Sunday, December 16, 2001, 4:09:11 PM, Sebastian wrote:

> Fusiontunes:

> A high priority mail is NOT speeding a mail up in any way - it just
> gives the recipient a sign that this mail is important, it catches
> more attention. Vice versa with low priority mail.

In some circumstances, the priority does speed up the mail. For
example, my mail server normally queues mail until the next scheduled
transfer. However, if I assign the message one of these:
  Priority:Urgent
  X-Priority:Highest
  X-Priority:1
The server connects immediately.

That said, most mail clients indicate the importance that the sender
attaches to each message. So, as Sebastian wrote, the main effect is
to tell the recipient that the sender considers the message to be of
greater or lesser importance.

HTH,
 
-- 
Geoff Lane
Cornwall, UK
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 


-- 
________________________________________________________
Archives   : http://tbudl.thebat.dutaint.com
Moderators : mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
TBTech List: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Latest Vers: 1.53d
FAQ        : http://faq.thebat.dutaint.com 

Reply via email to