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  2. Print emails in AOL Mail

    help.aol.com/articles/print-emails-in-new-aol-mail

    Save a physical copy of important emails you've sent or received. Check out how to print emails and attachments in AOL Mail. 1. Open the email you'd like to print. 2. Click the Print icon. - A window will appear with your message. 2. Click the Print icon again. 3. Follow the browser prompts to finish printing.

  3. Download attachments in AOL Mail - AOL Help

    help.aol.com/articles/download-attachments-in...

    Open the email. Click Download all attachments as a zip file. - The file will be downloaded to your computer. Open the file on your computer. It will often be under "Downloads".

  4. Autoresponder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autoresponder

    An autoresponder is a computer program that automatically answers e-mail sent to it. [1] They can be very simple or quite complex. The first autoresponders were created within mail transfer agents that found they could not deliver an e-mail to a given address. These create bounce messages such as "your e-mail could not be delivered because ...

  5. Turn on or off vacation response in New AOL Mail

    help.aol.com/articles/turn-on-or-off-vacation...

    5. Enter your response message. 6. Click Save. Turn on another response for specific domains. 1. Toggle on or off Add another response. 2. Enter up to 2 domains (like aol.com or yahoo.com). 3. Enter a different message in the box. 4. Click Save.

  6. Drip marketing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drip_marketing

    Drip marketing can be used as a function of the lead generation and qualification process. Specifically, drip marketing constitutes an automated follow-up method that can augment or replace personal lead follow-up, [citation needed] invented in 1992 by Bill Persteiner and Jim Cecil, also known as Action Plans, and first introduced in software called WinSales. [2]

  7. Bounce message - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bounce_message

    A DSN may be a MIME multipart/report message composed of three parts: a human readable explanation; a machine parsable message/delivery-status, a list of "name: type; value" lines that state several possible fields; and; the original message, or a portion thereof, as an entity of type message/rfc822. The second part of a DSN is also quite readable.

  8. MIME - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIME

    Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) is a standard that extends the format of email messages to support text in character sets other than ASCII, as well as attachments of audio, video, images, and application programs. Message bodies may consist of multiple parts, and header information may be specified in non-ASCII character sets.

  9. The Power of 10: Rules for Developing Safety-Critical Code

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Power_of_10:_Rules_for...

    The Power of 10 Rules were created in 2006 by Gerard J. Holzmann of the NASA/JPL Laboratory for Reliable Software. [1] The rules are intended to eliminate certain C coding practices which make code difficult to review or statically analyze.