I use an ActiveX component to do this. It sends the email in two parts, one
in HTML and one in plain text. The email reader selects which one to show to
the user.

The component is free:

http://aspxp.com/free_stuff/aspxpmail/

~Brad

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Len Conrad
Sent: Monday, January 07, 2002 10:04 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [IMail Forum] Text/HTML


Hi Kelly

>How do they do it?  We recently used a company called TargetInteractive to
>send an email blast.  The blast was in HTML, but, they also prepared a text
>version for those whose email client does not accept HTML.  How does the
>mailserver determine what the users email software will accept (HTML/text)?

I just don't know.  I don't think it's possible.   What did
TargetInteractive claim they could do?   It sounds like miraculous
mind-reading to know which users in a list of x,000 wanted/could/prefer
text over HTML.  You simply can't know that in advance unless the user
joined the list for text vs HTML, nor is there any standard, agreed
convention for users to communicate back to  whom? or what? as to what
message format they want.

If they sent HTML and the user rejected it, how would they know the user
rejected it or preferred non-HTML?   If the user received HTML mail, and
just deleted it because they weren't interested, couldn't read it because
the HTML code screwed up the msg so bad it was unreadable??

Again, technically, the sending mailserver sends to the receiving mail
server, and hangs up. Then the user's mail program contacts that mailbox
server to read its mailbox.  The sending mailserver has no direct dialog
with any user's mail client program, so can't determine whether ...

a) the mail client program can handle HTML mail

nor

b) even if it could, whether the user wants to receive HTML mail.

What I can say is that for the Ecartis joke list server I manage, they send
HTML mail without giving the user the option choosing.  It works ok.
However, it seems that there are some anomalies how web mail like AOL, MSN,
Yahoo, etc handle HTML messages.  Using HTML to color text and change text
sizes, and no more fanciness, is probably ok.

What many people who receive HTML mail now is to disactivate any java or
javascript or other scripting that could be included in the HTML.

Since HTML mail 4 to 10 times bigger than non-HTML mail, to use HTML mail
has an impact on both the end user (wants it? rejects it?) and on your list
server's performance and your monthly bandwidth volumes.

This is my opinion:  a nicely formatted, and spaced non-HTML msg is
perfectly capable of communicating your message. It is the "least common
denominator" most acceptable to all people.  I'm more of a Jakob Nielsen
type, than a special FX type.    Do you have hard evidence that HTML mail
is more "successful" than text mail?

What is your schedule for implementing a new list server?

Len



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