โFeb-14-2016 11:49 AM
โFeb-23-2016 07:32 AM
Gdetrailer wrote:
Then open your email client, choose your email "group" you have set up in your Email client.
PASTE the URL from the Google drive.
Then send.
The Google drive "people" box does not seem to have any means of "mass mailing" or "group mailing" unless that option is in the advanced menu (I didn't look there).
โFeb-23-2016 06:53 AM
TenOC wrote:
Apparent GD is looking in the T-Bird address list and looking for a xxxx@yyy.com name.
โFeb-21-2016 09:20 AM
โFeb-21-2016 08:26 AM
TenOC wrote:tatest wrote:TenOC wrote:tatest wrote:
There is something wrong with your approach. You should be able to access the cloud stored file from your mailing program, and let the mail program bring it back to your computer, send it to each addressee.
1. It is a large file. I can copy from the cloud and then email it out as an attachment to the group.
2. I wanted everyone to see the edit changes made by each person. That is why I wanted it stored in the cloud and not on my desktop.
3. I think MicroSoft OneDrive may be best for the editing since everyone can use Word to do the editing and not need to learn Google Doc to edit. I still have the problem with OneDrive in trying to create a Group of email address.
So you are not talking about email sharing at all, you are sharing on the cloud server. If a document is to be kept "private" on anyone's cloud server, each person to have access must be specifically identified. I don't know of any cloud server today with "group" identity as found on Unix/NFS and early Netware or Windows network services. They've pretty much moved on to using access control lists, with every user of a file specifically identified, and email is not an access method because identities are too easy to spoof in mail systems. A given cloud server might use an email address as a login ID (backed up by an encrypted password), but not email as a file access method.
Even where groups were defined on network servers, each user had to log in to the network with individual ID and password to become identified as a member of the group.
Excuse me since I am new to cloud storage. I only want to be able to send the invitation to edit or Cloud collaboration (?) on the content of the file without typing each persons (5 or 10)email address.
โFeb-20-2016 05:39 PM
tatest wrote:TenOC wrote:tatest wrote:
There is something wrong with your approach. You should be able to access the cloud stored file from your mailing program, and let the mail program bring it back to your computer, send it to each addressee.
1. It is a large file. I can copy from the cloud and then email it out as an attachment to the group.
2. I wanted everyone to see the edit changes made by each person. That is why I wanted it stored in the cloud and not on my desktop.
3. I think MicroSoft OneDrive may be best for the editing since everyone can use Word to do the editing and not need to learn Google Doc to edit. I still have the problem with OneDrive in trying to create a Group of email address.
So you are not talking about email sharing at all, you are sharing on the cloud server. If a document is to be kept "private" on anyone's cloud server, each person to have access must be specifically identified. I don't know of any cloud server today with "group" identity as found on Unix/NFS and early Netware or Windows network services. They've pretty much moved on to using access control lists, with every user of a file specifically identified, and email is not an access method because identities are too easy to spoof in mail systems. A given cloud server might use an email address as a login ID (backed up by an encrypted password), but not email as a file access method.
Even where groups were defined on network servers, each user had to log in to the network with individual ID and password to become identified as a member of the group.
โFeb-20-2016 05:25 PM
TenOC wrote:tatest wrote:
There is something wrong with your approach. You should be able to access the cloud stored file from your mailing program, and let the mail program bring it back to your computer, send it to each addressee.
1. It is a large file. I can copy from the cloud and then email it out as an attachment to the group.
2. I wanted everyone to see the edit changes made by each person. That is why I wanted it stored in the cloud and not on my desktop.
3. I think MicroSoft OneDrive may be best for the editing since everyone can use Word to do the editing and not need to learn Google Doc to edit. I still have the problem with OneDrive in trying to create a Group of email address.
โFeb-20-2016 03:22 PM
tatest wrote:
There is something wrong with your approach. You should be able to access the cloud stored file from your mailing program, and let the mail program bring it back to your computer, send it to each addressee.
โFeb-20-2016 01:28 PM
โFeb-15-2016 04:29 AM
TenOC wrote:
In my T-Bird account Yes I have a mailbox and I have the 5 to 10 mail groups such as family, RV friends, Work etc. Each consisting of 5 to 10 people.
โFeb-14-2016 01:40 PM
bcsdguy wrote:
i think what he is saying is he can't just click on a group name and send the file to all of the people in that group. In Outlook, you create groups with individual email addresses in it and if you send to that group name, it sends to all in that group.
โFeb-14-2016 01:36 PM
โFeb-14-2016 01:35 PM
Sam Spade wrote:
The problem is not with your "cloud storage" but with your email client.
Are you telling us that T-bird does NOT have a directory or contacts list where you can just click on names to select them for your TO: field ?
โFeb-14-2016 01:12 PM