
In standards-compliant email, you can add "hints" to your message that tells the client how the sender intends it to be displayed: font, color, size, and whether the attachments should be viewed inline or not. There is no such thing as "inlining." An attachment is an attachment. Google had no problem displaying the message as sent.Īnd what "standard" is Mails way of inlining? I tested with just images and with images interspersed with captions and text. I checked both on the Gmail web portal and on the Gmail iOS app. I have and gmail has no problem displaying the attachments. It's not about only Microsoft - try sending to gmail more than one image and see what happens. So what to do? I have been using Mail since the Mac OS X and very painful question is should I stop using Mail and change the mail client - or is there any other way to avoid the "Mail Inline-problem"? Galeni provides but when anytime Apple upgrades its system the Anti-inline needs upgrading too, and when waiting the upgrade I´m in deep trouble - like now. The only thing that solves the problem is "Anti Inline-Plugin" that Mr. The reason is Mails way of inlining the attachements and "Show as icons" does not solve the problem at all. The problem is that the attachement files sent with Mail do not appear correctly, do not appear at all or do not go through the systems my clients ate using. I have had this problem for ages (since Snow Leopard or other cat) and yet it appears again every single time when Apple upgrades its operating system.

Problems: my paying customers cannot see or receive correctly the attachment files I send with Mail if Clive Galenis Anti-inline plugin not attached
