this tiny version looks a little messed up. See my little gif attachment that would be very hypnotizing and allow me to take control of email viewer's minds. I used to make custom email flyers for a luxury real-estate agency but those were sent to people who were already interested, perspective clients, and I never used sound or even animated gifs, although with access to MS Outlook then, maybe I should have. if spammers really want to put moving images on an email, all it takes is an animated gif, and I read how if a spammer really wants to drive traffic to a website, they can put an animated image along with a link that says it will go to an audio playback for more information, and based on statistics of traffic driven to websites via email ads, people are far more likely to click on a link with an animation next to it that promises to play an audio description of some goods or services because the average consumer-citizen likes listening to and watching stuff/ads, instead of reading them. It's a little funny if one really considers what emails can display even without Javascript support since they can still display animated gif files. There's a webpage that mentions that Winmp 5.6 may handle PTH files, so I'm looking in to that now before I try installing the Winamp. I gergled them and I found info about the PTH format that explained, in secret code, what it is and said that WMP would open and play them, but it will not, and I when I go to the webpage that the WMP message takes me to, it doesn't show a codec for PTH or any of the others. I forgot to ask, did you guys know anything about the "PTH", "PTD" "BKH" and "BKD" file formats?. I'm gergling this topic now, but there are allot of results to sort through with many trap-door buttons on these webpages that could lead to mean viruses. does anyone know what those formats are and if they can be converted to something usable outside of Send-A-Message?. Inventivio support staff answered an email that I sent to them and confirmed that Send-A-Message just attaches their sound files to an email the same way as anyone can and there are no other options.Īnd, speaking of the Inventivio Send-A-Message app, they have sound effect files that can be downloaded in "PTH", "PTD" "BKH" and "BKD" format. Yesterday I installed and tried the "Send-A-Message" application, but it turns out that it just attaches the audio file recordings that it can make to an email and those have to be double-clicked to play on the receiving end anyway. I know all the receiver has to do is to double-click on the attached audio file and it will play in their default audio player, but sometimes even that is too hard for my mom or some other less than computer savvy family members of mine because they can't find the attachment icon on the email. #Put sound in a fmail codeonce with the code it looked like it was trying to put some kind of a player interface in an email because there was a box that showed up on the received email, but that was it, just an empty box. #Put sound in a fmail windowsI tried Thunderbird, which I use for email, and its "Options>Format>HTML" then "Insert>HTML" trick to try to make an audio file play automatically or to present a play button within the email, and I even tried inserting several different chunks of code, but none of it worked on the receiving end when the email came through in Windows Live Mail 2011 or Thunderbird recipient email client programs. Now apparently that feature is only available, that I can find out about, in MS Outlook. #Put sound in a fmail softwareI got all kinds of input and tried quite a few things that were supposed to make that work, but apparently email client software makers have almost completely stripped that feature of embedding an audio file into an email to make it play automatically because spammers were abusing it. I wanted to ask if anyone knows of a way to embed a sound file in to an email in such a way that it starts playing automatically when the email is opened. now I'm trying to find out if I'm going up a dead-end ally with my next audio related project. After successfully using some basic features in Audacity, I also was finally successful in installing and using TiMidity for converting MIDI files to WAV with invaluable help from steve.
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