. They also claim that using the Word engine allows users to easily cut and paste from Microsoft office products directly into their email. To review a complete online explanation from Microsoft click here.

“The problem is that not everyone uses Outlook and to assume that recipients will see an email the way that it is composed in Outlook 07+ is a common mistake. In actuality, Outlook has a very small market share in the ever-expanding world of email clients. To assume that they are the only provider is par for the course for Microsoft, therefore it is not a big surprise that they are headed in the same direction for Outlook 2010.”

Does anyone else have an Outlook horror (or success) story? Am I alone in thinking Microsoft is giving us all the finger by continuing to render HTML in Outlook with Word?