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µo«H¤H: huiqun@usa.net, «H°Ï: BudaTech ¼Ð ÃD: Re: §¨ÀÉh.zip - h.zip µo«H¯¸: °ê¥ß¤¤¤s¤j¾Çºô¸ô²Õ Mailing List (Wed Jul 30 02:43:00 1997) Âà«H¯¸: Lion!ccnews.nsysu!news.nsysu!buda-tech@sccid.nsysu ¨Ó ·½: sccid.nsysu.edu.tw > h.zip §¨Àɦ¨¥\¤F. > a.zip ¨ÌµM¬O¶Ã½X. > ¯à§_¨p¤U±H a.zip µ¹¤p§Ì¬Ý¬Ý. ¨Ã±Ð¤p§Ì¤GªÌ³]©wªº®t²§! > ¦³¤ß±o«á¦A³qª¾ buda-tech ¦U¦ì, ¥H¼¢¦U¦ì¦¬´ú¸ÕÀɤ§¨¯W :p a.zip ©M h.zip ¤º®e¤@¼Ë¡A³£¥u¦³¡u´ú¸Õ¡v¤G¦r¡C ¦ý attachemnt=>properties ³]©w«h§¹¥þ¤£¦P¡C¤GºØ³]©wªº´ú¸Õµ²ªG¦p¤U¡G MIME for Encoding for Non-ASCII Attachment ª½±µ Buda-tech §¨ÀÉ Main Body Headers Format email Âà°e ---- --------------- --------- ---------- ----- --------- a.zip QuotedPrintable Yes MIME ¦¨¥\ ¶Ã½X (MIME) h.zip 7bit/8bit No UUEncoded ¦¨¥\ ¦¨¥\ ¤@¯ë¨Ó»¡¡A²{¤µemail³£·|¥Îa.zipªº³]©w¡A¤Wusenet¤~·|¥Îh.zipªº³]©w¡C §Ì¹ï´ú¸Õµ²ªGÁÙ¬O¤£¸Ñ¡C ¥H¤U¬O±qAgent.hlpºK¿ýªº¬ÛÃö»¡©ú¡G All About Attachments ===================== A growing number of groups on the Usenet are devoted to posting messages with media attachments. The types of media attached to messages are diverse - from images such as GIF and JPG files, to recorded sounds saved in WAV files. There are two major formats used for messages with attachments: MIME and uuencoded. MIME messages conform to this widely accepted message transferral protocol in which messages consist of one or more sections. Each section can is either text or one of many different types of media attachments. Uuencoded messages contain attachments that are converted to a text-based format using "UUCode", a utility that is closely aligned to the Internet. Fortunately, it doesn't matter which format is used for messages with attachments that you retrieve. Agent is pre-configured to intelligently discern the format and launch or save message attachments seamlessly. Also, Agent allows you ro create simple or complex MIME messages with ease. Choosing between MIME and uuencoded format ------------------------------------------ When selecting the format for messages with attachments, you must consider the hardware and software constraints of the message recipient. It defeats the purpose of your message if your MIME attachment cannot be viewed (or heard) by the person receiving it. Here's a good rule of thumb to follow: · For email messages - Most major email programs support the MIME format, so in many cases "MIME" would be the appropriate choice. (The safest thing to do is to find out whether your recipient's email program supports MIME.) · For Usenet messages - At the present time, most newsreaders and participants in the Usenet use uuencoded format, so currently it would be wise to choose "uuencoded" when posting attachments. Of course, this may change over time. At some point, MIME may become the standard format supported and used on the Usenet. Advantages of MIME: =================== · Greater reliability in transferring data - The MIME format is a well defined, widely accepted message transferral protocol which makes it possible for gateways to interpret message data smoothly and efficiently. Conversely, uuencoding comes in a number of "flavors", each with its own set of rules. Some gateways may misinterpret or even damage uuencoded data during transfer. · Splitting long messages - Messages cannot be longer than 100k bytes. Files that are bigger than that must be split into multiple messages. Compared to the uuencoded mechanism, MIME allows for a more graceful way of splitting long messages and then reassembling the pieces when they are received. Using MIME Quoted-Printable =========================== Quoted-printable provides international character support (e.g., accented characters) via MIME. The other type of text encoding commonly used when posting messages on the Usenet is 8-bit text encoding. There are a few advantages for using quoted-printable versus 8-bit encoding: 1. Quoted-printable uses only 7 bits to encode 8-bit characters. Thus, information won't be lost when messages are transferred via 7-bit gateways. 2. Quoted-printable correctly encodes non-ascii characters (such as accented characters). 3. Quoted-printable allows lines of text to be arbitrarily long, by inserting invisible line breaks where necessary to keep the physical line lengths within prescribed limits. TIP: If you are sending messages to people who have MIME-capable email/newsreaders, you will probably find that quoted-printable is the best way to format your messages, since it allows you to type long paragraphs without having to worry about how they will be formatted. If you are sending messages to people who don't have MIME-capable email/newsreaders, or if you are posting to newsgroups, where quoted-printable is not yet a universally accepted standard, you will probably find that 8-bit is the best way to format your messages. |
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