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Posted by ginoplusio on 08/22/07 11:54
On 22 Ago, 12:35, "rf" <r...@invalid.com> wrote:
> <ginoplu...@gmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:1187777969.499520.206220@l22g2000prc.googlegroups.com...
>
>
>
>
>
> >> <sigh> Yes. I am very sure.
>
> >> If your email recipient has configured their email client to _not_
> >> retrieve
> >> images (as I have done) then there is absolutely nothing you can do about
> >> it, short of going round to their house and changing their preferences
> >> for
> >> them.
>
> > Hi Richard, that's true, ok. I know it. But in Windows mail as in
> > Outlook, when you receive a mail with images you can click a link that
> > say something like "download images".
> > I'm not crazy, I know I can't change your client security settings or
> > move your coffee :-)
>
> > I want to track opening when the user decide to "download images".
>
> > The problem is that the image used to track as a suspect name (".php"
> > and parameters) so that particular image is not download.
>
> > So the problem is in the way I write the tracking image tag.
>
> Ah, OK then. Sorry, I did not understand that your recipient has actually
> pressed the "download" button.
>
> I see no reason at all why this should not work. Neither the client nor the
> host care about the actual file name. To the client it _is_ an image,
> because you have specified an <img> element. The file name is, or should be,
> irrelevant.
>
> However, you have a closing / in there, which is XHTML. Does it work if you
> use HTML (no /). Maybe it is not a "fake image" issue but an XHTML one.
> Hint: IE simply does not understand XHTML and error corrects the / away.
> Perhaps Outlook does not error correct, er, correctly.
>
> --
> Richard.
mmm... I send XHTML email, here is the beginning of the html part:
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://
www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
I'll make a test with only HTML.
thanks.
bye
Giulio
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