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#16
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nospam wrote:
bonjour is very reliable and incredibly useful. I have never run bonjour and never had any trouble finding devices on my LAN. If it is so reliable why does is routinely crash on Windows systems? -- Take care, Jonathan ------------------- LITTLE WORKS STUDIO http://www.LittleWorksStudio.com |
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#17
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In article , Jonathan N. Little
wrote: pop is obsolete. Nonsense! Different service for different requirements. it's not nonsense at all. imap does everything pop can do and much more. there is no longer any reason whatsoever use pop anymore, particularly since everyone now reads their mail from multiple devices. not only that, but many isps don't offer pop anymore. Okay nonsense again. As I said different service for different requirements. I run mailservers. No not *everyone* reads their mail from multiple devices. almost everyone does, and using imap works from only one device anyway. Some accounts I and others need to access from multiple devices so we use IMAP. Other accounts for business we don't and offline storage is important so we use POP. imap doesn't prevent offline storage. anything pop can do, imap can also do. there is no reason to use pop anymore. it's been replaced with something more capable. Some ISPs no longer offer email...Verizon is now dumping the service but I would not say email is obsolete. nobody said email was obsolete. pop, however, is. |
#18
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In article , Jonathan N. Little
wrote: bonjour is very reliable and incredibly useful. I have never run bonjour and never had any trouble finding devices on my LAN. the point is so you don't have to find the devices. the computer finds them *for* you. If it is so reliable why does is routinely crash on Windows systems? it doesn't routinely crash on windows systems or any other systems. something else is the cause of your supposed crashes. |
#19
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Lionel Muller wrote:
Received two emails in Gmail web mail on Win10 with no attachment icons. They are huge mime things when viewed in Gmail as original. Sender says there are about 50 iPhone photos in each email. I just see black [x] boxes in gmail, which disappear when I click them. Something takes a few minutes to load and then goes away. The header of the emails is From: name of persion Content-type: multipart/alternative; boundary="Apple-Mail=_big_number" MIME-version: 1.0 (Mac OS X Mail 10.3 \(3273\)) Subject: Pictures Message-id: Date: Wed, 14 Jun 2017 18:43:12 -0400 To: me X-Mailer: Apple Mail (2.3273) How do I view the pics from iphone to mac on windows? Use a better email client. It's obvious the web browser and/or the GMail web mail interface are malfunctioning. Things you can try: - use a different web browser in case the malfunction is due to the particular browser you are using - configure a native email client application for GMail so that you can read the message without a web browser -- E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my ravenous SPAM filter. I often ignore posts from Google. Use a real news client instead. JR |
#20
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On 2017-06-15, Jonathan N. Little wrote:
Wolf K wrote: On 2017-06-15 02:05, Michael Logies wrote: On Thu, 15 Jun 2017 05:59:25 +0200, Lionel Muller wrote: How do I view the pics from iphone to mac on windows? Don`t use email for such tasks. Use Google Photos for exchange of pictures or https://wetransfer.com/ The pictures are in iCloud. To see them, download the app: https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT204283 Google Photos is an alternative to iCloud. It's a website, accessible with any browser, no app needed. There are many such services, eg, Photobucket. AFAIK, they all provide some levels of privacy and control. It I had to install an app just to see an attached image in a email I'll give you a hint where that email would end up...whoosh Only one app is needed to read email: an email client. No additional applications are needed. Wolf K is wrong about needing the iCloud for Windows app. First of all, nothing in the OP's message indicates the images are in iCloud. What the OP does say is that where the images *should* appear when reading the email message, he instead sees broken image/link indicators ([x] boxes) and that clicking them attempts to load something but fails. He also stated he's using the GMail *web* interface to read mail which means a malfunction in either the web browser he is using or the GMail web interface itself may be causing the unwanted behavior. -- E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my ravenous SPAM filter. I often ignore posts from Google. Use a real news client instead. JR |
#21
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On 2017-06-15, nospam wrote:
In article , Jonathan N. Little wrote: bonjour is very reliable and incredibly useful. I have never run bonjour and never had any trouble finding devices on my LAN. the point is so you don't have to find the devices. the computer finds them *for* you. If it is so reliable why does is routinely crash on Windows systems? it doesn't routinely crash on windows systems or any other systems. something else is the cause of your supposed crashes. That rings true. I've has Windows installs going for years with iTunes, QuickTime, Bonjour software installed, and haven't ever had crashing or any slowdown associated with them. -- E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my ravenous SPAM filter. I often ignore posts from Google. Use a real news client instead. JR |
#22
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On 2017-06-15, Davoud wrote:
Wolf K: Google Photos is an alternative to iCloud. It's a website, accessible with any browser, no app needed. There are many such services, eg, Photobucket. AFAIK, they all provide some levels of privacy and control. Google provides some level of privacy? Their very existence is about selling our privacy. +1 -- E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my ravenous SPAM filter. I often ignore posts from Google. Use a real news client instead. JR |
#23
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Jonathan N. Little:
I have never run bonjour and never had any trouble finding devices on my LAN. If it is so reliable why does is routinely crash on Windows systems? Nonsense. If you have never run Bonjour how do you know it is unreliable? And if it so unreliable why does it never cause a problem on my Macs or my Windoze systems? It is so transparent that I had forgotten it existed until this thread appeared. -- I agree with almost everything that you have said and almost everything that you will say in your entire life. usenet *at* davidillig dawt cawm |
#24
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On 2017-06-15, Davoud wrote:
Jonathan N. Little: I have never run bonjour and never had any trouble finding devices on my LAN. If it is so reliable why does is routinely crash on Windows systems? Nonsense. If you have never run Bonjour how do you know it is unreliable? And if it so unreliable why does it never cause a problem on my Macs or my Windoze systems? It is so transparent that I had forgotten it existed until this thread appeared. It's pure trolling. I've had various versions of iTunes installed on several Windows systems without issue for years - systems I use for anything from software development to headless automated servers. While I'm sure there may be some bugs in those pieces of software (no piece of software is bug-free), in comparison I have seen more obvious bugs and issues with other Windows software. -- E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my ravenous SPAM filter. I often ignore posts from Google. Use a real news client instead. JR |
#25
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In article ,
"Jonathan N. Little" wrote: It I had to install an app just to see an attached image in a email I'll give you a hint where that email would end up...whoosh -- Take care, Jonathan What about two photos? Or three? Or ...n? For what value of n would you resist whooshing an email? g -- dorayme |
#26
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"Jonathan N. Little" wrote
| nospam wrote: | bonjour is very reliable and incredibly useful. | | I have never run bonjour and never had any trouble finding devices on my | LAN. If it is so reliable why does is routinely crash on Windows systems? nospam is a notorious AppleSeed and compulsive arguer who frequents several groups. He'll keep going as long as you do, no matter what you say. His arguments in the photo group often go into the hundreds of posts, most of them boiling down to some variation on, "No suh, you are!" |
#27
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In article
, dorayme wrote: It I had to install an app just to see an attached image in a email I'll give you a hint where that email would end up...whoosh What about two photos? Or three? Or ...n? For what value of n would you resist whooshing an email? g depends on the photos, doesn't it? |
#28
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In article ,
nospam wrote: In article , dorayme wrote: It I had to install an app just to see an attached image in a email I'll give you a hint where that email would end up...whoosh What about two photos? Or three? Or ...n? For what value of n would you resist whooshing an email? g depends on the photos, doesn't it? Don't be pedantic. -- dorayme |
#29
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On 2017-06-16, Wolf K wrote:
On 2017-06-15 17:37, Jolly Roger wrote: On 2017-06-15, Jonathan N. Little wrote: Wolf K wrote: On 2017-06-15 02:05, Michael Logies wrote: On Thu, 15 Jun 2017 05:59:25 +0200, Lionel Muller wrote: How do I view the pics from iphone to mac on windows? Don`t use email for such tasks. Use Google Photos for exchange of pictures or https://wetransfer.com/ The pictures are in iCloud. To see them, download the app: https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT204283 Google Photos is an alternative to iCloud. It's a website, accessible with any browser, no app needed. There are many such services, eg, Photobucket. AFAIK, they all provide some levels of privacy and control. It I had to install an app just to see an attached image in a email I'll give you a hint where that email would end up...whoosh Only one app is needed to read email: an email client. No additional applications are needed. Wolf K is wrong about needing the iCloud for Windows app. First of all, nothing in the OP's message indicates the images are in iCloud. I guess you missed the same datum as OP: " Message-id: " No, I didn't miss it since it was included in the original post. All that indicates is that the email host is iCloud.com. It does *not* indicate that the email attachments are actually hosted on iCloud.com. -- E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my ravenous SPAM filter. I often ignore posts from Google. Use a real news client instead. JR |
#30
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On 2017-06-16, Wolf K wrote:
On 2017-06-15 17:41, Jolly Roger wrote: On 2017-06-15, Davoud wrote: Wolf K: Google Photos is an alternative to iCloud. It's a website, accessible with any browser, no app needed. There are many such services, eg, Photobucket. AFAIK, they all provide some levels of privacy and control. Google provides some level of privacy? Their very existence is about selling our privacy. +1 Pointless comment. Nope. Google is literally in the business of collecting and selling information about its users to advertisers and other special interests for profit. That's the Google business model, like it or not. Have a good evening, Same to you. -- E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my ravenous SPAM filter. I often ignore posts from Google. Use a real news client instead. JR |
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