CC and BCC are both ways of sending copies of an email to additional people. However, you can also send copies of an email to additional people by specifying multiple addresses in the To field.
CC- The abbreviation CC comes from “carbon copy.” By placing a sheet of carbon paper between two pieces of paper, the pressure from writing on the first piece of paper will push the ink from the carbon paper down onto the second piece of paper, producing an additional copy of the document. Like a physical carbon copy, a CC is a way of sending additional copies of an email to other people. Some people refer to CC as “courtesy copy,” which better describes what a CC actually is. CC is often used as a verb, as in “I CC’d him on the email.”
BCC- BCC stands for “blind carbon copy.” Unlike with CC, no one can see the list of recipients on the BCC list. Someone on the BCC list can see everything else, including the CC list and the contents of the email. However, the BCC list is secret – no one can see this list. (If a person is on the BCC list, they’ll see only their own email on the BCC list.
CC is useful when:You want someone else to receive a copy of an email, but they aren’t one of the primary recipients.
BCC is useful when:You want someone else to receive an email, but you don’t want the primary recipients of the email to see you’ve sent this other person a copy. My references for this assignment.
Wednesday, 19 March 2014
Tuesday, 11 March 2014
Internet Plagiarism
Plagiarism is using the work of others without acknowledging them. So basically STEALING! The problem with people practicing plagiarism is that it is a very bad habit. Internet plagiarism is a term used to describe the illegal use of written work, photographs, or graphics on a website. It is usually taken from another website without giving credit to the creator of the original content. The laws governing online content are the same as for printed materials. Activities such as this not only hurt the person who wrote or created it, but also the student who plagiarised the work, because they are abusing the system, being unfair to others who actually put in the work to do an honest job, and cheating themselves out of a proper education.
Citing Pictures-Label an inserted graphic Figure, Table, Chart, etc. and give it a number along with a caption (Author's Last name, First initial, and a brief description). Place the label and caption underneath your graphic.1
Photo credit: Lamphear C.
Citing Videos-Lastname, Firstname. "Title of Video." Online video clip. Publisher of video. Source, (date uploaded). Web. (date viewed).2
James Clay "Internet Plagiarism is a serious problem" says 58% of teachers.Uploaded on Jan 18, 2008 3 Citing Information-Always post the name of the sites that you got your information from.
Citing Pictures-Label an inserted graphic Figure, Table, Chart, etc. and give it a number along with a caption (Author's Last name, First initial, and a brief description). Place the label and caption underneath your graphic.1
Photo credit: Lamphear C.
Citing Videos-Lastname, Firstname. "Title of Video." Online video clip. Publisher of video. Source, (date uploaded). Web. (date viewed).2
Tuesday, 4 March 2014
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