Ky sajt do të funksionojë me kufizime, teksa bëjmë mirëmbajtjen e tij për të përmirësuar punën tuaj. Nëse një artikull nuk e zgjidh problemin tuaj dhe dëshironi të bëni një pyetje, kemi bashkësinë tonë të asistencës, e gatshme për t’ju ndihmuar, te @FirefoxSupport në Twitter dhe/r/firefox në Reddit.

Kërkoni te Asistenca

Shmangni karremëzime gjoja asistence. S’do t’ju kërkojmë kurrë të bëni një thirrje apo të dërgoni tekst te një numër telefoni, apo të na jepni të dhëna personale. Ju lutemi, raportoni veprimtari të dyshimtë duke përdorur mundësinë “Raportoni Abuzim”.

Mësoni Më Tepër

Striata Reader's *.emc file is impossible to open in Thunderbird automatically

  • 1 përgjigje
  • 2 e kanë hasur këtë problem
  • 1 parje
  • Përgjigjja më e re nga Matt

more options

Thunderbird is very security conscious in that it will not simply run an attachment with a 'known' extension unless it has been specifically selected in Thunderbird's 'list'.. This is a great feature for computer-illiterates who tend to click on all (potentially dangerous) attachments without a second thought!

So I advise my 'illiterate' family/colleagues to NEVER open an emailed attachment unless it can be opened directly in Thunderbird.. - but this requires ALL 'safe' attachments to be 'pre-selected' in Thunderbird's list..

Striata Reader is used by a number of banks to send secure, encrypted, password-protected statements. I would very much like to add its *.emc extension to Thunderbird's list, ... but... - It's 'weird' installation regime (presumably to make it less prone to virus attack) of installing a *.dll file instead of a regular *.exe, and using rundll32.exe with parameters to execute itself, makes it impossible to select it directly within Thunderbird. So this requires the attachment to be saved and executed outside of Thunderbird - something I definitely don't want my 'illiterates' to get into the habit of doing!!

While its clearly possible to write a small 'wrapper' app to execute rundll32 with the correct parameters and add that to the list instead, I'm hoping you may have a simpler solution for me..?

Thunderbird is very security conscious in that it will not simply run an attachment with a 'known' extension unless it has been specifically selected in Thunderbird's 'list'.. This is a great feature for computer-illiterates who tend to click on all (potentially dangerous) attachments without a second thought! So I advise my 'illiterate' family/colleagues to NEVER open an emailed attachment unless it can be opened directly in Thunderbird.. - but this requires ALL 'safe' attachments to be 'pre-selected' in Thunderbird's list.. Striata Reader is used by a number of banks to send secure, encrypted, password-protected statements. I would very much like to add its *.emc extension to Thunderbird's list, ... but... - It's 'weird' installation regime (presumably to make it less prone to virus attack) of installing a *.dll file instead of a regular *.exe, and using rundll32.exe with parameters to execute itself, makes it impossible to select it directly within Thunderbird. So this requires the attachment to be saved and executed outside of Thunderbird - something I definitely don't want my 'illiterates' to get into the habit of doing!! While its clearly possible to write a small 'wrapper' app to execute rundll32 with the correct parameters and add that to the list instead, I'm hoping you may have a simpler solution for me..?

Krejt Përgjigjet (1)

more options

I can suggest nothing the limitation is actually Windows, not Thunderbird. The list of helper applications is provided by the operating system and a similar shortcoming occurs with the Windows picture viewer.

A wrapper EXE is probably the easiest solution.