Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 127. Not illustrated. Chapters: Email Client, Webmail, Comparison of E-Mail Clients, Yahoo! Mail, Blitzmail, Open-Xchange, Outlook Web Access, Penelope, @mail, Gnumail, List of E-Mail Clients, Unicode and E-Mail, Columbia Mm, Afterlogic Webmail Lite, Para-Mail, Columba, Touchmail, Em Client, Getmail, Laszlo Mail, Scribe Mail, Eureka Email, Courier, Turnpike, Ream, Cone, Hotjava Views, Omni Mobile, Nextmail, Sendemail, Mailamp, Stubmail, Wanderlust, Chatteremail. Excerpt: The following tables compare general and technical information between a number of e-mail client programs. Please see the individual products articles for further information. This article is not all-inclusive or necessarily up-to-date. Basic general information about the clients: creator/company, license/price etc. Clients listed on a light purple background are no longer in active development. A brief overview of the release history. The operating systems on which the clients can run natively (without emulation). What e-mail and related protocols and standards are supported by each client. Information on what features each of the clients support. Note that for all of these clients, the concept of "HTML support" does not mean that they can process the full range of HTML that a web browser can handle. Almost all email readers limit HTML features, either for security reasons, or because of the nature of the interface. CSS and Javascript can be especially problematic. A number of articles describe these limitations per-email-client; see 1, 2, 3, and 4
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 127. Not illustrated. Chapters: Email Client, Webmail, Comparison of E-Mail Clients, Yahoo! Mail, Blitzmail, Open-Xchange, Outlook Web Access, Penelope, @mail, Gnumail, List of E-Mail Clients, Unicode and E-Mail, Columbia Mm, Afterlogic Webmail Lite, Para-Mail, Columba, Touchmail, Em Client, Getmail, Laszlo Mail, Scribe Mail, Eureka Email, Courier, Turnpike, Ream, Cone, Hotjava Views, Omni Mobile, Nextmail, Sendemail, Mailamp, Stubmail, Wanderlust, Chatteremail. Excerpt: The following tables compare general and technical information between a number of e-mail client programs. Please see the individual products articles for further information. This article is not all-inclusive or necessarily up-to-date. Basic general information about the clients: creator/company, license/price etc. Clients listed on a light purple background are no longer in active development. A brief overview of the release history. The operating systems on which the clients can run natively (without emulation). What e-mail and related protocols and standards are supported by each client. Information on what features each of the clients support. Note that for all of these clients, the concept of "HTML support" does not mean that they can process the full range of HTML that a web browser can handle. Almost all email readers limit HTML features, either for security reasons, or because of the nature of the interface. CSS and Javascript can be especially problematic. A number of articles describe these limitations per-email-client; see 1, 2, 3, and 4
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
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