I am not convinced that we need to use attachments to display Turkish texts.
I have composed this e-mail using the Weston European (ISO) encoding.

To view the Turkish alphabet below properly, I believe it suffices to switch
the encoding in the browser to Turkish (ISO).

Aa Bb Cc Çç Dd Ee Ff Gg Ðð Hh Iý Ýi Jj Kk
Ll Mm Nn Oo Öö Pp Rr Ss Þþ Tt Uu Vv Zz

If it works, we don't have a problem.

The special, Windows, encodings I used are:

Alt 0199 for Ç (Capital C cedilla)
Alt 0231 for ç (small C cedilla)
Alt 0208 for Ð (Capital edh, i.e. D with a bar through the upright, doubling
as capital yumuþak G. If 'yumuþak' is garbled, think of it as yumusak)
Alt 0240 for ð (small edh, the IPA symbol for a voiced non-sibilant dental
fricative, doubling as small yumuþak G)
Alt 0253 for ý (small y acute, doubling as undotted small I)
Alt 0221 for Ý (capital y acute, doubling as dotted capital I)
Alt 0222 for Þ (capital thorn, doubling as capital S cedilla)
Alt 0254 for þ (small thorn, doubling as capital S cedilla)
Alt 0214 for Ö (capital O umlaut)
Alt 0246 for ö (small o umlaut)
Alt 0220 for Ü (capital U umlaut)
Alt 0252 for ü (small u umlaut)

Note that the numbers above are to be typed on the numeric keypad.

The proper Turkish encodings appear to be:

Working codes:
Alt 0286 => for capital G yumuþak
Alt 0287 => for small G yumuþak
Alt 0304 => for dotted capital I
Alt 0305 => for undotted small I
Alt 0350 => for capital S cedilla
Alt 0351 => for small S cedilla

I am not sure how well these codes will actually travel.

Richard.

P.S. If you can read this, you are an intended recipient.

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