public marks

PUBLIC MARKS from Spone with tag mailing

2014

Transactional HTML Email Templates

by 1 other
Styling HTML email is painful. Tables, inline CSS, unsupported CSS, desktop clients, web clients, mobile clients, various devices, various providers. All these things have to be thought about and tested. It’s no surprise developers don’t want to deal with this when there is a backlog of more important priorities. We’ve tried to remove some of the pain for you and open-sourced a collection of common templates for transactional email.

Inkbrush | A web application to quickly build bulletproof HTML emails.

Build Bulletproof Email Faster Than Ever! Quickly create customized HTML email from any creative mockup, that works on any device and in every inbox.

2013

2011

Tiny Letter

by 3 others
It's the easiest way to start writing your own email newsletter. Just tell people to subscribe, then write whatever you want, whenever you want, and we'll send it out. All for free!

2009

librelist.com: Welcome to librelist.com

Librelist.com is a free as in freedom mailing list site for open source projects. It is a place for FOSS communities to discuss all the things they want without ads, censorship, signup requirements, bundled apps, or requirements that you use any particular email client or service.

Guide to CSS support in email clients (2008)

by 22 others
Designing an HTML email that renders consistently across the major email clients can be very time consuming. Support for even simple CSS varies considerably between clients, and even different versions of the same client. We’ve put together this CSS support in email clients guide to save you the time and trouble of figuring it out for yourself. With 21 different sets of results, all the major email systems are covered, both desktop applications and webmail.

2008

Home | Email Standards Project

by 22 others
The Email Standards Project works with email client developers and the design community to improve web standards support and accessibility in email. Our goal is to help designers understand why web standards are so important for email, while working with email client developers to ensure that emails render consistently. This is a community effort to improve the email experience for both designers and readers alike.

2007