HTML email: Difference between revisions

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External links: «+"[http://dsv.su.se/jpalme/ietf/mhtml.html Using HTML in E-mail] * [http://www.w3.org/TR/1998/NOTE-HTMLThreading-0105 HTML Threading: Conventions for use of HTML in email] *"»
Message size: «"which" → "even though it", "three" → "ten"»
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HTML e-mail is larger than plain text. Even if no special formatting is used, there will be the overhead from the tags used in a minimal HTML document, and if formatting is heavily used it may be much higher. Multi-part messages, with duplicate copies of the same content in different formats, increase the size even further.
 
Download speed was more of a concern in the 1990s, though, when most users were accessing email servers through slow [[modem]]s. On a modern connection, the difference in download time between plain text and mixed message mail, whicheven though it can be a factor of threeten or more, is negligible, especially when compared to images, music files, or other common attachments.<ref>[http://momentum.insertdisc.com/archives/2004/09/17/html_email_still_evil_part_1.html HTML Email — Still Evil?]</ref>
 
Additionally, the plain text section of a multi-part message can be retrieved by itself, using [[IMAP]]'s FETCH command.<ref>[http://dsv.su.se/jpalme/ietf/mhtml-discussion.html Do we really want to send web pages in e-mail?]</ref>