ElizabethM
Well-Known Member
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Hello!
I am a PC user and this question came about the other day when discussing with an Apple user how my email attachments arrives as part of the email and not on the side icons.
When I use my Outlook, I select "attach this file" and that creates a bar above the email (where we type the message) for the attached files. However when I insert the images, it becomes embedded into the email.
The Apple user I spoke to asked me why couldn't I caption each image and explain what was what since they saw no title. Instead Apple users recieves attachments like how a PC user would recieve an inserted/embedded file in an email. Part of the email, with the ablity to write next to it, above it, around it an ect.
That's where I got to thinking.
How do YOU guys send your files to clients?
Do you attach them even if it may appear just like a row of images to Apple users? or do you insert them, add discriptions and leave your clients the chance to name it themselves (because embedded files are given the choice of naming it yourself whilst attachments are already named).
So yeah, that's my random question of the day. Haha
I am a PC user and this question came about the other day when discussing with an Apple user how my email attachments arrives as part of the email and not on the side icons.
When I use my Outlook, I select "attach this file" and that creates a bar above the email (where we type the message) for the attached files. However when I insert the images, it becomes embedded into the email.
The Apple user I spoke to asked me why couldn't I caption each image and explain what was what since they saw no title. Instead Apple users recieves attachments like how a PC user would recieve an inserted/embedded file in an email. Part of the email, with the ablity to write next to it, above it, around it an ect.
That's where I got to thinking.
How do YOU guys send your files to clients?
Do you attach them even if it may appear just like a row of images to Apple users? or do you insert them, add discriptions and leave your clients the chance to name it themselves (because embedded files are given the choice of naming it yourself whilst attachments are already named).
So yeah, that's my random question of the day. Haha