Technology by Andrew Backhouse Microsoft Outlook users around the world have reported problems viewing and creating emails. The issue arose after Microsoft released Outlook version 2104 build 13929.20372. Users of the click-to-run desktop client discovered they could no longer properly view or create emails. Outlook was not displaying the entire message body, instead only showing a small portion or a single line of the email message. Users also reported that when they pressed enter, all the previously written content was removed. Microsoft confirmed it was investigating an issue with email message visibility in Outlook. It said Outlook on the web appeared to be unaffected.
Technology by Andrew Backhouse Microsoft Outlook users around the world have reported problems viewing and creating emails. The issue arose after Microsoft released Outlook version 2104 build 13929.20372. Users of the click-to-run desktop client discovered they could no longer properly view or create emails. Outlook was not displaying the entire message body, instead only showing a small portion or a single line of the email message. Users also reported that when they pressed enter, all the previously written content was removed. Microsoft confirmed it was investigating an issue with email message visibility in Outlook. It said Outlook on the web appeared to be unaffected.
In cycling’s modern era, generational winners ruled over each decade since the 1960s to dominate grand tour racing.
With the sun setting on the Froome Era, who will step up to fill the void? There are plenty of candidates, from Primož Roglič to Egan Bernal, to Richard Carapaz to, Pogačar.
That question could be answered this season.
Grand tour racing season begins this weekend with the Giro d’Italia clicking into gear Saturday in Torino. The Tour de France and Vuelta a España are not far behind.
The 2021 “corsa rosa” boasts a solid start list that should deliver an exciting three weeks of racing. Though defending champion Tao Geoghegan Hart isn’t back, the presence of Bernal, Peter Sagan, Vincenzo Nibali, Simon Yates, and Remco Evenepoel assure there will be plenty of reasons to tune in every day.
Egan Bernal wants to turn back the clock to 2019 at the Giro d’Italia.
Bernal burst into the limelight with a historic win at the 2019 Tour de France, but the Ineos Grenadiers rider is a shadow of his former self for the past 12 months.
Plagued by back problems, which ultimately forced him out of last year’s Tour, Bernal’s confidence is at a low ebb. The Giro d’Italia gives him an opportunity to harken back to happier times, but he admits he doesn’t know if he has the winning legs.
“I don’t think I have the best condition that I won the Tour with yet, but I want to find it again, and I also want to find again the confidence that I had,” Bernal said Thursday.
Which version of Egan Bernal will show up at the Giro d'Italia? The Ineos Grenadiers star packs plenty of question marks and expectation into the season's first grand tour.