On Friday, June 20, 2003, at 01:56 pm, Frank da Cruz wrote:
You mean something like this?does anyone know of a simple, explanatory web page, aimed at not too technical people, based on sending *accessible* email, and if really necessary attachments and the problems related to attachments (specifically inaccessibly, not viruses).
i'm looking for a nice concise web page that i can give the address to
people who keep asking me about email attachments and reading email.
more often than not, the problem is with the sender, so i'd like to
find a web page that they can pass to people (who are more than likely
not knowledgeable about computers) in the event of unreadable email and
in particular unreadable attachments.
very often an attachment isn't needed (like attaching a ms word document when emails themselves are text) and i'd like to know about a web page explaining that thoroughly but simply.
anyone know of such a magical page?
http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/safe.html
It includes sections on email.
thanks Frank, but not really :/
looking for something much more simpler and to-the-point and explanatory (a *small* page) that informs senders of the inaccessibility issues and how to avoid them by not attaching files unnecessarily. a very simple practical guide for how to go about that and the reasoning behind it.
for people who aren't really interested in computers as a subject in themselves and don't want to get bogged down in involved text about them. (yes, there are such people)
i've found 2 pages that are towards the sort of thing i'm after:
<http://www.dynamicwebs.com.au/tutorials/attachments_new.html>
<http://astron.berkeley.edu/~jhall/export/attachments.html>
(the second one, to start with, i only found a pdf version of it, which i thought was quite funny, but then i realised there was also an html version)
but those still aren't quite what i'm looking for.
apparently the bbc just did a guide on accessibility issues (such as not using proprietary formats) and released it as a pdf (not html)! then also as a .doc!! :) oh dear.
(i suppose technically pdf is not a proprietary format (?), but still, not far off.)
Ken, on this list, suggested i write this myself. my get out: some m.s. software knowledge would be needed, which i don't have. :)

