web_design_in_vancouver

Shared by: pengxuebo
Categories
Tags
-
Stats
views:
0
posted:
1/8/2013
language:
English
pages:
1
Document Sample
scope of work template
							Web Design in Vancouver
Web Design in Vancouver - Web-based email or Webmail are terms which are used to be able to describe 2 things: The first
meaning refers to an email service offered via a webmail provider or a site like for instance Hotmail, AOL Mail, Gmail and Yahoo!
The other term is to describe a Webmail client which translates to an email client employed as a web application accessed via a
web browser. Nearly each and every webmail provider offers access to email utilizing a webmail client. Numerous providers
likewise provide email access by a desktop email client utilizing usual email protocols. Different service providers also offer a
webmail client as part of the email service which is incorporated within their internet service package.

Webmail's main advantage over the use of a desktop email client is the ability to send and receive email wherever there is a web
browser. The main drawback of webmail is the need to be connected to the World Wide Web whilst utilizing it, even though, Gmail
can offer offline use of its webmail client through the installation of Gears.

There were several people which were working on enabling email in 1994 and 1995, to be accessed on a web browser. Within
Europe, Soren Vejrum and Luca Manunza released their "WebMail" and "WWW Mail" applications, whilst in USA, Matt Mankins
wrote "Webex." All of these early applications were Perl scripts. They comprised the full source code obtainable for download as
well.

Bill Fitler in the year 1994, at Lotus cc:Mail in Mountain View, California; likewise began working on the implementation of
web-based email. It was a CGI program written in C on Windows NT. He publicly demonstrated it at Lotusphere in January of the
year 1995. Soren Vejrum's "WWW Mail" was released on February 28, year 1995. It was written while he was working and
studying at the Copenhagen Business School in Denmark.

Luca Manuza was working in Sardinia at CRS4, where he was writing and working on his "WebMail." The first source release was
on March 30, 1995.

On the 8th of August, year 1995, Matt Mankins released his "Webex" application source code in a post to comp.mail.misc under
the supervision of Dr. Burt Rosenburg at the University of Miami. Webex had been used as the main email application at the
School of Architecture where Mankins worked for some time prior.

During the autumn of 1995, Bill Fitler's webmail implementation was further developed as a commercial product that Lotus
released and announced as cc:Mail for the World Wide Web 1.0, thus providing an alternative way of accessing a cc:Mail
message store. The standard means being a cc:Mail desktop application that operated either within the confines of a local area
network or via dial-up.

The early commercialization of webmail was achieved near the end of the year 1995, when "Webex" began to be sold by Mankins'
company, "DotShop, Inc." Within "DotShop", the "Webex" brand changed its name to "EMUmail". It was sold under this name to
major businesses like Rackspace and UPS until its eventual sale in 2001, to Accurev. EMUmail was among the very first
applications to feature a free version which consisted of embedded advertising as well as a licensed version that did not. As
Hotmail developed a monopoly on the Free-e-mail address market, EMUmail started MollyMail. This was a service to let you
check your existing e-mail from the Internet. After the Accurev acquisition, the EMUmail webmail line was disintegrated in favor of
the SMTP.com e-mail delivery service.

Email users may find the use of a desktop client along with a webmail client utilizing the POP3 protocol a little incompatible. Email
messages which are downloaded by the desktop client and are removed from the server would no longer be accessible on the
webmail client. Using a webmail client in this mode is restricted to previewing messages before they are downloaded to the
desktop email client. Clients making use of the IMAP4 protocol have the use of both a desktop client and a webmail client with no
such incompatibility. The mail box contents can be consistently displayed in both the desktop email client and the webmail. Also,
whichever action the user performs on messages in one interface will be reflected when email is accessed utilizing the other
interface.

The rendering capabilities between the popular webmail services consisting of Yahoo! Mail, Windows Live Hotmail and Gmail
have numerous differences. Companies carrying out Email marketing services will usually rely on the older web development
methods to send cross-platform mail. This would normally mean that there is a greater reliance on inline stylesheets and tables.
This is due the various treatment of HTML tags like for instance

						
Related docs
Other docs by pengxuebo
PITNotes
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
insert013011
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
knights_101_exam_study_guide
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
insert121612
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
4th-Quarter-News-Letter1
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
SBBulletin39
Views: 0  |  Downloads: 0
TRISMART OPEN WATER SWIMMING - SYTri
Views: 187  |  Downloads: 0
TriLinkTM Gateway - Ezenture
Views: 174  |  Downloads: 0