Sending Electronic Mail
Sending email is relatively easy if your Web Browser supports email and has
been set up to handle email. We will assume that to be true in what follows.
To send email, go to your browser menu and select "New Mail Message" from the pulldown menu under "File" (see the adjacent figure). This will bring up a mail window of the form shown in the figure below.
As you can see, in this figure there are several
windows into which you may enter information.
To illustrate what goes into those windows, we are going to
send a mail message to the President of the United States.

Yes, the President
has an email address! It is president@whitehouse.gov. And so does the
Vice-President; it is vice-president@whitehouse.gov.
How do we know? Well, trust us for now; we'll find out
how to locate email addresses a little later.
Now to send the email message, we do the following in the mail window that you have opened:
Be sure to put the address exactly like this. The regular postal service may still deliver mail if you make a spelling mistake in the address, but most computers will reject email if even one character is wrong in the address.
where youraddress is whatever your personal email address is. ("CC:" stands for "Carbon Copy", from the old days when people used mechanical typewriters with carbon paper for copies and rode around in covered wagons!)
Notice that in this case we use commas to separate multiple addresses. Entries in the "CC:" field are optional (you don't have to send a copy to anyone), but you must enter an address in the "Mail To:" field, since it wouldn't make much sense to send a message without an address for the primary person the message is for! The distinction between the primary recipients and those receiving a CC: is for human sensibilities. In either case, the computer sends the email message to the address listed. The only difference is where the recipients address will be printed in the mail header when it is read.
Since it looks like we are going to be receiving some mail, we now need to learn how to read incoming email messages.
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