Ray, here is the whole article.
Why don't pictures show up in the emails I send or receive?

The person asking the question noted that he or she was getting red 
X's in the spots where the images should be.

Naturally, there are several possibilities. I'll review the common 
email formats and some of the ways that pictures can get lost in 
transmission.

•

It's reasonably important to know that there are three common email 
formats:

Plain Text email is, as it implies, plain text and nothing more. No 
formatting, no pictures, all in a single, unspecified font. All email 
programs support plain text emails. Images can be included with plain 
text emails, but only as attachments. 
HTML email uses the same language that's used to create web pages to 
format email. Almost everything you can do with a web page can be 
done in HTML mail - images, formatting, and so on. 
Rich Text email actually predates HTML email in common use. It's a 
Microsoft format that works well between Microsoft email clients. It 
also supports formatting, images, and more. 
Problems with images arise in three areas: conversions between the 
various formats above, how images are actually carried within email, 
and how the email program chooses to display them.

Email Format Conversion

Most non-Microsoft mailers don't support Rich Text, so if someone 
receives an email in Rich Text format, the mailer may display a Plain 
Text version of the email instead without the pictures. Similarly, if 
an HTML email is sent to someone who's email isn't set up to handle 
HTML email, they may see a Plain Text version, or they may see raw 
HTML formatting codes sprinkled throughout the message.

Of course if you send a plain text email message, everyone should be 
able to see it. If you include images as attachments, they should be 
able to view those as well, though not necessarily in their email 
program.

The good news is that most email is in either plain text or HTML, and 
most consumer email programs recognize both properly.

Image Location

In HTML on a web page, images are not actually "in" the HTML text but 
rather they are stored as separate files that are referenced in the 
HTML. For example somewhere in the Ask Leo! home page is an HTML 
statement that essentially says grab the file "http://ask-
leo.com/images/askleonew.png" and display it here - the upper right 
corner. The contents of the image, the .png file, is not contained 
within the HTML file but is referenced by it.

This presents a problem for HTML email, which is a single "thing"; a 
single message which should be self-contained. As a result there are 
two ways that images are included with HTML email.

The first is that they are not included in the email at all. In this 
approach, the HTML email works exactly like a web page - the HTML 
contains a reference to the image, which is then downloaded and 
displayed as you look at the email. For example, my email could 
contain a reference to "http://ask-leo.com/images/askleonew.png";. 
When someone opens that email, the mailer would go out to the server, 
download that image, and display it.

And here you can see at least one common cause for "red X's" in your 
email. If the mailer, while displaying the email containing that 
reference can't locate the picture the result is a red X. The picture 
could have been removed, the server holding it could be down, or your 
machine could be disconnected from the internet. All have the same 
result.

The second approach actually includes the images as "hidden" 
attachments to your email, and encodes the references to them in a 
special way. Rather than referencing "http://ask-
leo.com/images/askleonew.png", the email might have a reference to 
using some special code that means to pick up the image contained in 
the first attachment and display it. This results in larger emails 
since the images are physically included, but you're no longer 
concerned about locating the images since they came with the email.

One point of confusion between the two methods above is that you may 
not always be certain what type of email you're creating. A 
copy/paste from a web page or HTML editor may generate the first type 
with pointers to images. Are those pointers correct? Will they work 
on the recipient's machine? It's hard to say, because it depends on 
the type of web page, the type of browser or tool you were using to 
view it, and even the mail program you were pasting into. Similarly a 
copy/paste from, say, an image editing program will commonly produce 
the second type if it works at all.

Email Options

Because images can increase the size of your emails, many email 
programs allow you to select whether or not images should be sent 
with your email at all! In Outlook Express, as you compose a message, 
you'll find an option labeled Send Pictures with Message on the 
Format menu. Make sure that's selected to include any pictures with 
your outgoing messages. Other email programs may have similar or 
related options.

Email Display

Now that we're somewhat uncertain about what we're sending, we'll 
introduce even more uncertainty into what your recipients are viewing.

Outlook 2003 introduced a security feature whereby all remote images 
from untrusted addresses are displayed as red X's by default. In 
order to view the images you must either add that sender to your safe 
sender's list, or right click on one of the red X placeholders and 
specifically tell Outlook to download and display the images.

Most email programs that display HTML email actually use a browser 
such as Internet Explorer to do so. That implies that any settings 
you've made to your browser will also impact your HTML email. One 
such setting controls whether images are displayed at all. Turn that 
off in your browser, and chances are you've turned it off in your 
email as well.

Some email programs may understand HTML email, but not the referenced 
to images as hidden attachments.

Email programs must save embedded images to disk in order to display 
them. If there's not enough room or some other problem, then that may 
fail and the images not appear.

•

As you can see there are a lot of reasons that things might not work. 
Don't let that discourage you, though. Experiment a little. Take a 
little time to understand how your emailer creates email from what 
you give it and how the people you send it to see it.

If things have been working, and suddenly do not, see what changed. 
If your images are coming from a remote server, is that server still 
available? Did you change your email program or perhaps a setting in 
your browser?

With the knowledge you now have, you should be able to at least make 
some educated guesses as to what's happening and perhaps correct it.




--- In [email protected], Ray Parrish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> That link sucks, there's nothing there about the subject matter.
> 
> Later, Ray Parrish
> 
> Ivan Wilson wrote:
> >
> > Why don't pictures show up in the emails I send or receive?
> > Naturally, there are several possibilities. I'll review the common
> > email formats and some of the ways that pictures can get lost in
> > transmission.
> > 
http://askleo.com/why_dont_pictures_show_up_in_the_emails_i_send_or_re
 
> > 
<http://askleo.com/why_dont_pictures_show_up_in_the_emails_i_send_or_r
e>
> > ceive.html
> >
> > --- In [email protected] 
> > <mailto:A-1-Computer_Tech%40yahoogroups.com>, "Stephanie Vinson"
> > <stphnvnsn@> wrote:
> > >
> > >
> > > Would someone please explain to me why on some of my messages 
where
> > > their is a picture i get a square with a little red x in the top
> > left
> > > corner. Before i could get the picture, but now i can't. I have 
a
> > dell
> > > xps, with window xp. Thanks in advance for any help.
> > >
> > > Stephanie Vinson
> > >
> >
> >  
> 
> -- 
> http://www.rayslinks.com/ Web index of human reviewed links.
> <http://www.rayslinks.com/Troubleshooting%20and%20fixing%
20Windows.html>
> Trouble shooting and Fixing Windows
> http://www.writingsoftheschizophrenic.com My poetry in web pages
>



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