Hi all,
This is what I know about Cc and Bcc in an e-mail communication:
Cc (Carbon Copy ) - makes difference between your main(s) recipients(s) and the and an other one who needs a copy (may need to be informed) of that e-mail but he is not required to participate or respond.
Bcc (Blind Carbon Copy) - is reserved for the recipient who should not see the others contacts.
Please correct if I'm wrong,
Cheers,
RV.
no
By using internet faxing, fax can be sent through email or fax machine.
I sent an email to my boss with the updated report attached.
Some email clients offer Email Receipts. If you are using this, you will receive notification that the email has been opened.
He sent her a derisive (mocking) email.
An efax is a type of fax sent over the internet using an email account or other means. The difference between efax and email is that an efax can be sent to fax machines.
Email within a local area network operates nearly the same as it does on the Internet without traveling across multiple networks. An email sent is delivered using an SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) server which sends it to the appropriate mailbox, and the user receives the email from connecting to their POP server.
It stands for carbon copy, so you can send the same email to multiple people without having to recreate it for each person.
If the person sending the email to you also sent the same email to 10 other people then using the reply to all would send a reply to the person that sent you the email and the other 10 people.
If an email is sent to a user using 'BCC' that user can see the addresses of other recipients who were not sent as 'BCC'. However, none of those that received the email can see any of the 'BCC' recipients, and thus cannot respond to them.
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