Saturday, May 22, 2010

How to insert an image into the body of the e-mail?

without using yahoo photos or attaching it





i want to insert it into the body of the email like when you insert a picture into a word document





thanks in advance

How to insert an image into the body of the e-mail?
If you are using Yahoo's free e-mail, you can't. It is not a feature in Yahoo mail. There are other e-mail programs that let you do this, but Yahoo Mail does not.
Reply:Got this from www.e-how.com





Don't think you can insert a picture in the body of an e-mail message yet. Looks like you will have to send as an attachment.








These instructions will give you the basics of how to send an e-mail attachment no matter what program you have. You might have to adapt the instructions for your program.








Steps:


1. Go to your e-mail program.





2. Click the New Mail, Write Message or similar button, depending on your application to create a new e-mail message.





3. Enter the address of the recipient in the To field.





4. Type a subject in the Subject field.





5. Add a message to the body of the e-mail as usual.





6. Click the Attachments button. Many programs have an icon of a paperclip for it. Also look for an Insert File or Insert Attachment option in the File menu.





7. Browse your files to find the attachment you want to send. You may need to click on a Browse or Find button to see your directory.





8. Click on the filename. If your program allows you to attach more than one file at once, hold down the Control key (or Shift key on a Mac) as you select another one.





9. Click the Attach Insert or Open button, depending on your e-mail program.





10. To send another file from a different location, click the Attachments but-ton again and repeat the steps.





11. Click the Send button when you're done.





Tips:


Change picture attachments to the JPEG format. They'll take up less space and send faster in that format.





Make sure the recipient can read your attachment. Most word processors can read RTF (Rich Text Format). Web browsers can all open JPEG and GIF image files.





If you're sending files to a person who uses a modem, be careful about sending large files (300K or more), because they can take a long time to download.





Consider compressing your files with a utility such as WinZip or StuffIt. Your recipient usually needs to have the compression software as well, but some pro-grams are able to make 'self-extracting' files that decompress automatically.








Warnings:


AOL doesn't read MIME attachments. They show up as a bunch of letters that make no sense. (MIME is a way of compressing and sending files. If your e-mail program uses MIME, and you're sending to an AOL user, you may have to turn MIME off. See your program's sending options or preferences.)

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