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MIME means Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions, and refers to an official Internet standard that specifies how messages must be formatted so that they can be exchanged between different email systems. ... INTERNET SURFERS LOOKING - ANSWERS TO MIME/EMAIL ISSUES FOLLOW THIS LINK.
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Mime Theatre Education, Information, and Contacts Around the World ... The World of Mime Theatre is devoted to the promotion of Mime as a specialized theatrical art. Its goals are education, information exchange, entertainment, and providing the opportunity to connect people involved and interested in Mime Theatre...
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MIME - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions ( MIME ) is an Internet standard that extends the format of e-mail to support: • Text in character sets other than ASCII • Non-text attachments • Message bodie...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIME |
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This charset can be used for the top-level media type "text", but it is of limited or specialized use (see RFC2278). PCL Symbol Set id: 19K Alias: csWindows31J Name: GB2312 (preferred MIME name) MIBenum: 2025 Source: Chinese for People's Republic of China (PRC) mixed one byte, two byte set: 20-7E = one byte ASCII A1...
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Information, including RFC links. ... This document provides links to information about Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME). MIME extends the format of Internet mail to allow non-US-ASCII textual messages, non-textual messages, multipart message bodies, and non-US-ASCII information in message headers.
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Mime is considered one of the earliest mediums of self-expression. Before there was spoken language, mime was used to communicate what the primitive people needed or wanted. Instead of fading into obscurity when the spoken language was developed, mime had became a form of entertainment.
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This page describes the term MIME and lists other pages on the Web where you can find additional information. ... There are many predefined MIME types, such as GIF graphics files and PostScript files. It is also possible to define your own MIME types.
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There are currently two actively proposed methods for providing these security services: S/MIME and PGP (both in its early incarnation as PGP/MIME, and as the new OpenPGP standard). Other protocols have been proposed in the past (most notably PEM and MOSS), but they did not garner much interest in the market.
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