-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Tuesday, February 5 at 04:35 PM, quoth Michael Kjorling: > On 5 Feb 2008 10:00 -0600, by [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Kyle Wheeler): >> The best way to send a DOS file, if it needs to *stay* a DOS file, is >> to compress it (e.g. to zip it) and send the compressed form. When it >> is decompressed, it will return to its original DOS form. > > This will obviously work. I was wondering though, if sent as an > application/octet-stream MIME part, shouldn't the file be encoded by > mutt in such a way that it can get reconstructed accurately on the > receiver side? Yes, I know that calling plain text a/o-s is a > borderline case, but sometimes compressing might not really be an > option. (Say, if the recipient might want to read the attachment on a > cell phone or PDA, which may not even be able to uncompress formats > taken for granted on PCs.)
Perhaps, though there are two considerations to that: first, encoding as a/o-s is a common spammer trick that most people do not employ (so it may get your message tagged as spam), and second, there's no guarantee that a cell phone or PDA can decode base64 either. Lastly, why would someone send a DOS text file to a cell phone (that's incapable of doing simple things like decompress zip files) in the first place? ~Kyle - -- What progress we are making. In the Middle Ages they would have burned me. Now they are content with burning my books. -- Sigmund Freud -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Comment: Thank you for using encryption! iD8DBQFHqKYHBkIOoMqOI14RAmVCAJ92aohg4TevJ7U97mHCVnyK1nTF4ACgkXDC vJbgxGwginFDvG2J8e0AwVM= =yxSN -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----