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Mastering the Internet, XHTML, and JavaScript

Mastering the Internet, XHTML, and JavaScript. Chapter 3 E-mail Tools. Goals and Objectives Chapter Headlines Introduction Communication Protocols Content, Attachments, and Etiquette Acronyms and Emoticons E-mail clients and Web-based E-mail Eudora. Outlook Express

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Mastering the Internet, XHTML, and JavaScript

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  1. Mastering the Internet, XHTML, and JavaScript Chapter 3 E-mail Tools

  2. Goals and Objectives Chapter Headlines Introduction Communication Protocols Content, Attachments, and Etiquette Acronyms and Emoticons E-mail clients and Web-based E-mail Eudora Outlook Express Netscape messenger and Mailer Opera M2 Hotmail Yahoo mail S-mail E-mail Activities Managing E-mail Wireless E-mail Summary Outline Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  3. Goals and Objectives • Goals Understand and master the essentials of e-mail such as installation, configuration, types of e-mail programs, and the effective use of e-mail clients and web-based e-mail • Objectives • Protocols : SMTP, POP3, IMAP, MIME • Content, attachments, and etiquette • Acronyms and emoticons • E-mail clients versus web-based e-mail • Software : Eudora, Outlook Express, Netscape, Opera, Hotmail, and Yahoo • E-mail activities : receive, send, read, reply, forward, delete, organize • Managing e-mails : signature files, vCards, stationary, address book, mailing lists, spam • Wireless e-mail Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  4. Chapter Headlines • 3.1 Introduction • E-mail is easy and intuitive to use • 3.2 Communication • The use of e-mail requires an e-mail account, ISP, and e-mail program • 3.3 Protocols • SMTP, POP3, IMAP, MIME protocols are used • 3.4 Content, Attachments, and Etiquette • E-mail follows public and social etiquette and rules • 3.5 Acronyms and Emoticons • Acronyms save time, and emoticons express emotions and moods through facial expression symbols Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  5. Chapter Headlines • 3.6 E-mail Clients and Web-based E-mail • There is a time and place to use either type of e-mail program • 3.7 Eudora • Eudora is a stand-alone client, and also available as web mail • 3.8 Outlook Express • Outlook Express comes built-in with Internet Explorer • 3.9 Netscape messenger and mailer • Netscape browsers have built-in e-mail clients • 3.10 Opera M2 • Opera Hotlist has all the user needs for e-mail Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  6. Chapter Headlines • 3.11 Hotmail • Hotmail is free, easy to use, and popular • 3.12 Yahoo mail • Yahoo mail is web based, and is popular • 3.13 S-mail • Use s-mail for confidential, personal, or business communication • 3.14 E-mail Activities • All you need to know about using e-mails • 3.15 Managing E-mail • It is all about saving time, control, and fighting spam • 3.16 Wireless E-mail • Wireless E-mail and browsing have a lot in common Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  7. Introduction • E-mail is a method of communication over the internet that involves exchanging computer messages • E-mail is the most widely used tool of internet • Some advantages of e-mail are: • Simple • Intuitive • Fast • Like Internet, e-mail also uses a client/server model • For using e-mail the user requires • E-mail account on an e-mail server • E-mail address • E-mail software • Internet connection Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  8. Communication • E-mail requires e-mail client and e-mail server • E-mail servers communicate with internet and e-mail clients communicate with e-mail servers • E-mail system usually has separate servers for sending and receiving • Mail servers are managed and maintained by ISPs • A client mail box typically has the following folders • Inbox : to hold incoming mails • Outbox : to hold copies of outgoing mails • Draft : to hold to-send mails • Trash : to hold to-delete mails Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  9. Communication Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  10. Protocols • The communication is accomplished using 3 protocols: • SMTP (simple mail transfer protocol) • POP3 (post office protocol version 3) • IMAP (internet message access protocol) • SMTP is used for transferring e-mail over the internet • POP3 and IMAP are used with SMTP to overcome its limited queuing ability • Usually a user has SMTP outgoing mail server and SMTP and POP3 or SMTP and IMAP incoming mail server • IMAP allows the user to access mail from any client computer connected to the internet, but with POP3, the user must download mails and then read them • MIME protocol is related to e-mail content Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  11. Protocols Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  12. Contents, Attachments and Etiquette • E-mail message has 4 parts: • Header : includes From, To, Subject, and Date • Body : includes the message body • Signature : holds the senders information • Attachments : allows the user to attach files to be sent • E-mail messages can be sent to one or more persons • E-mail message body can be plain text or XHTML • E-mail message usually has an e-mail thread i.e. sequence of related e-mail messages generated from responses of the first new message • E-mail attachments are handled by MIME protocol Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  13. Contents, Attachments and Etiquette Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  14. Contents, Attachments and Etiquette • Email Etiquette • Be concise and short • Do not use too much punctuation • Limit number of characters per line to 80 • Avoid too much formatting • Use salutations properly • Use e-mail quote symbol, “>” • Avoid flame • Do not respond to flame • Include all needed content in one message Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  15. An acronym is an abbreviation of a group of words An emoticon is a facial expression generated using keyboard characters Avoid over-use of acronyms and emoticons Examples of acronyms: 2L8 – too late ASAP – as soon as possible BRB – be right back FYI – for your information Examples of emoticons include: :-) – smiley ;-) – smiley with a wink ;-( – sad Acronyms and Emoticons Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  16. E-mail messages arrive at a server and then a client accesses them Client using POP3 protocol connects to internet, downloads the mails and then reads them later on. Client using the IMAP protocol connects to the internet and reads the messages while connected An e-mail client is a stand-alone program When the e-mail client is a web page it is web-based email User can configure an e-mail client to use POP3, or IMAP, or both E-mail Clients and Web-based e-mail Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  17. POP3 is viewed as an e-mail forwarding protocol IMAP is viewed as on online e-mail reader POP3 is suitable for users who always use the same computer IMAP is useful for users who access e-mails using different computers Any type of e-mail client provides ways to read and manage e-mail activities E-mail clients also provide an address book to store e-mail addresses of other people E-mail Clients and Web-based e-mail Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  18. E-mail Clients and Web-based e-mail Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  19. Eudora is a stand-alone email program It comes as and e-mail client or Web-based email Eudora can be downloaded from http://www.eudora.com It is intuitive to use One can customize Eudora by changing its settings and specifying incoming and outgoing mail servers Eudora Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  20. Outlook Express is a stand-alone e-mail client provided by Microsoft It is bundled with Internet Explorer 6.0 It is suitable for individual user for personal use Users of Outlook Express should be aware of its viruses and security problems It can be downloaded from http://www.microsoft.com A user can customize Outlook Express to change its settings Outlook Express Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  21. Netscape Messenger and Mailer • Netscape browsers come with built-in stand-alone e-mail clients • The e-mail client allows the user to configure one POP3 server, but multiple IMAP servers • They do not permit configuring mixed types of servers Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  22. Opera M2 • Opera browser comes with its built-in M2 e-mail client • M2 has a built-in mail database and a search engine to search it • Opera also provides web-based e-mail • A user can sign up at http://www.operamail.com • The use of Opera’s web-based e-mail is easy and intuitive Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  23. Hotmail • Hotmail is a popular web-based e-mail program • A user can get his account at http://www.hotmail.com • It is free and easy to use • It has virus and security problems • At peak times, it may be slow • It has a limited disk space and sizes of mail attachments are restricted Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  24. Yahoo Mail • Yahoo mail is a popular web-based e-mail program • A user can sign up for a free account at http://www.yahoomail.com • It is easy to use and good at blocking unwanted mails • It has disk space limitations • Users can set up POP3 accounts for a fee Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  25. S-mail • S-mail means Secure Mail • S-mail sends and receives mails over a secure connection • Mails send using S-mail cannot be intercepted or altered • The messages are encrypted and decrypted using public and private keys • An e-mail client can be configured to provide S-mail • Two available protocols are: • S/MIME • PGP/MIME Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  26. E-mail Activities E-mail activities include: • Configuring e-mail clients • Creating e-mail accounts • Reading e-mails • Sending e-mails to single or multiple recipients • Sending e-mails with attachments • Forwarding e-mails • Downloading attachments • Printing e-mails • Setting up auto-reply option Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  27. Managing E-mail • Managing e-mail means to deal with incoming and outgoing mails effectively • It is important to manage e-mails to avoid mail box clutters • Incoming e-mail management involves: • Organizing • Responding • Deleting • Archiving • Filtering • Spam, junk mail and bulk mail handling Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  28. Managing E-mail • Outgoing e-mail management involves: • Electronic signatures • vCards • Stationeries • Mailing lists • Aliases • Address books Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  29. Wireless E-mail • IMAP is the ideal protocol to use for Wireless E-mail • There are three key concerns for wireless e-mail: • Security – Internet connection must be secure • Single mail box integration – Syncing handheld device mail box with desktop mail box • Push – e-mail is automatically delivered to the handheld device Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

  30. Summary • E-mail is a widely used method of communication over the internet • E-mail is based on a client/server model • SMTP, POP3, IMAP, and MIME are important communication protocols for e-mail model • A user must follow the e-mail etiquette guidelines and keep content relevant • Acronyms and emoticons are useful but must be used wisely • E-mails can be accessed by e-mail clients and web-based email • Managing e-mails is important to avoid mail box cluttering • Wireless e-mails have security and syncing issues Chapter 3 - E-mail Tools

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