The client edition of Mac OS X 10.4.3 (available as a 93 MB download) makes enhancements in the following areas, resolving a number of issues reported in our Mac OS X 10.4.0, 10.4.1 and 10.4.2. Email client for mac 2018. The new client software for Mac OS X, 10.4 and higher can be installed via the Server Configuration menu Connections under Client / Resources or via the Client Web under Resources (if allowed in the Server Configuration under Server Config.
Mail Client For Mac Os X
Hi.
Regarding #1 -- that is something you need to configure on your email server. Mail on your Mac doesn't 'support' it because it is not a mail client thing. I.e., your email settings with your ISP might support this, or your .mac account might (I don't have a .mac account, so I cannot tell.
Regarding #2 -- Mail in Tiger does not support this. Leopard's Mail does. But, I'd like to strongly encourage you to reconsider. You really are assuming that what ypur pretty email looks like on your Mac is how it will look when someone reads it. Bad assumption. You, the sender, knows nothing about what the email client of the recipient can do. When the email is sent, the 'decorative stationery' is attached -- as an attachment, often as a gif.
What happens with some email client software (email readers) is that the user gets your email and also gets the attachment. They click on this image, and they get a small nicely decorated picture.
Stationery is for paper mail. It adds little to email except for making the message larger and harder to read for some on simpler email clients.
-Fred
Regarding #1 -- that is something you need to configure on your email server. Mail on your Mac doesn't 'support' it because it is not a mail client thing. I.e., your email settings with your ISP might support this, or your .mac account might (I don't have a .mac account, so I cannot tell.
Regarding #2 -- Mail in Tiger does not support this. Leopard's Mail does. But, I'd like to strongly encourage you to reconsider. You really are assuming that what ypur pretty email looks like on your Mac is how it will look when someone reads it. Bad assumption. You, the sender, knows nothing about what the email client of the recipient can do. When the email is sent, the 'decorative stationery' is attached -- as an attachment, often as a gif.
What happens with some email client software (email readers) is that the user gets your email and also gets the attachment. They click on this image, and they get a small nicely decorated picture.
Stationery is for paper mail. It adds little to email except for making the message larger and harder to read for some on simpler email clients.
-Fred