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Chapter 20 - Electronic Mail

  1. Introduction
  2. Description Of Functionality
    • send a single message to many recipients.
    • send a message that includes text, voice, video, and graphics.
    • send a message to a user on a network outside the Internet.
    • send a message to which a computer program responds.
  3. The Best Of All Worlds
  4. Each User Has A Mailbox For E-mail
    Each individual who participates in electronic mail exchange has a mailbox identified by a unique address. Any user can send mail across the Internet to another user's mailbox if they know the mailbox address; only the owner can examine the contents of a mailbox and extract messages.
  5. Sending An E-mail Message
  6. Notification That E-mail Has Arrived
  7. Reading An E-mail Message
    A computer connected to the Internet needs application software before users can send or receive electronic mail. E-mail software allows a user to compose and send a message or to read messages that have arrived. A user can send a reply to any message.
    • SMTP
    • POP-3
    • IMAP
  8. E-mail Messages Look Like Interoffice Memos - smileys, CC, BCC
  9. E-mail Software Fills in Header Information
    Although most e-mail messages contain many lines of header, software generates most of the header automatically. User-friendly software hides unnecessary header lines when displaying an e-mail message.
  10. How E-mail Works (CLIENT-SERVER)
  11. Using E-mail From A Personal Computer
  12. Mailbox Address Format (summers_wayne@ColumbusState.edu)
  13. Abbreviations Make E-mail Friendly
  14. Aliases Permit Arbitrary Abbreviations
    Most commercial e-mail software permits each user to define a set of abbreviations for frequently used mailbox addresses. If the user types an abbreviation when specifying a recipient, e-mail software substitutes the full mailbox address in place of the abbreviation.
  15. Aliases Shared By All Users Of A Compuer System
  16. Sending To Multiple Recipients
  17. Mailing List: An Alias for Multiple Recipients
    A mailing list is an e-mail alias that specifies multiple recipients; when a message is sent to the alias, the e-mail system delivers a copy to each recipient on the list.
  18. Public Mailing Lists and Mail Exploders
  19. E-mail To And From Non-Internet Sites
  20. Access To Services Via E-mail
    Because a computer program can answer and reply to an electronic mail message, e-mail can be used to provide access to a variety of remote services.
  21. Speed, Reliability, And Expectations
  22. Impact And Significance Of Electronic Mail
    • Because e-mail provides high-speed transfer while allowing the receiver to choose when to answer, it combines the benefits of instantaneous communication with freedom from interruption.
    • Because a mailing list allows an arbitrary group of individuals to exchange memos, it provides a way for a group of people who share a common interest to participate in a discussion.
    • Because most computer networks offer an electronic mail service that operates with electronic mail on the Internet, it is possible to communicate with more people using electronic mail than with any other Internet service.
    • Because electronic mail can include text, graphics, and voice, it can be used to transfer documents or recorded audio messages.
    • Because a computer program can answer electronic mail and send a reply automatically, many services on the Internet have been constructed so a user can submit a request and receive a response using electronic mail.
  23. Joining A Mailing List [tile.net & LISZT]

Terms

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