>egroups does not send email in HTML format. The only advertising you get
>is a two or three line text ad with every message received. Of course an
>individual subscriber to a list may have the option of turning on HTML
>email with his POP3 client, but other list members would probably flame the
>person for doing so and they will try to set him straight on the general
>social unacceptability of sending HTML email.
>
>Sam Heywood
I don't think turning on HTML email with a POP3 client would bother the list,
but turning on HTML email with an SMTP client would annoy more than a few
people. Getting an HTML attachment is a nuisance, and worse when the non-HTML
part and HTML part are quoted-printable.