Adrian : I have Mozilla Thunderbird but maybe not the same program as yours. Or, maybe more probable since I don't know what I'm doing at least half the time, maybe I just don't understand something basic. There is no graphics program with Mozilla. It asks if I want to use it as my default e-mail system but I am not at all clear if this is a good idea since, despite its many faults, I like the graphics art features of AOL and don't want to screw things up. There is a setting on Mozilla to "see" all attachments "inline." Guess that this means all attachments will be made visible, or am I wrong about this ? Actually, all I want is to be able to send plain text with graphic arts visuals that no-one has to bother to click to see, just like a real (print) magazine. If someone sends me attachments this is not a concern. I just want my E-Zine to look professional when it gets sent out. Anything relevant you can tell me about Mozilla would be appreciated. Thanks Billy In a message dated 6/30/2006 12:35:08 A.M. Pacific Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> What I am trying to figure out is how to get material that I create > on Open Office to transfer directly to the BODY of e-mail. > Not as Attachments. Not as Attachments, > I'm trying to create an E-Zine. Graphics, etc, would be utterly useless > as attachments. What exact steps are needed to get stuff from Open > Office > into the text itself of an e-mail ? I always use "HTML formatted" email to do that. HTML email allows you to format things in a way similar to a web page. The most effective way that I've found to do that is using Mozilla Thunderbird. It is very good at doing advanced formatting of emails, including tables, graphics, lines, colours etc. You can download Mozilla Thunderbird from www.mozilla.org. Like OpenOffice.org, it is free open source software. Adrian --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
