[Chris Carlen]
Why is your email containing "=20" at the end of every line? Something strange is going on with your email program.
The regular =HH that we see in some email are indicative that it is coded in quoted-printable. Now, there should be a few MIME headers at the start of the message describing this fact. So, either the headers are missing or inadequate at the originating end, or the MIME handling is lacking at the receiving end. The correct way of sorting out which is which is through scrutiny of email headers, and some knowledge of the MIME standards to judge if the standards are followed. Each =HH, where H is an hexadecimal digit, holds for a single byte having the value represented by the hexadecimal digits. =20, in particular, is the coding of an ASCII space. Now, having a space at end of each line is usually indicative of flowed format (yet another standard!) at the originating end. This format should be announced in the headers as well -- for example, this very message I'm writing uses flowed format. Flowing may or may not occur at the receiving end depending on the capabilities of the mail reader in use, but flowing format is designed so it does not matter much. -- François Pinard http://pinard.progiciels-bpi.ca