It's hard to remember what our lives were like without e-mail.
Ranking up there with the Web as one of the most useful features of the
Internet, e-mail has become one of today's standard means of
communication. Billions of messages are sent each year. If you're like
most people these days, you probably have more than one e-mail address.
After all, the more addresses you have, the more sophisticated you
look...
E-mail is part of the standard TCP/IP set of protocols. Sending
messages is typically done by SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) and
receiving messages is handled by POP3 (Post Office Protocol 3), or IMAP
(Internet Message Access Protocol). IMAP is the newer protocol,
allowing you to view and sort messages on the mail server, without
downloading them to your hard drive.
Though e-mail was originally developed for sending simple text
messages, it has become more robust in the last few years. Now,
HTML-based e-mail can use the same code as Web pages to incorporate
formatted text, colors, and images into the message. Also, documents
can be attached to e-mail messages, allowing files to be transfered via
the e-mail protocol. However, since e-mail was not originally designed
to handle large file transfers, transferring large documents (over 3 MB,
for example) is not allowed by most mail servers. So remember to keep
your attachments small!
No comments:
Post a Comment