A customer sent an "sig" file. Can anyone open such an animal? thanks
Posted by Fred Weiss (Member # 3662) on :
quote: .sig Signature
A .sig file can be set up and automatically attached to outgoing email, newsgroup postings, etc. It includes the name and contact information of the sender, and may also have ASCII art, favorite quotes, etc
My guess is that you should be able to copy and paste into a variety of applications from your email software. Posted by Wayne Webb (Member # 1124) on :
I tried opening it with SignWizard, Corel 9, Vinylmaster Pro, and Print Artist 12.
Will try something else Monday. Thanks Fred
Posted by Curtis hammond (Member # 2170) on :
In most cases,,,,a "sig" file is the signature pple use in news groups. email or BBS's. Just like the name and address at the end of your post in here. The reason u see it is usually because an association to the file is set up wrong,,
It is not meant to be opened by a sign program. Some SIG's are very ornate with graphics, some are just a name address and phone number. Notepad, or Composer can open many of them. It is usually a plain text file.
To make one..
Setup In Internet Explorer 1.Open Internet Explorer and Click on the Tools menu. 2.In the Tools menu , select "Read Mail" or "Read News," depending on which signature you want to create. 3.Your mail program would open. Create your sig file in the program.