You need to restart Outlook for the change to take effect. You can follow the steps to set up: Login the Delve, go to Settings -> Feature Settings: In Feature Settings page, select Off for Documents, click OK to save the changes.
#HOW DO I BLOCK EMAILS FROM SHOWING UP WINDOWS#
To edit the registry, go to Start menu, Run (keyboard shortcut: Windows key + R) and type regedit in the Run field then press Enter. It's "all or nothing" when it comes to displaying contact photos. If you disable photos, this affects the display of contact photos in the header of email messages, in the people pane, and the contact card. Next thing you know, there’s a dozenemails from someone you don’t know. Unfortunately, not allof those emails are something you want. If its being properly blocked at the server, it will never get to the inbox on your iPhone. You have your Gmail account and you’re getting messages. But, the same spam senders are not blocked on my phone inbox. I have upgraded filters on my email account with Cableone to level high, and that works. Administrators can use Group policy to disable contact photos. Use whatever spam filters your email provider offers. In Outlook 2007, you need to edit the registry. In Outlook 2010 and up, display of contact photos can be controlled in File, Options, People (Contacts in Outlook 2010 and newer). If you don't want to see the contact photo, you have two choices: don't add photos to your contacts (and don't use the social connector) or configure Outlook to hide the photo and photo placeholder. When the people pane is open, the photo displays in the people pane instead of the message header, as seen in the screenshot on the right. If the people pane is enabled you'll see a small thumbnail of the photo (#3) when the people pane is minimized. In Outlook 2007 and up, the photo is also displayed in the message header (#2) in both the reading pane or an open message and on Outlook 2010 or Outlook 2013's Contact Card that pops up when you hover over an email address.