X-Google-Language: ENGLISH,ASCII-7-bit X-Google-Thread: f996b,cbc17298d2bec2ba,start X-Google-Attributes: gidf996b,public From: ronhl@juno.com (Ron Hopkins-Lutz) Subject: Re: What's an e-mailer with ASCII Art supposed to do? Date: 1997/08/17 Message-ID: <5t7nmb$kns$2@news.megsinet.net>#1/1 X-Deja-AN: 264832894 References: <33ef08e4.18259332@news.iglou.com> Organization: MegsInet, Inc. - Midwestern Internet Services Newsgroups: alt.ascii-art In article <33ef08e4.18259332@news.iglou.com>, redhead@iglou.com wrote: }More and more recipients of my e-mail with my sig or an ascii art }attached are replying, "By the way. What was that mess at the bottom }of your letter?" } }Seems most new e-mail programs and newsreaders are using type fonts }that totally screw-up the wonderful world of ASCII Art. } }Does anyone know of a way to ensure an e-mail is viewed as the sender }intended? Any help would be greatly appreciated. I hate to see the }ultimate art form, deformed. Try just putting an instruction in your sig to change to their "fixed font" to view the signature to see a neat picture. In most cases it's a push button away on most mail and news programs. ===== Ron Hopkins-Lutz = ronhl@juno.com If anything I have said offends you, I'm glad because it means you actually read this, which is not a given. KILLFILES RULE!