When I try to send e-mails, sometimes I receive delirery failures that contain the following text:Maximum number of body parts (250) per message exceeded ##
What does that mean? What is a body part? When I have seen them is after trying to send messages with ink in them. I sent a message with over 400 ink strokes in it, and it was delivered successfully. I have tried to send e-mails with fewer than even 250 ink strokes and they weren't delivered. Notes: The successfully delivered message is 2 megabytes in size and was sent from a Microsoft Exchange account to another Microsoft Exchange account. The undelivered message is 796 kilobytes in size and is to a company, so the address might or might not be for a Microsoft Exchange account. Both messages contain a signature which contains 3 pictures and 7 hyperlinks. Aside from the signature, the delivered message's body contains only ink. The undelivered message's body contains both ink and text (converted from ink in Tablet PC Input Panel's writing pad). Do ink strokes count as body parts? Why would the one that contains more than 400 ink strokes be delivered when the established limit for body parts is 250? I looked at the article located at http://help.outlook.com/140/dd630704.aspx, but it didn't make it any clearer for me.