Hi Ronni

Thanks as always.
iPhoto 09 was so simple - but I will utilise your new info and set up this new 
system for iPhoto 11.
There didn't seem to be anything about these changes in the iPhoto 11 video 
tutorial - I'm sure your knowledge would be snapped up by the many frustrated 
users!
Perhaps Apple could set you up as a roving Apple Guru!

Regards

Marlene Oostryck


On 18/03/2011, at 1:37 PM, Ronda Brown wrote:

> Hi Marlene,
> 
> On 18/03/2011, at 12:58 PM, Marlene Oostryck wrote:
> 
>> I can send emails with photo attachments if I attach using the Photo Browser 
>> in Mail and they appear in my Sent list in Mail.
>> When checking with recipients of mail with photo attachments sent directly 
>> from iPhoto 11(a phone call to each) it appears that they are arriving - but 
>> I can't find them listed in Sent Mail/Messages - either on Mail or on 
>> Webmail.
> 
> 
> iPhoto 11 works with email in a new way. Rather than using an Application to 
> send the email as before, what they have done is handle the email within 
> iPhoto. 
> So, you input your Email Account details - the name of your service, the 
> account name, password, etc, and iPhoto uses that information to send the 
> email via your account. 
> 
> Emailing a photo usually means bouncing from your email application to your 
> pictures folder and back again. 
> But now you can create and send beautiful messages without leaving iPhoto. 
> Just choose from eight Apple-designed themes that you customise with your own 
> images and words. 
> 
> Then select the photos you want to send, and iPhoto places them in the 
> template. Rearrange photos with a simple drag and drop, adjust the image 
> mask, or change the size and style of your text. 
> Even attach high-resolution versions of your photos for your recipient to 
> download and keep. iPhoto optimises your message so it’s never too big to 
> send.
> 
> iPhoto works with popular email services like MobileMe, Gmail, Yahoo! Mail, 
> Windows Live Hotmail, and AOL. 
> 
> And since iPhoto keeps track of all your email messages with photos, you’re 
> free to open a sent message, make changes, and share it with someone new, 
> anytime you want.
> ——
> To view email you send from iPhoto, you need to send yourself each email 
> message.
>  iPhoto can automatically send you a “blind” carbon copy (blind means that 
> your recipients won’t see that you are a recipient too).
> 
> Choose iPhoto > Preferences, and then click Advanced.
> 
> Select “Automatically Bcc myself.”
> 
> You can also see whether or when you emailed a photo. Select the photo, click 
> the Info button in the toolbar, and look in the Sharing section to see to 
> whom and when the photo was sent. Click the entry in the Sharing section to 
> open an email you’ve sent, so you can view, edit, or resend it. (If you don’t 
> see a Sharing section, you haven’t shared the photo.)
> 
>> Emails on my iPad sent from Photos with 1 attachment indicated service was 
>> denied by Optus - but the emails were received 10 days later!
>> 
> 
> Cheers,
> Ronni
> 
> 17" MacBook Pro  Intel Core i7
> 2.66GHz / 8GB / 1067 MHz DDR3 / 500GB Serial ATA Drive @ 7200rpm
> 
> OS X 10.6.6 Snow Leopard
> Windows 7 Ultimate (under sufferance)
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
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