From: Glenn PTS Glenn on 5 May 2010 20:15 When my email goes out with my signature it comes up garbled on the recipients machine. I believe that this is because we use Neuropol.ttf as our logo and it is not by default on most machines. How can i lock our signature or make it like a pdf so that it will appear correctly on all machines.
From: VanguardLH on 5 May 2010 21:35 Glenn PTS wrote: > When my email goes out with my signature it comes up garbled on the > recipients machine. I believe that this is because we use Neuropol.ttf as our > logo and it is not by default on most machines. How can i lock our signature > or make it like a pdf so that it will appear correctly on all machines. You need to use fonts that exist on the recipient's host or fonts that have an equivalency lookup on their hosts (like Helvetica will be substituted by a host that doesn't have Arial). Using unique fonts means the recipient cannot accurately render (or even similarly render) your e-mails. Since the portion of your e-mail in your signature that uses a font is text, stop using fonts that recipients don't have. It's just text. Stop making it fluffy with useless fonts.
From: Bob I on 6 May 2010 09:13 Use an image of your "signature" instead. Glenn PTS wrote: > When my email goes out with my signature it comes up garbled on the > recipients machine. I believe that this is because we use Neuropol.ttf as our > logo and it is not by default on most machines. How can i lock our signature > or make it like a pdf so that it will appear correctly on all machines.
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