English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

That people who recieve it won't have to download anything.

2006-06-19 11:20:02 · 10 answers · asked by Gabrielle 2 in Computers & Internet Other - Computers

10 answers

insert the picture into the body of the email. This way the receiver you be able to view the pic as he/she is reading the email.

2006-06-19 11:24:10 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

There are 2 ways:

a) You open your .jpg file, Make a screen shot from it and paste it as your email content and send it. When reciever open your email, instead of seeing Hi, How do doing today and.... as usual content, he would see a screen shot of the photo ( although you can type whatever you want before or after the image in the email )

b) If you have a Yahoo! account, when oyu go to Compose, next to attatch file, you would see Inset Photos. there you can brows and put your photos and send it. reciever would see the photos without needing to download them.

2006-06-19 11:29:26 · answer #2 · answered by Frost Gothic 4 · 0 0

Ah, it really is not any longer tremendous, even if that is an recommendations-blowing possibility to knock down someone who truly merits it! mockingly i have in no way had an offensive one the following apart from a cloner threatening me i'd be his next sufferer. perchance my avatar scares 'em off.... My very last one became in Astronomy & area at the same time as utilising my different account with a more effective generic avatar. A questioner requested a question about astrology, claiming he became very insightful. after I with politeness yet humorously noted that it ought to no longer be sufficient perception to locate the right section (alongside with many others a lot less polite solutions!), I were given a bypass of polyasterisked abuse from him in an digital mail. Which of direction I then further to my reply, with proper rebuttal...

2016-11-14 23:59:56 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

When you start the new email (in Outlook) make sure your cursor is in the body of the email. Then go to >insert>picture. It will bring up a browse menu. Go to the picture and click on it and "save". It will put in right in the email for you to see. Yahoo is probably similar to that.

Good Luck

2006-06-19 11:35:49 · answer #4 · answered by phy333 6 · 0 0

it has to be embedded in the email using html code....or the other easier way to do it is by sending a link to it if it's already (being hosted) on some website....actually you know what? I just remembered there is a really easy way, use this www.yousendit.com or www.sendspace.com

all you do is upload the file it gives you a link and you send it via email.

2006-06-19 11:26:51 · answer #5 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

If you use outlook or outlook express you can insert the picture into the email or you could insert it into a word document and send the doc as an email not as an attachment

2006-06-19 11:25:47 · answer #6 · answered by bl4me2000 2 · 0 0

Depending on your email client, when you are composing your email, go to Insert-Picture-From File and select a jpg file.

The picture will show when the recipient opens the email.

2006-06-19 11:29:22 · answer #7 · answered by rainer7888 1 · 0 0

Depends on your e-mailer program, but usually if you open the picture in your picture viewer program, copy it (e.g., left click and CtrlC, or right-click and select "copy"), and then paste it into the body of your e-mail message, that will work.

2006-06-19 11:24:28 · answer #8 · answered by Artemisia 2 · 0 0

almost all email have gone to the attache only format due to worms and virus threats. try posting the pic on a website like myspace.com or imagedump.com or in yahoo you can post the pics in your photo book and then invite them to come look

2006-06-19 11:23:22 · answer #9 · answered by j_ardinger 5 · 0 0

You should be able to copy and paste the images you want from from your file into your e-mail.

2006-06-19 11:26:00 · answer #10 · answered by ijcoffin 6 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers