pointless
because its easier than sending a letter
If you are sending a regular email without attachments, it will be less than 100 kilobytes. Adding attachments will increase the size of the email.
no you cannot unless you make a different email but no you cannot do that.
Forwarding is taking a message (email or outlook is most common, to me anyway) and sending it as you've received it to someone other than the person you got it from.
Carbon Copy...as in sending an email to more than one person. BCC is Blind Carbon Copy..when you send an email to two people, but the person in the "Send to:" category does not know that the person in the "BCC" category has received the same email.
I think ymail and Gmail both offer excellent features on their email. Both offer good spam protection, security protection, and reliable on sending and receiving your email.
It is still possible to provide a personal touch with wedding invitations by using email. Ehow.com shows how this may be done. There is no etiquette on whether or not to send invitations by email, but the personal touch is important and people do like to know that they are worth more than an email, so be careful.
No, it will require a different email address than your 1st one.
Our family business is using RingCentral Office Phone System for more than a year now and I'm pretty impressed with their services and support. I haven't had the chance to try eFax though. That would be RingCentral for me since it offers better features, functionality, price and flexible plans in comparison with eFax. Moreover, RingCentral is a decent provider.
BCC stands for Blind Carbon Copy The person whose email address should be invisible , is to be entered in the BCC field. - Rahul Agrawal
It's quicker, easier, can be encrypted so it can't be read easily by anyone but the recipient, and is convenient.