Nicolas Kovacs wrote:
Hi,
This question is not exactly CentOS-related strictly speaking, but here
goes. I'm running a few newsletter servers for myself and a handful of
clients on public CentOS servers with PHPList.
For the last twenty years or so I've followed the basic rule that mails
should
Le 02/02/2018 à 16:03, Mikhail Utin a écrit :
> The same story is in OS desktop GUI including Linux. I use CentOS 6
> and 7 and still do not like 7. Not to mention in the morning Win 10
> with all its crap included.
On a side note, I've written a complete post-install script for CentOS 7
and an Xf
and 7 and
still do not like 7. Not to mention in the morning Win 10 with all its crap
included.
Mikhail Utin
From: CentOS on behalf of Nicolas Kovacs
Sent: Friday, February 2, 2018 04:36
To: centos@centos.org
Subject: [CentOS] Slightly OT : newsletters
Cameron Smith wrote:
> Look into mutipart and offer both html and plain text in the same email.
> This allows the client to view it as they see fit.
>
> If you do send html it has a much more restrictive implementation than
> html
> and css for a webpage so study up on what you can and can't do.
>
Look into mutipart and offer both html and plain text in the same email.
This allows the client to view it as they see fit.
If you do send html it has a much more restrictive implementation than html
and css for a webpage so study up on what you can and can't do.
Mailchimp has some great info abou
- Original Message -
> From: "Nicolas Kovacs"
> To: "CentOS mailing list"
> Sent: Friday, 2 February, 2018 09:36:14
> Subject: [CentOS] Slightly OT : newsletters, mail formatting and netiquette
> Hi,
>
> This question is not exactly CentOS-relate
Hi,
This question is not exactly CentOS-related strictly speaking, but here
goes. I'm running a few newsletter servers for myself and a handful of
clients on public CentOS servers with PHPList.
For the last twenty years or so I've followed the basic rule that mails
should have no formatting whats
7 matches
Mail list logo