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#31
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mac windows gmail pic
In article , Wolf K
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: " [snip speculations] that just means it was sent from an icloud address, not where the images are located. |
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#32
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mac windows gmail pic
In article , Wolf K
wrote: 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. On all cloud services I know of you have control over who sees your files. Both you and OP are letting your emotions interfere with your reading. The following should be clear enough. See Dick use Google Photos. See Dick set privacy "for friends only". Dick is angry with Jane. She is not his friend any more. Jane cannot look at the photos. See Google look at every photo Dick sends. except that jane kept copies and not only can jane look at them at any time, but so can everyone else because she posted some of the more incriminating ones to imgur and linked them in a reddit thread. now dick is *really* angry with jane. despite their spats, google continues to build its knowledge graph of both dick and jane and everyone they know. |
#33
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mac windows gmail pic
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. If you followed what I wrote, bonjour service running on *others'* computers, not mine. -- Take care, Jonathan ------------------- LITTLE WORKS STUDIO http://www.LittleWorksStudio.com |
#34
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mac windows gmail pic
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. You don't need bonjour for the computer to discover devices on LAN. 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. Purge itune and bonjour and issue resolves... -- Take care, Jonathan ------------------- LITTLE WORKS STUDIO http://www.LittleWorksStudio.com |
#35
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mac windows gmail pic
dorayme wrote:
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 Hi dorayme! Nope still will flush them. Same goes when folks email images via some "service" that requires the recipient sign-up to get the image. Haven't seen those for a while though... If important I would request sender to attach images is the standard manner. -- Take care, Jonathan ------------------- LITTLE WORKS STUDIO http://www.LittleWorksStudio.com |
#36
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mac windows gmail pic
On 6/15/2017 8:29 PM, Jonathan N. Little wrote:
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. You don't need bonjour for the computer to discover devices on LAN. 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. Purge itune and bonjour and issue resolves... I agree 100 %. Rene |
#37
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mac windows gmail pic
Wolf K:
OK, your experience is different than mine. All emails I've received with iCloud references required accessing iCloud. You just don't get it. In the referenced message iCloud is nothing but an email address. It meets all cross-platform standards and has aught to do with where the photo was hosted. I got tired of reading this bull**** written by people who have no idea what they're talking about. I selected one of my photos in iCloud and mailed from my icloud.com account to my gmail account. I opened Windows on my Mac and received the email. There was nothing wrong with the email or the photo. There was no sign that it had been hosted in iCloud, no need for any special software to view the photo in Windows‹just an ordinary photo attachment to an email. Bottom line: the OP apparently has a Windows problem. Nothing new about Windows having problems with graphics; it was meant for ASCII art and video poker. He certainly does not have an iCloud problem. -- 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 |
#38
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mac windows gmail pic
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. You don't need bonjour for the computer to discover devices on LAN. yes you do. that's the point of bonjour. 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. Purge itune and bonjour and issue resolves... and all of the features and functionality that bonjour and itunes bring go away. not a good solution. and the crashes you claim are pure fabrication anyway. roughly a *billion* people use itunes without issue. it's one of the most popular apps on windows (source: microsoft). |
#39
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mac windows gmail pic
On 2017-06-16, Wolf K wrote:
On 2017-06-15 20:13, Jolly Roger wrote: On 2017-06-16, Wolf K wrote: On 2017-06-15 17:37, Jolly Roger wrote: 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. OK, your experience is different than mine. All emails I've received with iCloud references required accessing iCloud. You must not have much experience. I can tell you as a software developer of all of the above platforms that the fact that an email is sent from an icloud.com address implies nothing at all specific about the content of the email message, including whether or not included images are MIME attachments or links to remote hosts. -- 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 |
#40
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mac windows gmail pic
In article , Davoud
wrote: Wolf K: OK, your experience is different than mine. All emails I've received with iCloud references required accessing iCloud. You just don't get it. In the referenced message iCloud is nothing but an email address. It meets all cross-platform standards and has aught to do with where the photo was hosted. correct. I got tired of reading this bull**** written by people who have no idea what they're talking about. I selected one of my photos in iCloud and mailed from my icloud.com account to my gmail account. I opened Windows on my Mac and received the email. There was nothing wrong with the email or the photo. There was no sign that it had been hosted in iCloud, no need for any special software to view the photo in Windows‹just an ordinary photo attachment to an email. yep. Bottom line: the OP apparently has a Windows problem. Nothing new about Windows having problems with graphics; it was meant for ASCII art and video poker. He certainly does not have an iCloud problem. that's a bit extreme, but the problem is clearly user error, either the person who sent the email or the person receiving the email or a combination of both. |
#41
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mac windows gmail pic
On 2017-06-16, Wolf K wrote:
On 2017-06-15 20:15, Jolly Roger wrote: 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. Sure, but not relevant I disagree. It's completely relevant with things as intimate as personal photos. You can learn quite a lot about people from their photos combined with other metadata about them. You don't use *any* Google service "for free". It has a cost, and with Google, probably more than any other company whose business plan isn't to extract as much salable information about you as possible to sell to the highest bidder. -- 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 |
#42
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mac windows gmail pic
On 2017-06-16, nospam wrote:
In article , Wolf K wrote: 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. On all cloud services I know of you have control over who sees your files. Both you and OP are letting your emotions interfere with your reading. The following should be clear enough. See Dick use Google Photos. See Dick set privacy "for friends only". Dick is angry with Jane. She is not his friend any more. Jane cannot look at the photos. See Google look at every photo Dick sends. except that jane kept copies and not only can jane look at them at any time, but so can everyone else because she posted some of the more incriminating ones to imgur and linked them in a reddit thread. now dick is *really* angry with jane. despite their spats, google continues to build its knowledge graph of both dick and jane and everyone they know. It bears repeating: +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 |
#43
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mac windows gmail pic
Wolf K:
Sure, but not relevant to my point, which was that picture storage services all have some levels of privacy control. Privacy from whom? From your ex-friend Jane? Sure. From Google analysis of your photos in order to gather more and more information about your interests to sell to all takers? No. It's how Google makes money, provides all of those "free" services. -- 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 |
#44
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mac windows gmail pic
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. You don't need bonjour for the computer to discover devices on LAN. yes you do. that's the point of bonjour. Not running bonjour on my LAN and workstations can discover all network printers just fine...automagically as so many love to say. There are other protocols. 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. Purge itune and bonjour and issue resolves... and all of the features and functionality that bonjour and itunes bring go away. not a good solution. Don't need iTunes for my music and vids. I only have one Windows system the rest are Linux, iTunes not wanted not needed. and the crashes you claim are pure fabrication anyway. roughly a *billion* people use itunes without issue. it's one of the most popular apps on windows (source: microsoft). May be so. But bonjour service crashing that is logged in events on systems that I have debugged say otherwise. Sometimes reinstalling iTunes resolves the issue on some of the systems for awhile. But often the problem returns. -- Take care, Jonathan ------------------- LITTLE WORKS STUDIO http://www.LittleWorksStudio.com |
#45
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mac windows gmail pic
Davoud wrote:
You just don't get it. In the referenced message iCloud is nothing but an email address. It meets all cross-platform standards and has aught to do with where the photo was hosted. Ah ha, that might be the issue. If the image is remotely served and not encoded and attached to the email gmail may be blocking it. I don't ise webmail so not sure about it. Thunderbird surely will block it, it does by default. You must white-list it. Remote content is a security risk. -- Take care, Jonathan ------------------- LITTLE WORKS STUDIO http://www.LittleWorksStudio.com |
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